Showing posts with label Hiking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hiking. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Philmont Hike #1

I have to say night hiking throws me for a mental loop.  I am not a good judge of time or distance when I do it in the dark.  And not eating or drinking didn't help me.  Not sure why.  It was so cold that I could barely see through my own fumes as I exhaled.  

Nothing like a double fence with a 8 foot section in front of this sign.  

We came across this sign.  Funny...........sort of.  Apparently there were issues with Scouts before.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Central Florida Hiker - Basic Boy Scout Skills

Central Florida Hiker discusses some basic Boy Scout skills every hiker should know.  Looks good to me!!

Friday, January 17, 2014

All Quiet On The Western Front - Article from Backpacker


(Photo by Brian Mockenhaupt)

I have a love of hiking.  I have wanted to be a hiker for years.  Still not there.  Love to do it but am not "good" at it.  I subscribe to Backpacker to pick up tools to make it easier on me.  I love the military too and so this article hit home for me in both of my loves - hiking and the military.

May 2013 had an article that I just read through and through.  It is called All Quiet on the Western Front.  Please forgive their HORRIBLE website but read through the article.

CONCLUSION:  This is exactly why the BSA uses the outdoor as part of their program.  It gets you away, it gets your head clear, it provides a physical challenge to the body making it stronger and tougher which results in a clear head, a return to basics, etc.  I could go on and on about extended hiking trips.  I wish there was a way to do it as an LDS unit(s).

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Backpacking - Infographic

I am heading out with my boys to go hiking this weekend (and my son don't have a wrestling tournament so he gets to come with me! WAHOO!).  I took this morning off to go to REI to test try 8 sleeping bags.  Anything is better than the iron weight I have been using as a sleeping bag.  Big and roomy but weighs about 35 pounds alone.

Saw this and thought I would share.

Backpacks Infographic: How to Find the Right Backpack for You

Check out REI's backpacks next time you head outdoors!

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

10 Ways Your First Backpacking Trip Will Change Your Life Forever - Backpacking Magazine

I subscribe to Backpacker magazine.  The reason I do is because I stink at backpacking.  It isn't a skill I did a lot of as a Scout and with Texas being flat, there isn't a lot of places to do it to where it is "worth*" it.  I read the article named above and found when I do go hiking/backpacking these are the things I love.  This article starts on page 70.

10 Ways Your First Backpacking Trip Will Change Your Life Forever because you will:
  1. Feel like a kid.
  2. Live simply.
  3. Find it's never too late to learn something new.
  4. Learn how to pee outside. :)
  5. Make new friends.
  6. Expand your horizons.
  7. Discover the worlds most refreshing drink.
  8. Save money on vacations (that is debatable especially one what kind of equipment you are carrying!!)
  9. Set new goals.
  10. Discover you really do have what is takes.
* By worth it, we don't have inspiring views here because Texas is flat.  And mountains are pretty far off.  So for an LDS unit who can only camp for 24 hours, it is an issue with travel time.  Though our units try and do extended trips during school holidays.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Packing Light

This article might help when taking your boys hiking even though it is about luggage.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Wow!!

You gotta read this article about a guy who only owns 15 items.  I wish I could do this.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

50 Miles

This is an awesome website about backpacking and Scouting.

http://50miler.com/

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

How much water to carry?

This is a great article on how much water you should carry on a hike by SectionHiker.  I struggle with weighing myself down yet carry enough because water sources in Texas are not common.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Cool website to locate mountains

This is a really cool website to locate peeks and mountains for hiking or Operation on Target.

www.heywhatsthat.com

This is how flat the area is that I live in.

There is nothing around here to get the boys ready for adventures like Philmont.  Though we could probably use an office building.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Awesome Video - Andrew Skurka


This guy finished the AT in 95 days.  95 days!!!!!!

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Friday, March 23, 2012

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Super Spackle

As I am studying more and more and getting more and more excited about backpacking, I have found some interesting stuff.  One of those things is Super Spackle.  High calorie, takes up very little room in your bag.  Often when I am hiking, I have no interest in eating until it hits me that I am really, really, REALLY hungry (I am sometimes like that in the morning).  This might be a way to pack less of a lunch (too much space) and snack instead throughout the day.  Depending on the recipe, one tablespoon can have.................................................
130 CALORIES!!!

I don't know.  It is double the calories of peanut butter.  I am not sure I would be able to find some of the stuff without finding a hippie.  :)

Sunday, March 18, 2012

500 feet to go and he gave up..........

This past weekend we took our boys on something most Mormon Scouts never get to do..........a 3 day hiking trip.  The Troop, Team and the Crew went hiking on the Cross Timbers Hiking Trail.  We hiked 5 miles the first day.  We hiked 5 miles back the next day to where we started and then waited for parents to come and camp with us overnight and then went home the next morning.  Half of the boys had no experience hiking except for a mile hike last month including the older boys.  To put it plainly, all they have done is car camp and we have been struggling to get parents and boys for 4 years (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) to get out of the car with their gear and go further than 50 feet.  But we have done it and the boys love it even though at times they struggle.

