Boys Backpacking Trip 2010: El Norte
we have intentions of heading North this year.  Vermont, New Hampshire, northern NY, somewhere like that

on 2009: 
"We were never lost, we just couldn't find the trail sometimes." - E.G.

 

Backpacking 2010 Trip
At this point , the trip is one of three candidate trails listed below


Weekend of  October 8, 9, 10, 2010      Friday | Saturday | Sunday

 New Moon is October 7th.  dark evenings, no moonlight.

the 46 Adirondacks High Peaks:  stats  Click Here


Candidates:  Adirondack Park:  Five Mountain Loop
                   
                              Chuck Keiper Trail, PA            the best write-up  link here
                                                                                                another link here 
                           
                            Adirondacks:  Lower Range


Other considered trails for 2010:
              Adirondack Park:  Panther Gorge & Mt. Marcy              The Long Trail, VT:   hitting 15-20 miles of the 265 mile trail           Adirondack Park:  High Peaks Region

The Trip:  


wildlife:  deer, porcupine, turkey, raccoon, trout, opossum, grouse, bobcat, black bear, Peregrine Falcon, rattlesnake, pheasant, chipmunk

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Significant features:  

significant features of the trail will be showcased once a trail is picked.


Participants

Trail Details

Trip Details

Equipment and Food

Trail Hazards and Dangers

Participants

The Crew:     We potentially have 10 backpackers.  Nobody has cancelled at this point.  


Eric
confirmed - IN

Andy
confirmed - IN

Matt
confirmed - IN

Brian
confirmed - IN


Joe
confirmed - IN

Jesse

Jason

Brent
confirmed - IN

Brett
confirmed - IN
 

Anthony
confirmed - IN
 
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Trail Details

Trail name: 

Stats:
xxx mile loop
starting elevation:  x00'
highest elevation:  xx0'
lowest elevation:    xxx0'
1st campsite: along blah blah
2nd campsite: ridgeline blah blah


quick summary 


more summary


Details of Regional Forest - to be announced

get lost and die
*************
details on how to do this

Flora and Fauna
*************
look at the pretty flowers

 Local Wildlife
*************
Pick up that bear cub and we'll take a picture


 Get your equipment now!  E.G.'s Trail Checklist     last updated Tues 9-16-08


Boys' Backpacking Trip Details


Eric's Requirements:

-  must purchase and break-in your own hard-sole hiking boots prior to trip.  approx $100-$160 and subject to inspection before the trip. 
-  unnecessarily large bonfires at night
-  be in good enough shape to keep up.  This trip is incentive for me to reduce my beer gut.
-  no cell phones for 3 days.  they stay in the car.  No reception, anyway.  


Extra Details:

- lightweight backpacking stove will provide boiling water.  Actual cooking on the stove maintaining a boil requires extra fuel.  Group consensus to carry extra fuel?  Fine by me. 
- October in the mountains can get cold at night, avg low there is 41 degrees F.  Either a warm tent or a warm sleeping bag suggested.  No cuddling.
- S'mores = pain and ridicule, possibly abandonment.  Save it to share with the women and children.  
- B.Y.O.B.
- consider the possibility of rain at night and/or two days of travel.  Pack accordingly.
- in relation to rain, BRING A WATERPROOF BACKPACK COVER.
- trail is carry-in, carry-out.  We hike all trash off of the trail.  Burn any natural materials at campfire.
- black bears can run 35 m.p.h. for 10 miles at a stretch, and they easily climb trees.  The fattest guy will be assigned to carry the food.



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Equipment and Food

                         ..::: right-click here and choose 'save target as' to copy the master item checklist  :::...
 

Preparations:
 

Major equipment to start trying to borrow or to buy:

P  
hiking boots

P
  
1- or 2-person tents

P 
sleeping bag, rated to either 40 degree F or 20 degree F. 

P
  hiking backpack, minimum 3000 cubic inches.  Internal frame is 98% of current market these days, while older external frame packs are also fine. 

