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Tag:

backpacking

Backcountry cooking with a view
AdventuresGaia GPS

How to Plan a Menu for a Long Distance Backpacking Trip

by Ashli Baldwin February 14, 2018
written by Ashli Baldwin

For many of us, menu planning for a backpacking trip is a last minute consideration. Stop off at a grocery on the way up to the mountains and grab the essentials: mac and cheese, ramen, oatmeal, and, of course, bars, bars, and more bars. But the longer your hike (around the third day of a backpacking trip is usually when it becomes tough to eat another energy bar), the more important it is to vary your diet, both to maintain a high interest in your food and to keep your energy levels up and active. If you’re planning your first long hike, whether it’s for six days or 60, you’ll want to spend some time considering what to eat, how much, and when.

What to Pack

Organizing your food in individual Ziploc baggies is a smart way to pack your food
Organizing your food in individual Ziploc baggies is a smart way to pack your food

Laura Lancaster

Before we get into what to pack, let’s start with how much to pack. Eyeballing it might work fine for an overnighter, but the longer your trip is the easier it is to get wrong. Pack too much food and you’ll end up needlessly hauling around extra weight. Pack too little food and you’ll spend the end of your trip uncomfortably rationing. Counting calories before a backcountry trip can help make the trip itself more enjoyable. But how many calories should you plan for?

Start by considering what your baseline metabolism is. In the frontcountry, I eat an average of 2000 calories a day. For a low-key backpacking trip (averaging 8 miles or less a day) I’ll typically pack 2500 calories per day. For higher-mileage days, I’ll bump up the calories to 3,000 a day. Other variables, such as hiking in snow or backpacking at elevation will also result in a calorie-bump increase. If you’re planning a trip for a month or longer, plan to add more calories after the first couple of weeks, regardless of any change in mileage. This will help account for the loss of fat stores in your body.

Breakfast

Oatmeal: The breakfast of backpacker champions
Oatmeal: The breakfast of backpacker champions

Laura Lancaster

Don’t let your backcountry breakfast be an afterthought. If you’re hiking long miles, you’ll typically be up by dawn, packing up your gear, ready to get a jump on the day. You’ll want breakfast to be fast, nutritious, and, depending on the season, hot. This is what my husband and I typically pack when we are out on a long trip:

    • Instant espresso (such as Cafe Bustelo)
    • Instant milk (to mix into the coffee)
    • Instant oatmeal with brown sugar, freeze dried fruit, and instant milk
    • Instant grits with powdered cheddar cheese and instant milk
    • Pastries, cinnamon rolls
    • Protein or breakfast shake

Before you leave for your trip, repackage your breakfasts into individual servings. A chilly morning when you’re trying to break down camp is not when you want to be fussing with pouring three quarters of a cup of oatmeal and two tablespoons of brown sugar into your ultralight titanium mug.

Also, before you hike out for the day, consider your next meal. If you’re hiking big days, it may only take an hour or so for your appetite to work up, especially for those of us that don’t like to eat big meals when we first wake up. A protein or breakfast shake during the first mile or two of your hike can help keep your energy up until that next break, while a pastry is the perfect calorie-dense food to have on hand in case you feel your blood sugar levels plummeting.

Lunch/Snacks

Lunch in the backcountry doesn't have to be—and probably shouldn't be—too heavy. Snacks are the way to go.
Lunch in the backcountry doesn’t have to be—and probably shouldn’t be—too heavy. Snacks are the way to go.

Laura Lancaster

The longer you spend in the backcountry, the more your idea of “lunch” will change. The norms of the frontcountry no longer apply, so you’re not obligated to stop for a one hour lunch break between noon and 1 p.m., especially if you’re still a couple of miles away from that perfect vista. But at the same time, when you are hungry, it’s best to stop and eat something then, so that you can keep your energy high for the long haul. I now like to think of “lunch” as everything that I’ll eat between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

While it’s great to get some healthy foods into your backpacking snacks, this shouldn’t be your sole focus. It’s just as important to seek out food that is calorie-rich and lightweight. That’s right. I’m talking about the bane of frontcountry diets: junk food.

The longer your backcountry trip, the deeper down the rabbit hole of junk food you should go. As you hike longer and longer days, you will start to reduce your body’s fat stores and your metabolism will start to change into a fat-burning machine. This means that you can get away with eating all sorts of things on a long backpacking trip that it’s better to avoid in normal life.