One of the boys is 13 and has special needs.  His parents have yet to tell us what they are even when we ask them.  We can guess what the need is though.  His father was just called as an Assistant Scoutmaster to help mentor his own child (which I see the pros and cons to).  He makes it to most weekend camps but because this one would require taking time off work, he couldn't make it.  The first 5 miles of our trip took us, with an hour break for lunch, about 6 hours to hike because of him and some of the younger boys.  I am not complaining trust me.  I was slow too but my mentality was "I will hike my own hike and I will get there when I get there."  This boy gave up in the first 15 minutes of our hike like he had last month at our 1 mile hike through difficult terrain.  Mom and Dad packed his bag like we told them not too.  They packed it heavy and when we told him and his parents to lighten the load at the shakedown they told us they were not even done packing yet.  They have yet to buy his food.  On the trail this boy kept yelling for his dad and asking when we were going to be done.  I grabbed his hand at times and pulled him.  Other boys had him grab a rope on their backpack and pulled him up hills.  He was cursing his Dad for not being on the campout and carrying most of his stuff for him like he had the month before.

Literally 500 feet from the trail head to finish our 10 miles, the boy threw himself down and told us he was done.  I told him to stand up and look over the ridge.  The end was right around the corner.  He called me a liar.  I told him I was not lying.  I "ordered" him to his feet and told him to "get to stepping" and he was finished with the hike in less than 3 minutes.  I had asked my son to go grab the boys backpack and bring it over to the other ones.  Within 30 minutes the boy was sitting at the adult table joking about food and the hike like he hadn't even struggled.  That required a ton of patience honestly.  Saying you can't do something and then having enough energy to joke and go and play after a hike means to me that you could have hiked more miles or with a better attitude.

Some of the other challenges we faced were:
  1. Some of the Troop members were so small tightening their backpacks had no ability to hold their packs closer to their bodies or on their hips.  Their backpacks were too big.  
  2. When the Varsity Coach tells you that you don't need 3 pairs of shoes and 5 pocket knives to hike 10 miles, he is probably right.  Especially when you only use one knife at a time (even though you think you might be mugged in the middle of the woods) and only end up wearing one pair of shoes the whole time.
  3. Canned food is NOT trail food.  
  4. You fill up your water bladders and bottles EACH AND EVER time you get the chance to.  One boy was out of water at the end of 5 miles (also another boys who's parents packed his bag).  
  5. Another boy drank another boy's water until he had none.  
  6. MRE's are great to eat but they are big and heavy especially when you weigh 100 pounds and your parents and grandparents pack 4 of them.
  7. One of the boys decided to drop his pants to a couple of boaters that went by.
  8. Boys don't tie their shoes.  They do the socially "my shoes look tied to my feet but they are not".
Conclusion:

Do we put stuff we don't need in our own personal and spiritual backpacks?
When we need to lighten our own loads do we just decide to "tough it out"?
Do we need to be instructed in all things?
Do we give up before we start?
Do we give up right before we are done?
Do we do a disservice by doing things for boys instead of letting them struggle a bit?

What I learned from this campout:
  • You can go through 4 liters of water very quickly on a 5 mile hike especially when it is hot and you take over 6 hours to do it.
  • Patience, patience and more patience.
  • Making yourself miserable only makes yourself miserable and unable to function.
  • Hike my own hike but always be moving forward.
  • Don't look too far forward or too far back.  Stare at the guys shoes in front of you and just keep moving.
  • I can not only hike 10 miles of difficult Texas "hills" but I can do it with a 55 pound pack.
  • Loosing 30 pounds doesn't make you in shape to hike.
  • Boy leadership is very effective for motivating other boys when done correctly.  Sometimes we just have to remind the boys they need to lead.
  • My son can hike better than I can.

We went from Juniper Point to 5 Mile Camp.

View from 5 Mile Camp.

On the trail on one of the hottest days of the years so far.

I saw this view a lot.

You find a lot of weird stuff on the trail.



Saturday, March 17, 2012

Snow

I want to go hiking with snow shoes.  Just an FYI............


This looks awesome.  Stolen without permission.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Logs/Appalachian Trail

I thought this was very cool.  If you want to read some logs from an overnight dwelling log book from along the Appalachian Trail, here they are.  Pretty cool!!!  Interesting to see different people perspective.

Backgrounds:  I have been reading a book called A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail.  The book is hilarious and also very informative though it tends to be a rant by a tree huger in a few spots.  Still a great book!  And I am not reader.  Because of this book I have been dreaming lately of hiking the AT.