5/8/2011 10:00:24 PM
Nerdchick is a trail snob!
5/8/2011 10:30:46 PM
Just finished up the Art Loeb. Started 8:30am Friday and ended 3pm on Sunday. It was ridiculously rough and very challenging...but very worth it! Def not for beginners, but I think anyone with some Trail experiences will LOVE this!There were a few sketchy areas that weren't posted well on the NG Map...so if anyone plans on going, holler at me and I'll help you out![Edited on May 8, 2011 at 11:33 PM. Reason : ..][Edited on May 8, 2011 at 11:34 PM. Reason : ..]
5/8/2011 11:28:21 PM
^ did you do the whole trail or just a particular section of it?also, i love the art loeb
5/9/2011 6:18:18 AM
Limited experience? I'm the one that's posting from experience, not from looking up a bunch of numbers on the Internet. In my experience, a 4oz isobutane can make about 10 meals. Are you disputing this? And in my experience, 7oz of alcohol can easily make about 10 meals (depending on the stove of course). Seems like a bum deal for alcohol, right! BUT ...Mistake #1: in your weight calculations, you're only counting only fuel weight and totally ignoring the weight of the fuel container and stove. By your reasoning we should all carry a propane grill (propane: 21,000 btu/lb) because of the outstanding energy to weight ratio! So let's compare total weight, not just fuel. A soda bottle can be used to carry alcohol, but isobutane containers are metal. An 8 fluid oz container actually weighs 12oz. And if you have to carry multiple containers (which happens occasionally on a thru hike) you can double that. Now stoves: an MSR Pocket Rocket weighs 3oz, and many weigh more like Jetboil, etc. Don't forget to add in the plastic carrying case that most people keep their stoves in. My alcohol stove weighs less than 1/2 oz. I also use a wind screen and wire pot stand that combined weigh about 1/2 oz. I keep everything inside the pot so no need for an extra case.Sure, those differences are not that much. But the energy/weight advantage of isobutane is easily made up for by the equipment weight advantage of alcohol.Mistake #2: Cost. Are you seriously trumpeting a 3 cent per pint difference? Especially since prices of all fuels fluctuate immensely based on location. Some hostels like to to gouge hikers on the cannister, knowing they're the only place in town that sells them. But Advance Auto Parts everywhere charge $2/bottle for HEET.Mistake #3: alcohol stoves do have a heat adjustment option, I don't have one myself but some people make a "simmer ring" that blocks off some of the flame to lower the heat.Mistake #4: you make a bunch of wrong claims that I dispute, and that makes ME the snob? you're just a snob about carrying heavy stuff. ]
5/9/2011 8:50:57 AM
Did the whole thing...my ass and back can attest to this. LOVE IT! I had done a section of black balsam a year ago, decided to open up my summer season with something in NC.
5/9/2011 9:26:43 AM
the Art Loeb's awesome. Congrats on that hike!
5/9/2011 10:03:07 AM
^^^ Also I forgot to mention the initial cost difference! at quagmire's inflated estimate of 3 cents / pint advantage, it would take 1,000 dinners to make up the $30 cost of a Pocket Rocket vs $0 for a pepsi can stove.
5/9/2011 10:27:15 AM
5/9/2011 10:44:59 AM
You all are splitting hairs.If you're talking about thru-hiking, alcohol/HEET is by far the best method because of the constraints around where you stop, how many places carry the fuel, the amount of fuel you have to carry for days and weeks at a time with variable distances. Weight and bulk is very important to thru-hikers. The other thing is that most thru-hikers only hike the AT March-November (yes, I know some people do it over the winter too) but I'm just saying for most of the conditions it's the easiest, cheapest and most convenient option.If you're talking about a fixed distance backpacking trip, I'd take my JetBoil any day. It can handle almost any outside temperature, high-winds, it's light-weight, faster boil times, better for groups, cost is less of an issue, and if it's fixed distance I know exactly how much fuel to take, and the canisters can be flattened after use. It's a no-brainer.Also moving parts argument only applies to white fuel/unleaded pump based stoves... Isobutane / Propane canisters are no pump, you turn a valve and light, no real issues, regarding 'what if a part breaks'.[Edited on May 9, 2011 at 11:26 AM. Reason : .]
5/9/2011 11:16:17 AM
you guys are arguing the wrong points here. If he uses a canister stove how is he going to burn a circle into every picnic table and shelter on the AT?
5/9/2011 11:20:12 AM
but if you drop the alcohol stove, you can burn the entire floor!