So when you’re at the store, look past the typical granola or energy bars that so many hikers bring along. This may sound self-evident, but food that feels like a chore in the frontcountry isn’t going to taste any better when you’re hiking. And if you pack something that you’re not excited about eating, the odds are that you simply won’t eat it, missing out on valuable calories and adding unnecessary weight to your pack. Below is a short list of snack and lunch foods that I’ll pack for my husband and myself when we’re out on a long trip:

    • Peanut butter
    • Dried sausage
    • Wheat crackers or pita chips
    • Chips (Fritos, Tim’s Cascades, Terra, etc.)
    • Candy (Snickers, Almond Joy, Paydays, Peanut M&Ms, etc.)
    • Dried fruit, such as coconut, mango, and apples
    • Wasabi peas
    • Flavored almonds
    • Avocado
    • Cookies
    • Caffeinated crystal light
    • Chocolate covered espresso beans

Dinner

Dinnertime in Sequoia National Park
Dinnertime in Sequoia National Park

oliveogarchy

Dinner, like lunch, doesn’t have to follow the norms of the frontcountry and, in fact, is much more efficient when it doesn’t. On long trips, many hikers will end up eating dinner as early as 3 p.m. to provide extra energy through the rest of the afternoon and to avoid the dangers associated with eating their dinner at their campsite. But the purpose of dinner in a backcountry menu remains the same: a nutritious meal that will not only help your body operate on all cylinders, but also serve as a source of motivation when you’re pushing through a particularly difficult section of trail or during inclement weather.

If you’re pressed for time, the easiest way to prep your dinners is to purchase prepackaged foods. Many hikers enjoy pre-packaged dinners by Mountain House, Backpacker’s Pantry, and the like. You can also find a number of backcountry-ready meals at the grocery store, such as Kraft Mac and Cheese, Idahoan Potatoes, Lipton Pastas, and the Near East selection of couscous and other grains. If you choose to go this route, I recommend taking the time to package some extra olive oil, tuna in foil packets, and your favorite spices. This will give you the ability to either flavor these pre-packaged foods to your own tastes or add in extra calories as needed.

If you have more time at your disposal, I strongly recommend putting together your own backpacking meals. Here are a number of resources available where you can learn more about what this involves:

    • CascadeDesigns.com
    • Backpacker.com/trail-chef
    • BackpackingChef.com
    • DirtyGourmet.com

A note on packaging food for longer hikes: For a six-day backpacking trip, I’ll pop any homemade backpacking meals with potentially perishable ingredients in the freezer in the days or weeks leading up to the hike. But if you’re going out for any longer than that, consider investing either in a vacuum sealer or oxygen absorbent packets.

Packing Your Food

Vacuum-sealed is the way to go
Vacuum-sealed is the way to go

Laura Lancaster

Is there anything more irritating than stopping for your first snack break of the day, only to discover that your food bag is stuffed at the bottom of your pack? Or to find an unmarked Ziploc bag and not know if you’re looking at powdered milk or powdered potatoes? Taking a few moments before your trip to consider how packing your food can save you from headaches and hassle during your trip.

The first, and most obvious piece of advice is to label everything—especially if you are repackaging food items. Label what it is, how many calories it has, cooking prep instructions, and the date that you packaged it on.

Another strategy favored by some long-distance backpackers is to individually pack up the food for each day in a separate gallon Ziploc bag. That will prevent a situation where the only food in your food bag on the 5th day is cereal bars and jerky.

If you’re hiking in bear country, naturally you’ll want (and frequently be required) to take along a bear canister. But even if you aren’t in bear country, consider taking extra precaution to protect your food from raccoons and other small rodents. Combining an Ursack and an Opsack will significantly reduce the odds that a mouse will get into your food bag, while offering significant protection against bears for a fraction of the weight.

Sending Yourself a Resupply Box

Resupply isn't as complicated as it first seems
Resupply isn’t as complicated as it first seems

Laura Lancaster

Depending on your route and the length, you may want to consider sending yourself a resupply box. This is an excellent way to reduce the weight of your pack at the outset of a trip. Once you’ve identified a place on the trail where you can send a resupply box, spend some time researching what limitations might exist. Can you send the box USPS or only via UPS and FedEx? Is the resupply location closed on Sundays? Will they charge a cash fee to accept a resupply? If you’re basing your resupply information off of a guidebook or other online resource, call ahead to make sure that your resupply drop off point is still accepting resupply boxes.

