12 daypack essentials you never want to forget.
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- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2025
- Don't be caught without. Bring the essentials on every outing. Here's the most basic items I bring for every adventure. Add additional gear to adjust for the season. Check out the list below:
Osprey Stratos 24 backpack
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SOL emergency blanket
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Larabar--peanut butter chocolate chip
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Princeton Tec Fuel Headlamp
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Aquamira water treatment
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Spyderco knife
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Waterproof lighter
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Pyro Putty
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Nalgene half liter bottle
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Adventure Medical hiker first aid kit
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Suunto mirrored compass
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Dermatone with SPF
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Pink Flagging
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Filmed with a GoPro Hero 7 Black (available here):
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Leave a comment with questions and I'll try to answer in the comments or in a future video. Thanks for watching!
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My name is Matt, and my experience includes:
--6+ years of Search & Rescue
--Thru-hiking the 2,168 mile Appalachian Trail
--Cycling 4,000 miles cross country
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Sounds a lot like what’s in my pack. I also carry a wash cloth as an emergency bandage (and to use with hand sanitizer in case someone gets heat exhaustion), some clotting agent (I ride a motorcycle), a couple of whistles and flares (required by the Coast Guard), and a cheap disposable rain poncho.
Hello Clyde. Thanks for the comment(s)! Absolutely--it sounds like you are right on track with some of the water specific additions. I do actually have a whistle built into the pack I showed, but yes I carry much more for emergency when on the water. I've also figure I can use an emergency blanket for a rain poncho if needed. I hesitated in responding because I was trying to figure out the connection between hand sanitizer and heat exhaustion...but I got it--your meaning to use the washcloth to wet someone down if they have heat exhaustion. Funny. That makes sense now.
@@AdventuresInReach I have had to use it that way on several occasions. Easier to carry than rubbing alcohol. I carry a tube of frosting as well. There are lots of diabetics around here. You just pump some of the frosting into their mouth. If there levels are low, they recover quickly. If not, their levels are high and you call 911.
19 Degrees, that's a nice temp... (Realizes)
19 degrees is a nice temp!...especially in northern MN during the winter.
If you're carrying a knife you might as well carry a ferro rod too. Lighters are usually pretty unreliable.
Absolutely. Ferry rods are great. I've never had issue with lighters, even in -50 F as long as it was kept warm and dry. As mentioned, I will often tape over the top to seal out water. If it's cold I'll stick it in an inside pocket.
@Adventures In Reach all tech is great... right up until it isn't.all it takes is one bad fall, one skiing collision with a tree or one pisse off mama moose and your lighter is worthless and it's getting dark soon..minor kit is fine if you're on a well marked and popular trail and someone else knows your plan and when to call help...if you're going cross country you should really carry more than that. "2 is 1" mentality. Have backups, spares and alternatives because right when you need something to work is exactly when it fails.
I'm not trying to make a dig at you just wanted to kind of expand for the less skilled people thay might be watching.