goofus

joined 4 months ago
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Ma quindi....Cos'è nello zaino di Nico? In questo video scopriamo l’intero setup ultralight di Nico, un ragazzo svizzero che sta attraversando l'Europa dalla Scozia a Santiago De Compostela, 4000km con uno zaino essenziale, leggero e super funzionale di SOLI 4kg!

Gear List: lighterpack.com/r/xubfch

Fatemi sapere cosa ne pensate nei commenti!

ig: instagram.com/gioiaincammino

 

How much water should you actually carry when you’re ultralight backpacking? Most hikers carry too much. In this video, I break down my real approach to water carries on the Pacific Crest Trail—and why I often carry less than a liter.

I’ve hiked the CDT, AT, and now the PCT with a super ultralight base weight. If you want to hike further with less weight, you need to rethink hydration. This isn’t reckless—it’s calculated.

Learn how to: • Plan smart water carries using maps and timing • Understand water needs vs. water fear • Trust your body and terrain, not just groupthink • Carry less and move faster

Filmed while hiking 30+ mile days with a base weight under 5 lbs.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 4 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Pardon incoming

 

Join me for 20 hot and exposed miles on the Pacific Crest Trail, hiking from mile 600 to 620. I talk gear, trail food, and how ultralight backpacking changes everything on days like this. If you’re into super ultralight setups, real trail footage, and honest talk from the PCT, this one’s for you.

This is part of my full PCT thru-hike series. I’m carrying one of the lightest complete packs on trail—including a sub-5 oz shelter and a 6.5 oz backpack with a 4.5 baseweight

Temps were high, terrain was dry, and the ultralight gear made a big difference in getting through it.

Filmed on trail and edited entirely on my phone while thru-hiking.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 1 points 1 week ago

I wrote the parts used in another post in this thread, but if you have any specific questions, let me know.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

It is an Allpowers 200W flexible panel, about 33" x 54"

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 8 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

I started with a trike, and added a cheap direct drive ebike kit (Voilamart), and a Hailong battery 48V 20 aH. Then built a frame out of electrical conduit with Makerpipe connectors. The solar panel mount is made of 1x2 wood epoxied together and lashed with string onto the metal frame. I connected the 36V 200W Allpowers flexible solar panel to an Elejoy MPPT boost charge controller, which outputs 54.2V into the battery. That is the short version.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 1 points 2 weeks ago

Looks like a good project.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 5 points 2 weeks ago

Not much. I generally ride with the panel in flat top position.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 14 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

200W solar panel, 48V 20 aH battery. Range is 25 miles on battery with no pedaling, estimated additional 20 miles per day of full sunlight with solar panel, pedaling will increase range. In full sun, the panel charges at about the same rate as the plug in charger, 3 amps.

 

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 2 points 2 weeks ago

Looks like Greece needs batteries and more solar.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 3 points 2 weeks ago

Wrong. Yoopers are Yoopers, not Sconnies.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 1 points 2 weeks ago

Warren, just north of Detroit, part of metro Detroit. I don't know if it is a real assembly line but it is a big factory.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 7 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

Michigan has tank assembly lines.

[–] goofus@lemmy.today 72 points 2 weeks ago

Why inform Putin's Bitch?

 

In this adventure, I show you my 6.5 lb ultralight backpacking gear list.

backpack: ultimate direction 20l fastpack

shelter: sling fin splitwing poly ground sheet 2 msr groundhogs 6 shepard hooks ruta locura carbon fiber poles

sleep system: ph designs sleeping bag gosserman gear 1/8th sleeping pad

cook system: 500ml toaks titanium pot titanium esbit stove

water treatment: platypus quick draw

clothing: darn tough socks alpha direct hoodie high tail designs pantagonia houdini wind breaker enlightened equipment copperfield wind pants

light: nitecore nu25

misc: hyperlight pod hyperlight umbrella apex giant poop shovel zippo knife adotek bear bag

 

Looking for an affordable ultralight backpacking gear list that’s actually comfortable? In this video, I take you on-trail to break down my full backpacking loadout — with a base weight under 7 lbs and a total cost under $500. From a fully enclosed tent to a thick sleeping pad and full cook kit, this setup proves you can go light without giving up comfort. Whether you're a beginner or just trying to lighten your pack on a budget, this gear list shows you don't have to spend big to get outside.

 

This video covers my ultralight hiking gear & knowledge from 20,000 miles on the trail.

The following gear setup is full comfort, weighs 10 pounds, and covers down to 20 degrees for all weather scenarios, including:

Best Tents & Tarps for Backpacking

Sleep System - Sleeping Bag / Quilt, Pad & Pillow

Best Backpacking Backpack

Stuff Sacks & Equipment Organization

Clothes & Layering Systems

Small Essential Equipment

First Aid Kit for Hiking

Toilet Kit

Cooking System & Stoves

Water Purification & Storage

 

Simple 4 Day Resupply from Aldi

I did some research on a simple resupply plan using products available at Aldi. There are 4 ingredients:

Oatmeal, Protein powder, Almonds, Cranberries

4 Day Resupply:

1 - 42 oz oatmeal (regular)

1 - 32 oz protein powder

2 - 14 oz almonds

4 - 6 oz dried cranberries

Total weight: 7.9 pounds

Daily:

2 - 1.5 cups cold soaked oatmeal (about 2/3 peanut butter jar)

2 to 5 servings of protein powder

1/2 14 oz bag of almonds

1 6 oz bag of dried cranberries

The package of protein powder will provide up to 5 scoops of protein powder per day. Drink as many as you wish.

Daily nutrition (with 5 servings of protein powder per day):

Calories 3775

Fat 189% USDA recommended

Carbohydrate 152% USDA recommended

Protein 450% USDA recommended (5 servings protein powder)

Cost: about $46 at Aldi

 

I LOVE Cold soaking meals on the trail. Coffee, Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner all from a peanut butter jar. MORE RECIPES: irontazz.com/stoveless-backpacking

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