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Yes, the emergency dry bag will be the first thing I'll reach for in a capsize. It's a rude bright orange colour and floats. I assured my wife it'll probably provide a little buoyancy to her/my swim. That's my plan anyway. But my BOB is way more basic than yours Mike.
That’s my grab-it plan as well. I do not do long or arduous portages, not travel light, so a well stocked bag suits me fine.
I have resisted calling that bright yellow dry bag a “ditch kit” or “bail out bag”. Most of the places I trip someone will be along in a day or two at most, and it isn’t intended to assuage any lost in the wilderness fantasies. To wit, that bag is labeled (of course the bag itself is labeled) in big block letters “Spares & Repairs”
But before I get carried away poking fun at your thoroughness I might add that I've lost count the number of times I'd been at work and responded to a minor job emergency with "I've got just the tool for this...at home."
That is exactly why the tripping truck is well supplied with tools and materials.
I have never, knock wood, needed to use that Spares & Repairs bag for ditch/survival purposes. I have used some couple of items in it (many) dozens of times for minor . . . . well . . . . spares or repairs needs. Occasionally for my own needs, more frequently for companions and most often for new and appreciative friends met along the way.
heck, I’ve used stuff in that kit when truck camping or while working at the Tortoise Reserve. I always toss it in the tripping truck when travelling, along with the similar 3-compartment “group” first aid kit.
Pulling some savoir repair part or piece from that kit for folks met along the way is the most fun I can have.
Producing a simple fix like a spare fastex buckle for someone’s busted dry bag strap, the screws/nuts/washers and tools to fix a broken seat or thwart (or, many times, a busted camp chair X leg connection fix), or a Therma-rest repair kit for some leaky cushioned uncomfortable sleeper is deeply satisfying in a hail and well met new friend encounter.
The thing that I have used most often from that kit is the giant 4 x 6 foot garbage bag. Sometimes as a cut-neck-and-arm holes poncho for someone in need, most often as an interior tent ground cloth for wet tent campers. Sliced down one side and across the bottom that is a good sized ground cloth or tiny tarp 6 x 8 foot piece of thick plastic.
I may have to become more judicious about cutting those up and giving them away; I only have a couple left before I resort to generic Lawn & Leaf bags.
I had not pulled up the Spares & Repairs list and checked what I had used in the last 2 – 3 years. That was a good exercise. I’m going to empty the Spares & Repairs bag and sort through the used/not used and keep/lose selections. Sight unseen I’m thinking:
KEEP
Sandpaper, aluminum foil and wax paper take up no room and little weight.
Same for hacksaw blade halves
Same for the little (handle-less) rat tail file. Takes up no room, little weight and if I need to enlarge a fix-it hole I’d miss having it.
Same for the coffee filters. I have used them as silt stoppers in the past when pump filtering water, but I use a gravity filter 95% of the time now. And drink Starbuck’s Via.
MAYBE LOSE (or at least refresh/replace)
The whetstone is probably superfluous. It is a tiny little thing, and I start trips with sharp tools.
The two-part epoxy syringes are several years old and may be goners. I may get a new set and use the old ones, if still viable, on some non-critical home need.
Not sure why I need radiator tape when I have quality duct tape.
The resin putty is ancient and probably no longer putty in anyone’s hands.
The Superglue is almost certainly a tube of crusty air. Even unopened that stuff doesn’t store well.
I have not had great luck with long packaged Mylar blankets, at least the thin, cheap ones the size of a bar of soap. By the time I try to unfold them they are often hideously stuck together.
The brown glass vial of supersaturated iodine crystals and eye dropper. Probably kept only for sentimental reasons.
Fishing line and hooks. Who am I kidding, if I was serious about eating fish in a survival situation I’d buy a gil net with illegal sized openings and make minnow stew.
The driver’s license photocopy can go; I have the official, laminated expired one in my PFD pocket.
Health insurance copy is surely long out of date.
Thanks Brad. I feel I have a license to kill the outdated or unneeded stuff in that Spare & Repairs bag. I will alert M and Miss Moneypenny.
And once I finish that I oughta have a similar used/never used inspection of the big group first aid bag. I replenish the consumables and expired OTC drugs in that bag occasionally, but I have never asterisked the full contents list for what I have never used, what I may never need and what I’m unwilling to part with.