• Happy Birthday, Whirlaway (1938-53)! 👑👑👑

Search results

  1. Seeker

    Pants with knee pads

    I have a pair of 911s, and previously had some Proppers... both have velcro kneepad pouches, and they are a game changer for those over 40.
  2. Seeker

    Leaving firewood at camp

    I too prefer a cook fire to a stove, and I always carry a small, ultralight alcohol stove and a few ounces of fuel for first night and emergencies. I also don't like mornings at all, and if it's chilly, I'll lay in bed while my oatmeal/tea water boils on that stove. I'm not a rabid "LNT" guy...
  3. Seeker

    Things you've lost or misplaced on a canoe trip . . .

    I've lost mostly small stuff; a washcloth got away from me while swimming/bathing once, and I accidentally left 30' of Kelty TripTease Lightline wrapped around a tree another time. I was given my first pocket knife at age 4, and kept it through my entire childhood. My mom still had it at her...
  4. Seeker

    Useless/Unused Canoe or Camping Gear You've Had

    Useless/unused gear... where to start! but I guess that's all of us. I've been through almost every kind of cookpot, and have settled on a 5-cup aluminum boiler with a bail. I use a few smaller 'brew kits' for day hikes, all in the 20oz range, but still with a bail. I still have many pots and...
  5. Seeker

    Night Fears: Worse with Hammocks than Tents?

    I got over any fear of the dark in the Army... leading patrols or movements during overcast/moonless nights, night vision goggles, starlight scopes, red-lens flashlights, thermal imaging systems, glow-in-the-dark lensatic compasses, and blackout-markers for driving; it all "normalized" operating...
  6. Seeker

    Lights for Tripping

    Context re my way of doing things: There are several items I carry on lanyards in my pockets while camping; a pocket knife and compass on one side, and a lighter, whistle, and micro-light on the other. I also have a Photon mini-light attached to my backpack's drawstring (sort of like a closet...
  7. Seeker

    Single Trip Carry Portage Techniques

    Steve, So sorry for the ridiculously late response... Just now saw it. Yes, that is a West Marine CO2 inflatable PFD.
  8. Seeker

    Hello from NY & a question.

    Couple thoughts... having raised 2 daughters, now in their 30s. If they're not having fun, they will quickly lose interest. Portaging is not fun if it's more than a few feet. Being wet, too cold, too hot, too thirsty, too tired, too hungry, bug bitten, sunburned, or footsore is not fun...
  9. Seeker

    Hatchet or Saw?

    I found an extendable magnet at the dollar store, on a similar 'tube', took off the magnet and worked a bit on smoothing the end so it doesn't cut and doesn't get pushed in too far, and it works fine at 1/16th the price. I agree; well worth carrying.
  10. Seeker

    Paddling in the wind, which way do you lean?

    Wind from front, load front heavy. Reverse if rear wind (within reason... I recently got hit by a couple waves from the back and took water on, because I was too heavy/low). Beyond that, since I solo a sit-on-bottom and use a double paddle, I sometimes shift my center of paddle to one side or...
  11. Seeker

    Leftover food

    I tend to solo trip almost exclusively, and ration myself pretty closely. There is seldom leftover cooked food (cold meal parts, like landjaeger, candy, bread, cheese, but you can easily save them for the next day). One of the easiest ways to ensure this is with dehydrated food; measure out...
  12. Seeker

    Hatchet or Saw?

    I don't carry either/or... it's always both or none. I have various combinations for various means of transport and portage difficulty. When backpacking, I seldom carry either, as I'll generally be WAY deep, and then it's easy to find good firewood that doesn't need cutting and splitting, just...
  13. Seeker

    Best Places to Live in the US for Canoeing?

    I grew up in NYS. If I were to pick a location solely based on canoeing, it would be along Hwy 30 from Saranac Inn to Lake Clear to Paul Smith's. If I factored in the winters, it would be either Potsdam (above the Tug Hill/Ontario snowbelt) or Utica/Little Falls/Gloversville (also out of the...
  14. Seeker

    Oswegatchie River, October 10 and 11th 2024

    Very nice... Looks like you had a great time. Like the mouse story... I carry a couple mousetraps sometimes, when I plan to stay in a lean-to. I will also set figure-4 traps loaded with firewood if I have to. Had one chew a hole through a bandanna once; that was enough. I was out later that...
  15. Seeker

    Recommended PFD for solo canoeing and fishing

    I have two. The one I use most often is a West Marine inflatable. Light, doesn't interfere with my back rest, not hot (this was more an issue when I lived in LA), fairly comfortable neoprene neck liner, and for short portages (1/4 mile or less), I can stand wearing it with my backpack and...
  16. Seeker

    Small Leather Pouches

    A few years back, I experimented with building and using some traditional equipment.... a couple "side opening" duffle bags (like Warren Miller used), as well as some waxed muslin bags for things like dried fruit, bannock mix, and sugar. I also made up a couple pot sacks for my various cooking...
  17. Seeker

    Two nights in the rainy, cold St. Regis Canoe Area, ADKs

    I really like that pic of the pack, and the other of your canoe, parked. Clamshell, Fish, Little Fish, Lydia, Little Long, and Kit Fox are my favorite part of the Wilderness... very few people. I was up there around then too... but having pulled a tendon, I elected to stay on the...
  18. Seeker

    Favorite camp chair

    I have a couple methods of sitting. The simplest, and despite my age (60) what I still bring on exceptionally hard (for me) backpacking trips, where I'm moving every day (AT sections, mostly), is a basic green foam pad, roughly 9x14. It rides against my back as padding, is easy to pull out to...
  19. Seeker

    Grizzly Bears

    One of my favorite points about the Journals of Lewis and Clark is how excited they get about finding new animals, to include the grizz... within weeks, maybe days, however, there was an entry about how tired the men were becoming of running into Br'er Grizz, because it was so hard to kill them...
  20. Seeker

    Best & worst campsites ever?

    That spot, if it's the one I'm thinking, is the nicest campsite on Fish Pond... it's on the North shore, which means it gets the sun, and also a beautiful view of the sunrise... there is also a really nice stream to pull water from nearby, vs dipping it out of the pond... the streams flowing...
Back
Top