Take care when packaging your resupply box. Like with anything else that goes through the mail, your box has the potential to be smashed, crushed, left out in the pouring rain, or stuffed into a hot and humid warehouse. Using a bucket instead of a box, or securing your food inside of a large Tupperware container, can help protect your resupply box against both the elements and the potential for rodents.

Featured image provided by Laura Lancaster

February 14, 2018
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Gaia Topo - The Map for Backpackers
Gaia GPSNew Maps

Gaia Topo – The Map for Backpackers

by Kate Dougherty September 9, 2016
written by Kate Dougherty

We’ve made Gaia Topo a default map source in Gaia GPS. It’s been out there for a while now, but today Gaia Topo is really an amazing map source. We wanted to take a moment now to tell you about the work behind this map, and summarize the big improvements we’ve been publishing through the turn of the seasons.

Mt. Rainier area

While Gaia GPS continues to offer a vast catalog of topo and other maps, we encourage you to check out Gaia Topo for your next backpacking trip. In many ways, Gaia Topo is the best global topo map, offering a functional and beautiful worldwide map with extraordinary detail at all scales, and built by a team of backpackers who relentlessly test and improve the map in a huge and ongoing effort.

Click here to view Gaia Topo live on gaiagps.com

Our Unique Take on a Global Topo

You’ll find many stylistic differences between Gaia Topo and other maps, but there are at least two areas that make Gaia Topo a unique and wonderful map source for backpacking.

View feet or meters in Gaia Topo

  • Feet or Meters, Your Choice, Worldwide – One thing we want to highlight about GaiaTopo is that it’s the only global topo map that will show you measurements in either feet or meters. Every other global hiking map – from OpenHikingMap to Mapbox Outdoors – limits you to seeing contour lines, peak measurements, and other numbers in meters only. American users will appreciate being able to work with imperial units.
  • USGS Style – In designing Gaia Topo at its 1:24K scale, we hew closely to the familiar USGS style and maximize functionality for a high-contrast, detail-packed map that you can easily read in outside lighting conditions, without being overwhelmed. With USGS maps showing their age, lacking a full road network, and covering the US only, Gaia Topo often shines as the better map. And compared to other outdoor topos like MapBox Outdoors or OpenHikingMap, Gaia Topo has an unflinching focus on actually being outside, on the trail – without allowance for glamor or website-oriented design that might hinder functionality.
Yosemite Village in Gaia Topo - Before and After

Before and after of Yosemite Village in Gaia Topo.

A Community Effort

It turns out that the Gaia GPS team, users, and the global OpenStreetMap community all contributed to this collaborative project. Gaia Topo pulls together several data sources, and OpenStreetMap.org forms its core.

OpenStreetMap is a global movement that many Gaia GPS users and team members already participate in, and you can too. Over a million people worldwide have contributed their edits to OpenStreetMap, including trails, campsites, and other data of keen interest to hikers and other outdoor adventurers.

People can contribute by recording GPS data and notes with programs like Gaia GPS, or even by tracing features in satellite imagery to add them to the map. So if you ever find trails that aren’t marked in your area, you can really go a good deed for the world by recording your travels, and adding data to the open map on OpenStreetMap.org.

On the Gaia GPS team, lead developer Jesse Crocker built the first Gaia Topo that we released last summer, and did a significant amount of work over the last six months to improve the map and roll it out across iOS, Android, and gaiagps.com. Intern Aashima Talwar and Map Specialist Kate Dougherty also spent several months refining the design. Gaia GPS developer Alex Thissen has also spent a great deal of time working on the contour line rendering for the map, as well as debugging various issues.

Jesse Crocker, Lead Developer
Jesse Crocker, Lead Developer
Aashima Talwar, Intern
Aashima Talwar, Intern
Alex Thissen, Developer
Alex Thissen, Developer
Kate Dougherty, GIS Cartographer
Kate Dougherty, GIS Cartographer

Another Year of Work Unleashed

We decided to blog about Gaia Topo now because we’ve greatly expanded work on the map and improved it in numerous ways since we initially released it about 15 months ago.

