Outdoors Information

Stay Warm - A Backpacking Skill


Stay warm or die. That's what it comes down to at the extremes. More people die in the wilderness of exposure than from any other cause. Staying warm, of course, also means more comfort, and for backpackers, it can mean going even lighter, without more risk.

Staying warm in the wilderness is about proper gear and good skills. Proper gear means clothing and equipment suited to the enviroment you're in. This is a subject in itself, worth studying if you spend much time backpacking. With better materials and designs, the newest clothing and equipment saves lives. It is skills, however, that make the biggest difference.

How To Stay Warm - Tips and Skills

- Set up camp in the right places. Hilltops are windy and cold, and cold air also fills valleys at night. Level ground somewhere in between, out of the wind, is best.

- Wear clothes to bed. Shake and fluff them up to make them insulate better. Some recommend against sleeping in clothes, but I've tried it both ways many times, and it's always warmer with clothes on.

- Wear a hat. This may be equal to a pound of insulation in your sleeping bag. A lot of heat is lost through an uncovered head.

- Go to bed dry. Stay up until your clothes have dried, or change into dry clothes. On a warm, dry night, however, you can put damp clothes on your sleeping bag to dry them with body heat. You may need warm, dry clothes the next night (Thinking ahead is a great wilderness skill).

- Breath into your sleeping bag. Only do this in a dry climate, or if you're sure it's your last night out. You'll get damp, but you should dry quickly from hiking in the morning.

- Take a water-bottle full of hot water to bed with you. This is easier and safer than heating rocks and placing them around you.

- Make a pine-needle mattress. Dead leaves and dry grass work too. Scatter the leaves in the morning, so they won't smother the plants underneath. I've slept warmly below freezing, with no sleeping bag, in a pile of dry grass collected from a frozen swamp.

- You can breath into your sleeping bag if you're really cold. You should only do this in a dry climate, or if you're sure it's your last night out. You'll get damp, but you should dry quickly from hiking in the morning.

- Fill a water bottle with hot water, and take it to bed with you. This is easier and safer than heating rocks and placing them around you.

- Adjust your clothing as you hike. Remove and add clothes as necessary to stay warm without sweating. Sweat can cause you to lose heat rapidly when you stop.

- Stay dry. On a cold day, wet and hot can become hypothermia soon after you stop moving those muscles. On a hot day, however, wear wet clothing to dry it out in preparation for a possibly cold night.

- Conserve your energy. It's tough for your body to keep itself warm with no energy reserves. You may also need that energy to gather firewood or hike to the car to escape a blizzard. Finally, you'll make better decisions if you aren't tired, and you'll remember how to stay warm.

This is a sampling of wilderness skills and knowledge. There are many more things to learn about how to stay warm. In fact, I've left out one of the most important, because it deserves its own artcle: how to start a fire in any conditions.

Steve Gillman is a long-time advocate of lightweight backpacking. His tips, photos and stories can be found at The Ultralight Backpacking Site: http://www.The-Ultralight-Site.com


MORE RESOURCES:

Outdoors calendar
Dallas Morning News, TX - 12 hours ago
972-222-2207 or www.mediabass.com SATURDAY, JULY 26 – JC Outdoors' Lake Fork Nights Open Bass Tournament, Lake Fork, 7:30 pm-1:30 am $130. ...
Weigh-in station vital to fish survival Times Record News
all 17 news articles


Inside the outdoors
Detroit Free Press, United States - 6 hours ago
If you're going to be in northern Michigan this weekend, it's a great chance to see the country's longest nonstop canoe race, the 120-mile Weyerhauser Au ...


Outdoors: Power of place; wilderness offers cleansing treks to ...
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - 6 hours ago
(07-23) 20:32 PDT -- Regardless of why we venture into the wild, we all are in search of the same thing: what I call the power of place. ...


CPP Outdoors Manifesto
Peace fm Online, Ghana - 1 hour ago
The Convention People's Party on Tuesday adopted a vision of urgency towards national development as the main thrust of its strategy for winning Election ...


City revises ordinance on smoking outdoors
Ventura County Star, CA - 5 hours ago
The council voted 4-1 to revise a recently adopted outdoor smoking ordinance to exclude playing areas at the golf course. The revision changes the ...


Outdoors Report: Line on chinook season blurred
Seattle Post Intelligencer - 8 hours ago
By GREG JOHNSTON The Puget Sound chinook season is not exactly sizzling like the way a big king salmon rips line off a reel, and fishing in the ocean isn't ...


OUTDOORS REPORT Reds, trout found at Calcasieu Lake
Houston Chronicle, United States - 11 hours ago
Buddy Oakes of Hackberry Rod and Gun said fishing for trout and reds has been solid on live bait and plastics. The Night Stalker has been taking easy limits ...


Some hikes left in outdoors series
IdahoStatesman.com, ID - 1 hour ago
Trinity Lakes, Friday and Saturday: The Trinity Lakes and Rainbow Lakes area is north of Mountain Home between the Middle and South forks of the Boise River ...


Vancouver smoking ban billows to great outdoors
Globe and Mail, Canada - Jul 23, 2008
VANCOUVER -- With hookah parlours under control, anti-smoking regulations in Vancouver are being taken to the great outdoors, where future bans could ...


Outdoors: Indian River Sheriff's tourney benefits charity fund
TCPalm, FL - 7 hours ago
VERO BEACH — The Indian River County Sheriff's Office invites anglers to fish its first inshore tournament with 100 percent of the proceeds to benefit a ...

Outdoors - Google News

home | site map
© 2006