Other equipment to accrue:

P
Food
    Over the years I've found the easiest and most filling meals on the trail are the 20 oz variety of Mountain House brand foods.  I put together an online order for everyone about a month before the trip every year.  You can't go wrong with beef jerky, either.  It's almost required.
Regardless, everyone is encouraged to bring exactly what they want to eat.


P
Clothing suggestions
    -  backpacking / hiking socks recommended
    -  rain cover of some type.  I just bring a thin rain jacket and a pack cover.
    -  pair of sandals or alternate shoes for campsite.  They can be used for water crossings, too.
    -  this is a prime chance to reduce the weight of your pack.  think light.


P 
Rain Gear - for the backpack and for the hiker  -   for an October hike, it's worth mentioning twice

P
 
Disposable or Digital camera

P 
spirited drink    [click here]

P 
flashlight or other light source

P 
water bottles.  Yes, don't forget water bottles.
 

Q
  
We DON'T need:
    -  anything with a trigger                
 

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                                                   List of fatal bear attacks in North America by decade
                                                                                        Click Here


           

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Trail Dangers and Hazards
just make sure you're aware of these

Rattlesnakes

Rattlesnake bites are rarely fatal.  IF we see one, and IF we don't hear the rattle, and IF we get too close, and IF it strikes, and IF it's not a dry bite, what to do
Pa. DCNR Dept info on Timber Rattlesnakes. 

PDF Brochure: "Rattlesnakes in Pennsylvania State Forests" <-- right-click,  choose "save target as.."



                      
Relax, this rattlesnake was in Texas

Copperheads

The Copperhead is the most common venomous snake found in the eastern US. It is also known by the name "Highland Moccasin." As a species, it belongs to the genus "Agkistrodon" which also includes the Cottonmouth, also known as the "Water Moccasin".

Copperheads are usually colorful and strikingly patterned snakes. They derive their name from the copper-like coloring of the head. The background color of the back and sides is tan to pinkish. There are darker, chestnut colored bands across the back and sides. Each band is of varying width, often described as hour-glass shaped. Newborn Copperheads are colored and patterned like adults, excepting the last inch of so of the tail which will be a bright, sulfur yellow color.
Adults are usually in the range of 24 to 36 inches in length, although specimens of greater than 42 inches are not rare. They give live birth to young. Copperheads eat small rodents, birds, lizards, snakes, amphibians, and insects.

Copperheads are venomous, pit vipers. Copperheads account for more cases of venomous snake bite than any of our other species. Fortunately, their venom is the least toxic of our species. Bites from Copperheads are very seldom fatal; however, a bite may still produce serious consequences.

Copperheads can be found in most all habitats, although they often prefer to be near streams and other waterways. They may be found on hilltops or lowlands. It is not unusual for Copperheads to be found in forested or undeveloped areas within and near suburban developments. The Copperhead is one of the most successful of our larger snake species. It is usually not difficult to find a Copperhead crossing a road on a warm summer night. Because of their habit of freezing at the approach of danger, many are killed by vehicle traffic.

Copperheads prefer habitats with lots of vines, vegetation and/or debris. Their coloration and patterning is very effective for camouflage in dead leaves on the forest floor. Copperheads rely upon camouflage and cover for safety. When danger is perceived, Copperheads will usually freeze in place and remain motionless for the threat to pass. This strategy works well in their natural habitat. Unless a person steps on them, grasps them, or otherwise comes very, very close to them, Copperheads will not usually bite. However, the bite will be readily used as a last defense. An agitated Copperhead will vibrate its tail rapidly. The relative abundance of Copperheads and their occurrences near human habitations is the reason bites from Copperheads are at the top of venomous snake bite statistics in the eastern US.


Coottonmouth a
.k.a. Water Moccasin --- Cottonmouth territory extends from the South to lower Virginia and lower W. Virginia

It is found throughout Florida, with a range extending north to Virginia and west to Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas. Its habitat encompasses wetlands and waterways, such as streams, springs, rivers, lakes, ponds, marshes, swamps, sloughs, reservoirs, retention pools, canals, and even roadside ditches. Occasionally it can be found rather far from the water, and has been found in trees and bushes. Cottonmouths feed primarily on fish, frogs, mice, rats, and other small mammals.

