I
realize that many of you reading this series are not backpackers and are
therefore unfamiliar with the whole process. So, I decided to dedicate this
chapter entirely to “Frequently
Asked Questions”. I queried Tess on this subject since she has
done more long backpacking trips than me, and she contributed the following:
(all of these are actual questions that people have asked about these unique
adventures.)
I will resume the tale of our Very Long Walk in May
in Chapter 8.
Q. Do
you sleep in a tent?
A. This
is our very most frequently asked question, and I find it strange. YES. We
sleep in a tent EVERY night. Exceptions: occasionally
we will hitchhike in to a town and stay in a hotel or come upon a 3-sided
shelter built for trail hikers. Shelters are more common on
designated thru-hike locations like the Appalachian Trail, but often they are
crowded with people who move around in their sleep or snore like freight
trains; tenting is frequently the more appealing option.
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Tess and Jet sleeping in our tent. Tess hates this picture
because she thinks she looks like an ancient relic here.
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Q. Do you carry everything?
A. Yes,
we carry everything—including our tent—that we need for our trip, in our
backpacks. However, we are minimalists and concerned about carrying too much
weight, so we take only what is absolutely necessary (deodorant, towels, and
variety of clothes are NOT necessary), occasionally allowing ourselves to bring
one luxury item such as a small book, a deck of cards, or a pillow. One of the
most oft-repeated phrases when one is contemplating whether or not to include
an item is “ounces add up to pounds”; this means that even if something seems
really light, it will add something to your overall pack weight. And a heavy
pack means a less enjoyable trip. At the start of the trips, our packs are
really full, but as we eat through several meals, they become progressively
lighter. A good rule of thumb is to try and limit pack weight to
about 20% or less of your bodyweight. Some of the family members are
somewhat anal when it comes to pack weight and make spreadsheets that look
like this. (Brent's very exacting
spreadsheet created for our Camino trip).
Q. What
do you eat?
A. Lightweight
food. We dehydrate a variety of your run-of-the mill options like
beef stew and chili (and by we, I mean Tess), but lately Tess has become more
hippie-like and has been making things like Quinoa and salmon, Mexican rice and
beans, Thai noodles with peanut sauce, and dehydrated homemade
hummus. She experimented with dehydrating smoothies and refried
beans (separately), but those options were vetoed. It took Tess and
Shay many tries before they nixed the beans. I only ate the beans
once. We also lunch and snack on things like hard cheeses and salami
(within a few days of purchasing them), corn chips—which have the highest
calorie to weight ratio (calories are very necessary currency for the hiker),
and tortillas (they don’t crush like bread) with tuna in foil or with peanut
butter and Nutella. I loved the latter combo when I first ate it and
said, “It tastes just like a Reese’s peanut butter cup”, but I quickly came to
be disgusted by the mere sight of the light brown combo—have you ever changed a
newborn’s diaper? I refuse to eat it to this day. Breakfasts are
mostly oatmeal with dried bananas or apples with a hot drink like tea or
cocoa. Occasionally breakfast is a Snickers bar.
Q. What
do you drink?
A. We
just drink water (sometimes mixed with flavored powders) that we gather from
lakes, streams, rivers, and sometimes, when desperate, puddles or beaver
ponds. Since we don’t want to get Giardia or cysts in our lungs, we make
sure to sterilize the water first. We do this with a SteriPen which uses an
ultraviolet light to kill bacteria. Sometimes, because the SteriPen
only sanitizes and doesn’t filter, there are residual, but harmless chunks
floating in your drink. This is the reason we primarily purchase
opaque and/or colored water bottles.
Q. How do you shower/do laundry?
Q. How do you shower/do laundry?
A. Ha! This one
always makes me laugh. Have you ever watched a show where people—like pioneers
—just strip down on the shore of a lake and jump in for a
bath? Yeah. It’s like that. Except when it’s really cold and
you are battling against hypothermia, you just wash up in the frigid water with
your handkerchief (with a drop of Dr.Bronner’s—it won’t kill the
fish) and never actually remove your clothes. Stench is kind of par
for the course and you mostly get used to it. As for laundry, since
you normally only wear one outfit to hike in, and carry one outfit to sleep in
(that is all that is necessary), laundry isn’t part of the normal
routine. HOWEVER, when one is hiking daily in mud and mire, some
type of clothes cleaning is necessary; it’s called “rub your muddy socks on the
rock in the river and get the big chunks off.” We do carry a
clothesline with us to hang out any wet laundry, but mostly we just use the
line to hang our food up in what’s called a “bear bag” so the critters don’t
eat all of our fritos.
Q. Do you eat a lot of s’mores?
A. Umm,
no. Hiking is more like working and less like vacationing (see chapter 4 for more
clarification), and by the time we reach our campsite, we are anxious to eat a
hot meal and crawl into bed…no S’mores allowed. Also, no one likes sticky when
backpacking because stickiness requires washing.
Q. How do you charge your phone?
A. You don’t. You put it
on the extreme battery-saver mode and only use it for emergencies. And maybe
for listening to music when you think you might die. Sometimes you hit the
jackpot and find a state park with electrical outlets in the bath houses or you
enter a ghost town and unplug the pop machine since ghosts most likely can’t
drink liquids.
