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 10 ST's DIY FOOD BARRELS (Read 8007 times)
solotripper
Inukshuk
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Posts: 8105
Location: clarkston MI
Joined: Mar 14th, 2005
Re: ST's DIY FOOD BARRELS
Reply #10 - Jan 2nd, 2016 at 10:03pm
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IF your going that route you might want to get a food pack that has a good waist-belt/sternum strap?
The difference splitting the load between shoulders and hips is very noticeable. KONDOS outdoors makes a good  pack at a reasonable price.

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I like Granite Gear and this is my food pack.

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I sent it off to KONDOS to have 2 cinch straps put on each side to snug the load tight and also allow for attaching those side pockets I talked about. Cost was very reasonable and well worth it.
  
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Gavia
Inukshuk
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Re: ST's DIY FOOD BARRELS
Reply #11 - Mar 8th, 2016 at 12:27am
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I used to hang until I helped someone do tracking with dogs.  I learned some interesting things that figure into my choice of stash spots.

Scent is carried in moist air, which is why very dry air is hard for dogs to track in.  As the air cools, it becomes more humid and sinks.  So in the evening, low spots have the most moisture - and the strongest scents - but they're also the places where the heavier air settles.  This means that scents move toward low spots, rather than away from them.

I stash my food pack in the lowest places I can find and easily reach, and have some sort of visual barrier like a rock wall or a bunch of overhanging bushes.  These places are usually along shorelines.

My dog tells me whether my food pack is scent-proof.  I leave it open just a tad and let him walk by it.  He usually shows quite a bit of interest.  I close it up and he ignores it.  That's good enough for me.

My food pack includes a Bear Vault (large size) and several different sized OP sacks, which are truly Odor Proof.  It all goes into a dry bag-type pack which I wipe down with lake water before stashing.

Never again will the rock at the end of the hanging rope boomerang back at me!
  
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