LowKey wrote:People here aren't trying to figure out how to drop weight from their pack so they can...pack a spare set of ass-less chaps.
Speak for yourself - my assless chaps are going to be a big part of my primary source of income in the PAW...
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LowKey wrote:People here aren't trying to figure out how to drop weight from their pack so they can...pack a spare set of ass-less chaps.
Pondo_Sinatra wrote:LowKey wrote:People here aren't trying to figure out how to drop weight from their pack so they can...pack a spare set of ass-less chaps.
Speak for yourself - my assless chaps are going to be a big part of my primary source of income in the PAW...
George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
squinty wrote:Pondo_Sinatra wrote:LowKey wrote:People here aren't trying to figure out how to drop weight from their pack so they can...pack a spare set of ass-less chaps.
Speak for yourself - my assless chaps are going to be a big part of my primary source of income in the PAW...
Walk those chaps right over here big boy...how many cans of Spam for a dance?
LowKey wrote:*Speaking of which, I'd love to hear from any MDs, Physical Therapists, or high level sports trainers who could give us a better idea of how long you can carry heavier loads before permanently damaging your back, knees, and so forth. Is there is a certain period of rest between such exertions that would prevent or delay the onset of those problems if things get really unpleasant and your bug-out becomes a prolonged affair? Take 1 or 2 days a week off from carrying the pack and hunker down? Every other day? One week a month? Is there a window in which your compressed spine and overworked joints can "bounce back" before the problem becomes permanent?


Doc Torr wrote:Manimal2878 wrote:Seems like there have been lots of times where people have been refuges fleeing an area with only what they could carry on their back. For the US that would probably be whatever they could carry in their car, like those that fled during Katrinna or from any other hurricane's path.
I agree that people are kidding themselves if they think they are going to carry those giant backpacks for long. If you actually go backpacking and hiking you strive to get as lightweight as possible. Some lightweight hikers have base weights under 5lbs. The more pounds you carry the slower you move and the more prone to blisters and other injuries. I imagine a lot of people will be ejecting tons of items from their pack soon into their trek, just like happens every year on the Appalachian trail, when people's gear list meets the reality of having to carry their gear.
10 million Marines, soldiers, backpackers, and hikers that actually hike packs in the 30-70lb range disagree. Give me ten weeks and I can have anyone who's in a phantom shade of good shape rucking a 60lb load over a half-marathon distance in under eight hours.
UL=/=hiking/bugging out. If you train to hike the weight, and have a decent head about it, you'll be okay.
ODA 226 wrote:Manimal2878 wrote:Seems like there have been lots of times where people have been refuges fleeing an area with only what they could carry on their back. For the US that would probably be whatever they could carry in their car, like those that fled during Katrinna or from any other hurricane's path.
I agree that people are kidding themselves if they think they are going to carry those giant backpacks for long. If you actually go backpacking and hiking you strive to get as lightweight as possible. Some lightweight hikers have base weights under 5lbs. The more pounds you carry the slower you move and the more prone to blisters and other injuries. I imagine a lot of people will be ejecting tons of items from their pack soon into their trek, just like happens every year on the Appalachian trail, when people's gear list meets the reality of having to carry their gear.
Survival and Bugging Out IS NOT BACKPACKING!


Manimal2878 wrote:The whole point of a bob is that you take it now, not after 10 weeks of training. The point I'm trying to make is lots of people have these huge bags, but I doubt many that don't get paid to do it, like military folk, are actually training to carry around their huge bob.
George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
Doc Torr wrote:There is no one size fits all solution, but if I have to leave my house, I'm taking the INCH nor the GHB. Anything in the middle, for me, is a waste of time.
LowKey wrote:Doc Torr wrote:There is no one size fits all solution, but if I have to leave my house, I'm taking the INCH nor the GHB. Anything in the middle, for me, is a waste of time.
+1000 internets
If you can carry the weight an INCH bag will handle everything a BOB can handle. The reverse isn't true and as the old saying goes, "Better to have and not need than to need and not have".
I'm going on 43, I don't work out, I smoked for over 25 years until I quit a few years back, and I've not been gentle with my carcass over the years.....and I still can carry a 50-60 lb ruck 20 miles in a day. Might take me a bit longer than a younger guy in good shape and I may be hating life the next day, but I can drop my ass into low gear and trudge through the miles. That seems to be the nice thing about having been in good shape and done that sort of thing when you were younger...if you don't let yourself completely go, the knowlage that you can do it because you have done it before helps you tough it out.
George Orwell wrote:Power is not a means; it is an end. One does not establish a dictatorship in order to safeguard a revolution; one makes the revolution in order to establish the dictatorship. The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
squinty wrote:When's the last time you did it?
There a lot of things I have done, that I might not be able to do right now.
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