The latest release applies unique styles to different categories of trails and paths, and shows the bridges over them. It also renders many new amenities, including:

  • campsites
  • restrooms
  • drinking water fountains
  • parking lots
  • viewpoints
  • lighthouses
  • information centers
Before and after of Curry Village, Yosemite National Park in Gaia Topo.

Before and after of Curry Village, Yosemite National Park in Gaia Topo.

The map replaces generic points with intuitive icons wherever possible, and outlines national and state parks, nature reserves, and protected areas in dark green to make them easier to spot and identify. Land cover data on wetlands, meadows, scree, glaciers, beaches, bare rock, and landfills also appears at higher zoom levels.

rainier-before-after

Before and after of Mt. Rainier National Park in Gaia Topo.

Gaia Topo also includes:

  • slipways and airstrips
  • intermittent streams
  • dams
  • reservoirs
  • labels for islands and islets
  • military installations (red hatches)

You may also notice that rivers, streams, and creeks appear wider at higher zoom levels.

Before and after of the Warrenton, Oregon area in Gaia Topo.

Before and after of the Warrenton, Oregon area in Gaia Topo.

Vector Versions Too

In addition to Gaia Topo, iOS users also have access to Gaia Topo (Vector), which makes downloads smaller and rendering crisper. You can find this additional layer in the app in the More Layers Menu.

Because of the challenges associated with vectors on mobile devices, this map isn’t as beautifully rendered as the “raster” version, but it has its advantages, and it will improve over time too.

Ideas for Map Enhancements?

Do you have ideas about how to improve the map? You can post your thoughts on the new design and enhancements you’d like to see in the Gaia GPS Community Forum. If you have any other questions or feedback, you can also email support@gaiagps.com.

September 9, 2016
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Gaia GPS

Better Food to Enhance Your Next Backpacking Trip

by Ashli Baldwin October 19, 2015
written by Ashli Baldwin

photo-1414016642750-7fdd78dc33d9

Frequent hikers and backpackers know how to cook dehydrated meals, but they can get boring pretty quickly. These 5 delicious treats can launch your backcountry cooking game into the next dimension.

Cheese

Surprisingly, cheese doesn’t always have to stay at home when you hit the trail. It lasts up to 5 days in your pack in moderate climates. The harder the cheese, the longer it keeps, and the less oily it gets. While a block of cheese will do the trick, some grocery stores carry individually wrapped bite size pieces. Wax-wrapped soft cheeses such as gouda can stay bacteria free for long periods of time. High fat foods like cheese give you an energy-dense pick-me-up that keeps you going on long days when the nearest juicy cheeseburger sizzles miles away.

 Zamorano Cheese By No machine-readable author provided. P. B. Obregón assumed (based on copyright claims). [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft...), CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses...) or CC BY-SA 2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses....5-2.0-1.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

via PB Obregon

Avocado

Another delicious and high fat food for lasting energy–a perfectly ripe avocado. Added to your mac and cheese and the end of a 20-mile day, it can brighten your spirits and recharge your batteries. Just remember that by Leave No Trace standards, you still will want to pack out the heavy pit.

Peppers

Green peppers, yellow peppers, jalapeño peppers, any peppers! A fresh pepper won’t bruise or puncture easily in your pack and can last for days. One feels rebellious when adding a crunchy green pepper to your pepperoni and peanut butter tortilla.

MxJDaPQQAGf9MgAJNiLA_Peppers_Albuquerque_2013

via unslpash.com

Hot Sauce

Mmmmm, hot sauce. The perfect addition to spice up any gourmet backcountry creation. Pick up some individual packets at your local fast food joint, or fill a small reusable bottle to the brim with Frank’s Red Hot Sauce. Tuna Mac and Cheese will take on new meaning.

Eggs

Sound like a recipe for disaster? Not necessarily. Eggs can go quite a while without seeing a refrigerator, but don’t take my word for it. Boil them for a quick and easy snack, but leave the shells on until chow time for maximum preservation. Cut an egg crate in half to protect your precious nourishment and enjoy.

There you have it

Five delicious foods you can bring on the trail that will turn you from professional water boiler to gourmet chef.

Once you start thinking outside the box, you can create amazing meals that guarantee an entirely new hiking experience.

Good luck fending off your hungry hiker buddies.

IMG_20140820_192658

Photo Courtesy of: Kyle Flood

 

October 19, 2015
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