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I always go with 2 packs - actually one is a duffel bag, and the other is 2950 cu. in. "G" Pack (duffel is about 3000 cu in I'd guess). For portaging, I put on the pack and then just toss the duffel atop the pack and balance it there using one hand. In a solo canoe, trim is more of an issue than when paddling a tandem, in that you need a pack in front and back to get the trim right, and to be able to adjust for headwind or tailwind if needed. The G pack is my food pack, with rain gear, a water bottle and some odds and ends to start out with, and all the camping stuff is in the duffel. As the food gets eaten, I shift gear to more or less keep the weight equal.
I always take the gear over in 2 loads - the 2 packs first, so I can scout the portage trail for blowdowns that may need to be sawn, or to see where the go-around is, and to spot any false trails to avoid, and when I get to the far end, to pick the spot I want to drop the boat at. That is a lot better than carrying the boat first, and that way I take the heaviest load over first. Fishing pole and small fanny pack with lunch and water is attached to the boat - I have water in the food pack as well, so that way I can have a drink at either end of the trail. I hand carry a paddle on each trip, to use as a hiking stick for balance, and the pfd is just hooked around a rear thwart.
I pack as light as or lighter than anyone, but to single trip a portage I'd have to carry at least 95# on the first day - I tried that once and my knees were crying and telling me never again. That is with a normal food load for 12 or 14 days. I weigh in a fat 150 now, so 95# would be something like 65% of my body weight - old backpacking rule of thumb was that you could carry 1/3 of body weight comfortably, not twice that.
by making two trips across a portage, I enjoy the trail more, especially when hiking back empty for the second load
I suppose that you could get away with one giant pack if you use a tandem and shove it to the far end, or one giant and one medium if you cram all your camera and fishing gear in somewhere. Maybe just a light duffel bag for your food that you could either hand carry or toss atop the big bag for the portage.
to me, its a question of how much weight you want to carry on any given trip across (not volume), not how many trips you make - if you have too much weight to carry everything in 2 trips, then no option other than to do it in 3 carries. If the weight isn't the issue, then get bigger packs and load everything into 2 of them. That is one thing I like about a backpack (vs a traditional canoe pack) - mine has netting pouches on the outside that I make use of to keep my rain gear in, and it has a top pouch that holds a lot of little incidentals like bug dope, saw and sun screen where I can get at them easily - I don't have to open a pack to get the rain gear, just grab it.
with 3 packs, I don't see a practical way to carry everything in 2 carries - sure, I've seen people struggling across portages with huge packs on front and back, but to me, that's just asking for trouble when you can't see where to put your feet, and have really awkward balance. not something I'd try. I guess if you could put all of the lightest stuff in one big pack and carry that and the boat on one carry, you could maybe get the rest across in a second load.
a lot of odds and ends can be carried on the boat if you have some sort of thwart bag or rig something like that
one thing I forgot to mention, is that I have my food so well wrapped up in layers of plastic bags that I don't worry about food smell getting on the gear I transfer from the duffel to the food pack - it is usually stuff like the tarp, water filter, spare shoes, 1st aid kit, and repair kit that I move form the duffel as the food gets eaten.
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