5/9/2011 11:23:38 AM
5/9/2011 11:27:40 AM
exactly, if you're going on a 3 day trip you don't care as much about weight/bulk and the quick boil is what you want. Light weight has it's place and I don't use it all the time. shoot when I worked for the Forest Service I once hauled (in addition to my normal gear) 2 packs of Newman-O's, ice cream bars packed in dry ice, and a game of Trivial Pursuit up 1,500 ft of elevation to our base camp but quagmire's still wrong in his slanderous posts about alcohol.
5/9/2011 11:38:45 AM
5/9/2011 12:04:18 PM
5/9/2011 12:15:13 PM
^ well you'll see, he goes on to plot out the weight vs number of days, and that for trips of less than 13 days the alcohol is lighter (which is what I've said all along). I don't know about quagmire, but I've never gone out for 13 days without a resupply, and most thru hikers don't do that either
5/9/2011 12:17:07 PM
seriously though, how can you get your alcohol stove up to 500° so you can properly achieve the Maillard reaction to brown your steak? not to mention enough room to cook kabobs?this is what i roll with...sure it's 29lbs, but it provides 8500 BTUs and 129 square-inches! if you're on the trail and something breaks, no worries, Weber will send out a replacement for you!
5/9/2011 12:55:07 PM
5/9/2011 2:27:04 PM
wait, do you lose all your trail-cred if you show up to the AT shelter with anything but an alcohol tin-can stove?
5/9/2011 2:41:43 PM
5/9/2011 2:43:24 PM
5/9/2011 3:01:07 PM
5/9/2011 4:06:43 PM
I done caused a ruckus up in here. I am truly sorry. On a lighter note, Trail Days is this coming weekend in Damascus. Anyone else planning on going?
5/9/2011 4:15:38 PM
5/9/2011 5:30:32 PM
^ What she said. I don't think I've seen a thru-hiker carry a whisperlight in well over 10 years. My wife and I share an alcohol stove, but I've seen other couples using something any number of isobutane stoves. Honestly, we cook on fire at least half the time now, and probably would if we were to do another thru-hike sometime. It's at least, if not outright easier, to find denatured alcohol/HEET than any other fuel in a trail town these days. YMMV, rock on, whatever floats your boat...
5/9/2011 8:16:28 PM
too many AT elitists
5/9/2011 9:01:37 PM
5/9/2011 9:21:50 PM
whatever, quagmire's the one being judgmental. He won't shut up about how I'm a crazy-eyed cult member cause I would dare to make my own gear instead of letting a Chinese factory do it like any sane American would.I'm all about hike your own hike! If quagmire wants to chop down trees with his hatchet then go for it. But he's been telling lies ... and that I can't stand for!! He's been mis-representing alcohol stoves as heavier and more expensive, when that's clearly not the case. Also after complaining about the cost of alcohol he then went on to brag about how he's "not poor" and doesn't actually care about cost.
5/9/2011 9:35:34 PM
^^ wow for someone who doesn't care you sure did write a lot of dissertations on the subjecthow do you not understand this ... for a trip with < 20 meals, a whisperlite weighs MORE because you have to carry the heavier stove and bottle!!! how do you not understand this ... who cares about BTU's if you're lugging a 12oz stove that's required to obtain those BTU's. ]
5/9/2011 9:38:18 PM
5/9/2011 9:39:27 PM
we use a 2.7oz coleman F1 ultralight stove. got it for around $20 a couple of years ago. works really well, weighs almost nothing. iirc though, you can only use those fuel canisters like the one in the pic. i think.[Edited on May 9, 2011 at 10:06 PM. Reason : ]
5/9/2011 10:05:23 PM
^ yeah, that's isobutane...and that looks very similar to the MSR pocket rocket (i got mine for $20, too...they go on sale for $20 all the time at REI)
5/9/2011 10:08:14 PM
we got this at a camp store here in rocky mount that was going out of business. we bought a shit ton of those little fuel cubes and a bunch of random other crap
5/9/2011 10:09:21 PM
so you're admitting that your beloved gasoline, although it has more energy, is heavier? you want science, fine. if you can find anyone other than yourself who believes that gasoline is the best fuel then let me know.http://www.howardjohnson.name/Backpacking/Stove/Stove_notes.htm(near the top of this page are experiments done with 0.5-0.6 oz of fuel in a can stove. All but one were able to bring 2 pints to a rolling boil on this much fuel)here's the cannister data
5/9/2011 10:19:31 PM
In related minimalist news, I saw a guy hiking barefoot with a large pack on. Is this becoming common?
5/9/2011 10:27:42 PM
PPS ... I just checked MSR's website and according to them, 8oz of fuel can boil 16 liters (33 pints)http://cascadedesigns.com/msr/stoves/fast-and-light-stoves/pocketrocket/productSo a 4oz container should be able to boil 16 pints rather than the 14 found above ... probably due to the differences in efficiency at home. Either way, a total 12.5 oz alcohol system can easily match a 16 pint boil. If yours can't, then maybe it's cause your factory made stove doesn't work as well?