Q. Do you see a lot of wildlife?
A. Almost never, and most
certainly not dog-eating wolves. We do see a lot of wildlife poop,
though, so we know they are out there. The closest I have ever
gotten to wildlife was on this trip when one brown weasel and one white one
jumped out of tree together and ran around my legs, then popped up the tree
again. I guess that is where the song “Pop Goes the Weasel” came
from, but it should be plural. We do hear a lot of squirrels chiding us
from their perches and some beautiful songbirds waking us in the
mornings. This was my favorite bird
song from this trip.
Q. Do you do a lot of
stargazing?
A. We actually don’t do a lot of
stargazing because our tired heads hit the pillow (or ground if you didn’t
choose that luxury item) by around 7:30 most nights—long before the stars start
to twinkle. I do remember one summer trip to Isle Royale, Michigan
however, where I saw the most marvelous stars during a midnight potty break
outside.
Q. What do you do all day?
A. I refuse to answer this
question. It’s called a HIKE…figure it out.
Q. How do you deal with
blisters?
A. I almost never get
them, but some of the family members do and we like to cover them with Compeed—a cool wax-like blister
covering we discovered in Spain while doing the Camino de Santiago!
Q. What do you do if it
rains?
A. We carry on as usual. Also,
before this ever happens, as a preventative measure, we
line our backpacks with trash compacter bags. That way we get wet but our precious
sleeping bags stay dry.
Q. What do you do if someone gets sick/breaks a bone/gets eaten by a bear?
A. We haven’t actually had
anyone get sick on our trips; the exercise and fresh air seem to have a
immune-boosting effect. We have had two injuries on our
adventures—one in Alaska where Cole cut his knee open down to the fat globules
under the skin (luckily we were still at the resort where we began, on a day
hike into the mountains). We hiked down the mountain, got in our car and
drove to the nearest ER—6.5 hours away; that is a really good story that
requires a separate post. Our other major injury was in Michigan,
when I slipped on a rock and sprained my ankle while acting out a SpongeBob
episode for my children. I proceeded to hike, crying, into camp and
two days later, hike out with duct tape for a brace. When we got
done and removed the tape, my ankle looked like a puffy purple
orange. So far, no one has gotten eaten by a wild animal yet, but I
did see a movie one Valentine’s Day where a man got eaten by a bear and lived.
It was so traumatic for me that I wrote about it here.
Q. Do you bring a gun?
A. No, it would be too
heavy. We do bring a tiny knife to cut Salami and pepper spray to use on
things that scare us (like Wolf Man). There is an accepted sub-culture on
the trail and almost everyone is pleasant. Crazy, maybe, but mostly
pleasant.
Q. Why don't you wear
hiking boots?
A. Because they are heavy and
super rigid. When you hike, you want something that is sturdy but light;
something that has very little break-in time. We mostly hike in
running or trail shoes. I sometimes wish I had more ankle support (see photo
above this one), but most of the time I am satisfied with my sneakers.
Q. Are you doing what
Cheryl Strayed/Bill Bryson did?
A. Cheryl Strayed was
trying to escape her horrible life; we have great lives and just like to be
outdoors. Bill Bryson only did a tiny part of the trail, stayed
mostly in hotels, and bathed regularly, so no. But hey, they both
got enough fodder for a book. As Hemingway says, "Bad childhoods and war make for great
writing." I think he would agree that bad trips make for great
writing as well. See the blog series “A Very Long Walk in May.”
Q. Do you bring a Coleman
grill/cast iron Dutch oven/ax?
A. Ha, ha, ha* (*fights off the urge to be angsty) We
go for the MSR canister stove instead
the Dutch oven to save on weight. Nope on the ax. For the times we can
have fires, we just gather up kindling.
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Tess using our stove on a rock--the only raised surface available. The
minute after this photo was taken, the stove collapsed and boiling water got
all over everything...but not on Tess!
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Q. Do you get lost? How
do you know where to go? Do you use maps or a compass?
A. Yes, we get lost.
But never forever because we never go very far off of the trail. We have maps
of the sections we hike, but sometimes they are old and the trail has
changed. Most of the trails are marked with signs, at least every
few miles, to direct hikers. I have never used a compass, but it seems
like it would be a wise thing to take along--very Lewis and Clark-like.
Q. Are there campsites? What do they have?
A. Yes. There are
campsites. And they don't have much. We sleep in our tent at these
campsites. Many of them are close to some type or pond or river so you have a
ready water source. Some of the campsites have fire rings and allow fires and
some have logs to sit on. Occasionally, you will find a picnic table
which is wonderful, and sometimes the trails will have latrines (which are
toilets sitting on the top of the hill somewhere behind a few scraggly
trees). These are gross and smelly and remind me of a never-emptied
porta-potty; you get the idea. Mostly, I just go find a secluded spot in
the woods and do my business there. You are supposed to dig a cat
hole to bury your poop, but I figure that is racist against humans since none
of the animals are required to do it; so, I just cover it with leaves. Besides,
a trowel is just extra weight.
Q. Does your dog wear a
backpack?
A. Yes, and he
carries his own food and sometimes my water bottle.
Q. Do
you lose a lot of weight?
A. Tess did
when she hiked the AT a few summers ago, and I always lose a little, but the
minute I return, I am “scary hungry” enough to eat an entire pizza. This
normally evens out any weight previously lost.
Do you have a question that you have just been
hankering to ask? Leave your inquiry in the comment section and I will do my
best to address it!









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