(Continued from Part 2. This concludes the article.)
First-Aid Kit – This is another area where I’m way out of the norm. My first-aid kit is based on the medical emergencies I’ve experienced throughout my life including backpacking and wilderness camping. None of those would have been helped by a first-aid kit: mostly broken bones (5), kidney stones (107), and a huge one which required hospitalization. For all other incidents requiring first aid my bandana was it, mostly to stop gushing blood. (As a side note, a bandana is one of the most versatile items in my GHB.) Any serious wounds will be treated with the antibacterial cream I’ll have for my feet. Fortunately, I have quick-clotting blood, a high pain tolerance, and a long list of “coping words.” So based purely on probabilities, my only first-aid supplies will be the moleskin and antibacterial cream already mentioned. All other wounds are in the SUB category and will be cleaned with soap and water. Total 0.22 lbs.
Tools – The only tool I’ll be carrying is the Tinker Swiss Army Knife I’ve carried all my life, with a backup in my pack (0.13 lb.) Free advice: never, ever loan your knife to another person, offer to cut the thing for them. Never, ever lay your knife down, it’s either in your hand doing a task or in your pocket.
Repair Materials – I’ve never needed them on the road or trail except for a sewing needle and paracord so no duct tape or repair kits for me other than a few sewing needles and some dental floss for sewing.
Paracord & Twine – 50’ of paracord, 100’ bailing twine which is nearly weightless yet strong and versatile for rigging tarps among other things. Weight: 0.2 lbs.
Mess Kit – just my 16-oz steel mug with a wire handle. Not the sierra-mug type but shaped like a pint salsa jar. Great for hot chocolate, scooping water, cooking ramen. Weight is heavy at 5.3 oz. but it’s heavier duty than the mess-kit kind. No spoon, I eat a lot of food with chopsticks including popcorn (no greasy fingers!) so whittling a pair has always worked for me on the trail.
Map – State map only to see the side roads and shortcuts I don’t normally use. Weight: 0.1 lbs. No other navigation aids except for the road signs along the way and the button compass sewed onto my hand-lens cord. I hitchhiked coast to coast as a teenager with just a gas-station folding map of the United States so I consider detailed maps unnecessary in a get-home situation.Continue reading“My Ultralight Get-Home Bag – Part 3, by St. Funogas”