one caution do not count on fish too many meals if the bite is off or something happens you do not want to run out of food.
Welcome WW, pay little heed to the overly cautious fishinbuddy. A 4-day fast in the wilderness sharpens the fishing skills.
Ingfisher, I don't mind a brief fast...it is the springer spaniel who is our canoe buddy that objects. Last time we were there, with diligence found fish every day. Just trolling a line while we travelled usually picked up a walleye for supper.
Posted by: Magicpaddler Posted on: Feb 4th, 2007 at 8:29pm
FB Take that lumped up down sleeping bag put it in the dryer (No heat) with 2 or 3 pair of tennis shoes and let it tumble for an hour. Good as new/ MagicPaddler
Nice thought but here are the details. After she washed it with regular laundry detergant, she could not find any tennis balls (what I usually use) so she used some bolts I had around. She put them in the bag and then put two bags at once in the dryer. One bag is shot! with the nylon extremely thin and broken zipper. The other was pulled out after a bit and hung and I rescued it before she put it back in. I am going to keep the old one and see if I can figure out how to recover the down and use it in something else. She was trying to help but when she showed me the evidence and saw the look on my face, she felt sooooo bad I could not even start to get mad.
Posted by: Magicpaddler Posted on: Feb 3rd, 2007 at 6:01pm
FB Take that lumped up down sleeping bag put it in the dryer (No heat) with 2 or 3 pair of tennis shoes and let it tumble for an hour. Good as new/ MagicPaddler
Posted by: Kingfisher Posted on: Feb 3rd, 2007 at 2:57pm
Buying new gear is a great way to satisfy the adventure needs during hard water season. I also just got a new down bag, after a friend decided to help and laundry my old one. She will never 'help' like that again, and you really cannot get mad because she really wanted to help. I also have my sights on a new tent before our Quetico trip. WW it sounds as if you have a full schedule, one caution do not count on fish too many meals if the bite is off or something happens you do not want to run out of food.
Posted by: Jimbo Posted on: Feb 3rd, 2007 at 2:38am
Posted by: Wildernesswendy Posted on: Feb 3rd, 2007 at 1:33am
Today was THE DAY to start planning for our 2007 Quetico trip; last year's 18 days whetted our appetites for more. This year I plan the route, my husband plans the food, and having the spreadsheets for equipment, food, and way-points is making it so much easier. The only problem is that we are also a year older! This year, I refuse to carry the fishfinder, the extra pot, and other miscellaneous items, and have been able to reduce the load by 12 lbs. We also invested in the best light-weight down filled bags that money can buy, and that not only reduces the weight, it reduces the volume. From our last year's experience, we also know that we can count on more fish meals. Our schedule for the summer will be awesome; running the rivers here in Alberta with the canoe club in June; hiking the Canadian Rockies in July, the Quetico trip in August, and then to Colorado to fish and hike in September. I am armed with maps, Google Earth, and my GPS; the first step of planning the route was finished today, and now I start plotting the way-points with the GPS. Wish us luck!
Posted by: Magicpaddler Posted on: Nov 26th, 2006 at 7:20pm
FB, your lucky to have a wife like that I'm a dedicated solo paddler BUT if i ever change my mind on that and trip tandem, i would like it to be with a women who would welcome the challenges of a paddling trip! that time of year with the real possibilities of cold weather at night, i can't think of a better way to stay warm than a SHARED sleeping bag