5/9/2011 10:42:45 PM
^^ i saw a guy doing that, too, but he seemed to be in a hurry and so were we, so i didn't get to talk to himwhen i lived near lake lynn, i used to walk my dog barefoot around the lake every day...for a while there, my soles were thick enough that i could walk on gravel comfortablyi don't know that i'd ever give up footwear altogether, though...i wear my chaco sandals a lot, but i got them a size bigger for toe protection...i've never owned a pair of boots for ankle stabilization, but that's about as minimalist as i'm going to get
5/10/2011 6:52:14 AM
OK I'll try to make it simple since quagmire just wants to insult me and doesn't actually care about the facts. Let's say it's cold/windy out. This guy uses 1oz to boil two cups on a 28F/windy day. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lphULfNwpN0There's a cold 5 day trip, using a thru hiker scenario of one guy, one stove. the alcohol user carries a dry weight of 3.5 oz (including stove, fuel bottle, pot stand, and wind screen) with a fuel weight of 5oz. That's 8.5 oz total. The MSR Pocket Rocket with a 4oz cannister has a total weight of 12.0 oz (that's with the total cannister weight, stove, and carrying case). Please explain how the alcohol user is carrying more weight. Of course the Pocket Rocket can make twice as many meals with that fuel but who cares ... you're out for 5 days, you only need to boil 5 pints! If you can't explain this then I guess I'm right???
5/10/2011 9:14:06 AM
^ i think he is just trying to move on in the conversation. i think we are all tired of hearing about alcohol stoves
5/10/2011 9:17:29 AM
yes, we are all tired. just please drop it.
5/10/2011 9:53:56 AM
anyone ever done mt. mitchell to celo knob (http://www.trimbleoutdoors.com/ViewTrip/714040) or woody ridge to mt. mitchell (http://www.trimbleoutdoors.com/ViewTrip/716350)?
5/10/2011 10:05:33 AM
Looks like a better hike than my last one at Mt. Mitchell... <rant>I hiked down to the Commissary Ridge Campground (on the Mountains-To-Sea Trail) and it was a shit hole, it was during the summer and we got there and found it's a group campsite combined with horse camping and it was covered in horse shit, contaminated water and about a trillion gnats, mosquitoes, and No-see-ums. It was the only time I turned around and hiked back to my car because I refused to camp there... oh and my dog rolled around in that shit. Worst camping experience of my life.</rant>The ridge hike does look good though.
5/10/2011 10:56:28 AM
^^^ yeah I've also had enough of his petty personal attacks. glad this is over! ]
5/10/2011 4:44:29 PM
anybody have a favorite backpacking route around the Greyson Highlands area? heading out there Monday for a couple nights, weather looks like it'll suck, but should be awesome regardless
5/14/2011 11:27:46 PM
^ i've done this one a couple of times in the past 5-6 years and love ithttp://www.trimbleoutdoors.com/ViewTrip/289476this was a couple of years ago when it decided to sleet the entire time
5/15/2011 8:37:24 AM
NICE....I want to head to the Highlands for July 4th long weekend...any favorite spots I should hit up?
5/15/2011 11:11:09 AM
I am trying to figure out which compression sack size to use for the following two sleeping bags. Since they are both down I know I should be able to get them pretty small. Any help in this regard will be super helpful. Thanks! Summer bag:http://www.rei.com/product/778156/rei-halo-40-sleeping-bagWinter bag:http://www.rei.com/product/778167/rei-halo-10-sleeping-bag-womens (Yes, I know this is a women's bag. Keeping in mind that I got the long version. It has more insulation then the men's bag.)These are the compression sacks that I am looking at. I just need to know which size would work best.http://www.prolitegear.com/granite_gear_air_compressor_color.htmlAlso, the chica and I are looking to go to Grandfather Mtn in two weekends. I've never been up there and although she has, she doesn't remember anywhere nearby to camp. Does anyone have any experience or know of any places to set up shop overnight somewhere around there?[Edited on May 19, 2011 at 3:49 PM. Reason : .]
5/19/2011 3:42:42 PM
Isn't two weekends memorial day?I imagine its gonna be crowded
5/19/2011 3:56:25 PM
^^ just buy one medium and one large bag from REI, try them out and take back the one you don't need. My 35 degree synthetic bag fits fine in the medium and my tent fits fine in the large. The medium compresses down to the size of a football, the large compresses down to the size of a soccer ball
5/19/2011 4:02:56 PM