Often, cottonmouths are confused with water snakes, non-poisonous snakes who share the same habitats. These harmless water snakes are often killed out of fear and ignorance. Actually, cottonmouths are also often killed for the same reasons. Except for self defense or positive identification in the case of snakebite, it is best to leave all snakes alone. Snakes help keep the environment in balance. For instance, a shortage of snakes means an increase in the mice and rat population, which brings on epidemics of disease often fatal for humans. Also, picking up or attempting to kill a snake can be one sure way of being bitten.

Found in the eastern United States from extreme southeastern Virginia, south through the Florida peninsula and west to Arkansas, southeastern Kansas, eastern and southern Oklahoma, and eastern and central Texas. A few records exist of the species being found along the Rio Grande in Texas, but these are thought to represent disjunct populations, now possibly extirpated. The type locality given is "Carolina," although Schmidt (1953) proposed that this be restricted to the area around Charleston, South Carolina.[1]

Campbell and Lamar (2004) mentions this species as being found in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, eastern Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, and Virginia.[4] Maps provided by Campbell and Lamar (2004) and Wright and Wright (1957) also indicate its presence in eastern Tennessee and extreme southeastern Nebraska.[4][2]

In Georgia it is found in the southern half of the state up to a few kilometers north of the fall line with few exceptions. Its range also includes the Ohio River Valley as far north as southern Illinois, and it inhabits many barrier islands off the coasts of the states where it is found.

Black Bears

** In 2008, on Boys Backpacking Trip, we saw a young black bear.  It was walking across the road as we drove through World's End.  Mama bear might have been close by; bear looked about 1 year old.  **

East Coast forests are habitat for black bears. Although they appear cute and cuddly like a teddy bear, black bears are wild animals.

A black bear can scramble up a tree like a raccoon and sprint as fast as a race horse. Bears use their claws to tear apart rotting logs to find food, and those claws also work well to open garbage cans and coolers. The size and strength of a black bear is astonishing.

Black bears have poor eyesight and fair hearing, but an excellent sense of smell. Aromatic scents coming from your food can attract a curious and hungry bear from a great distance.

Store all food items inside a vehicle. At primitive, walk-in campsites, suspend food between two trees, ten feet in the air and three feet from either tree.

Black bears normally avoid people, but bears dependent on eating human food can become slightly aggressive when people get between them and food.

If you come in contact with a black bear, try chasing it away by making loud noises like yelling, honking a car horn or banging a pot. Notify a park employee if you have difficulties with bears.

Never approach a bear and be especially wary of mother bears and cubs.

Ursus americanus 

     The black bear ranges across forested Canada from Newfoundland to British Columbia as well as much of the United States. A solitary animal most of the year, they pair up briefly during the mating season. Cubs remain with their mother for about a year, which prevents them from being killed by the adult males. 
     Black bears swim well and often climb trees to feed on buds and fruit. They have a keen sense of smell, acute hearing, but poor eyesight. They can be seen at any hour of the day, but are most active at night. When very young, the cubs cry when afraid and hum when contented. 
     Black bears are omnivorous; their diet consists of about 75 percent vegetable matter, 15 percent carrion, and 10 percent insects and small mammals. Their love for honey is well known, and sweet, ripe corn in autumn is also a favorite.




Hypothermia



Gravity



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Rules:
unfortunately, I needed to post rules last year.  I don't intend on adding any more in 2010.

Rule #1:  No couples.  This includes your wife, fiancée, or girlfriend.  Nobody wants to see that.   Unless you bring your wife AND girlfriend.  That would be a train wreck worth watching.

Rule #2:  Everyone carries their own personal equipment. 

Rule #3:  Group needs always come ahead of Individual needs unless a bona fide emergency occurs.

Rule #4:  We will be environmentally friendly as much as as can on this trip.  This includes cutting saplings down only when it is unavoidable.  And if we kill it, we're going to eat it, unless it's too small to feasibly cook up.


Copyright © 2007  E.G.   All rights reserved, bitches
Revised: 09/03/10.