10 Items You Don't Have To Take on the AT | Appalachian Trail 2024

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • The aim of this video is to reassure people that they don't need to go over the top when planning the items to take on a hike of the Appalachian Trail.
    If you're researching a hike on the Appalachian Trail, whether a day hike, section, LASH, or a full thru-hike, it's hard to know what is absolutely necessary to take with you.
    I thru-hiked the AT, and from my experience, I don't feel that if you don't want to take these items, then you don't have to. If you do want to take these items, then you can do so. Hike your own hike.
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Комментарии • 112

  • @Mike___Kilo
    @Mike___Kilo Год назад +6

    Generally good advice. As for gun carry; I don’t have a blanket rule against carrying a gun whilst backpacking or venturing into the backcountry. IMO it’s a personal/circumstantial decision.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +5

      I feel I communicated this point poorly. My opinion on guns is that, like you, it is a personal choice, but someone that doesn't own a gun shouldn't think that they need to buy one just to hike.

    • @planetclownfishbrain7052
      @planetclownfishbrain7052 Год назад +7

      My loaded Glock 43 weighs less than 22 ounces. At least 6 states on the AT don't require permits, three or four others reciprocate CCW's from other states. This leaves NY, MA, CT, NJ and 40 miles of MD. where if you have to use a weapon, you collect your brass and quickly change scenery.

  • @suntzu5562
    @suntzu5562 Год назад +11

    I was robbed at knife point on the AT in Virginia. Mentally ill man at an overlook. I obtained a concealed permit for the 3 states I was going through, and luckily saved my own skin. I lifted my shirt and he left, no issues. Your advice could get someone killed, but that's all my opinion. Cheers!

    • @ohnonotagain8935
      @ohnonotagain8935 Год назад +3

      I agree with you! Especially with all the FBI notices of the area

    • @cwd243
      @cwd243 Год назад

      Where in VA did this happen? What year?

    • @addisonesslinger3653
      @addisonesslinger3653 Год назад +1

      So, technically, you weren't robbed. You were threatened. Good thing you were packing.

    • @davyhenry8985
      @davyhenry8985 Год назад

      I agree. I rather be safe the sorry.

    • @clbbig
      @clbbig Месяц назад

      @@suntzu5562 amen

  • @kathycasey9153
    @kathycasey9153 Год назад +6

    Hey Al, I agree with everything on the list however when I solo section hike the AT, I have an unreasonable fear of bears. I do carry bear spray but if I was doing a thru hike I probably wouldn't. Its very hard to make noise constantly when you are alone 🤪

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      If it makes you feel safer, then there's an advantage to carrying it. I don't believe it is an essential item by any means. Black bears are something to be respected but there are much better ways to deal with a black bear encounter than using Bear spray.

  • @christopherknowles
    @christopherknowles 2 месяца назад

    Imagine being mauled by a mountain lion and you think “if only that dingus hadn’t told me not to bring my gun.”

    • @dannynye1731
      @dannynye1731 2 месяца назад

      The cats are extinct on the southern in. In NM we chased one around one night. They like to avoid people

  • @jamietetrault4517
    @jamietetrault4517 Год назад +2

    If you wear prescription glasses, do not bring your prescription glasses. Its all trees and dirt so no need to focus on any one thing.....

  • @charliebell4632
    @charliebell4632 Год назад +2

    I don’t know I’m thinking about taking a small keltec or revolver

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      If it makes you feel more comfortable and you're used to carrying a weapon, then maybe it's better for your peace of mind.
      I think people that don't usually carry a weapon with them shouldn't feel that they have to go out and buy one just because they're hiking the AT. I don't believe it's necessary at all.
      If it's part of your routine, do what makes you feel better. It's your hike 😊

  • @johnyokum2593
    @johnyokum2593 Год назад +4

    In the end hike your own hike, do and take what is comfortable for you
    As for me, I appreciate the 18" blade on my hip and a machete strapped to make a pack for easy access if the need should arise to clean a trail
    Also
    Not sure With laws and bylaws of fishing licenses, true it would not be feasible to take a pole
    Of course, a foldable one might be resourceful through the 100 miles of wilderness for an added treat and break from the monotony of hikers' diet
    Just a thought

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      Very true. Hike your own hike and take whatever you want. The point of the list was to highlight that for the majority of hikers, when they are advised to take things on trail for a thru-hike, the things on this list aren't necessities. I'm hoping that novice hikers aren't scared into taking things that they don't need.

  • @myleftthumb2294
    @myleftthumb2294 Год назад +1

    "YOU ARE HIKING, NOT CAMPING !!" - Sorry, I forget the name of the other hiker who said this on his video - credit where credit is due. Thru-hiking is all about getting from point A to point B, rinse and repeat.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      It seems like that some days. There were certainly a few days where it felt like all the day was hiking from one stealth campsite to another, for no other reason than to make miles. On those days, the camping and time with friends is what makes the day positive.

  • @DamionJR4923
    @DamionJR4923 Год назад +2

    Bringing a Nalgene bottle is crazy I can’t believe any would bring that 😂

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      Lots of people do. They seem to love it in the beginning. Didn't see any by the time I reached NH and ME though.

  • @daphne142
    @daphne142 Год назад +2

    naglene bottle is good to use as a hot water bottle for starting early in winter

  • @deancheek9499
    @deancheek9499 Год назад +2

    Hey man! It’s dean from the first day at amicalola falls. I’ve thought about you guys a few times and wondered how your hike went. Congratulations!!!

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      Good to hear from you, dude! I messaged you on FB a while back. Glad that you made it the whole way. Congratulations to you too!

    • @deancheek9499
      @deancheek9499 Год назад +1

      @@Adventure_Together I’m not very active on the fb. I made it almost 2000 miles I’ll be back to do the whole thing as a thru hiker! And good content my guy,keep up the good work👍

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      @Dean Cheek I know you'll smash it! Did the mini-carbon guitar make it with you all the way?

  • @Unnaturalfly
    @Unnaturalfly Год назад +4

    I disagree with the fishing rod only because I fish for fun not food lol.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +2

      Fair enough if you have your hobby. I took a large camera because I enjoy photography. This list was more of what people at home tell most hikers to take with them for survival rather than recreation

    • @Unnaturalfly
      @Unnaturalfly Год назад +1

      @@Adventure_Together ya I meant I’m going for a overnight hike and I have family thinking I’m bushcrafting my way in the Amazon jungle. Talking about me having to look for berries and nuts just to survive lol. But good video tho I’m trying to start a outdoors type channel for fun. So your videos help give me ideas.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      I know your pain all too well. "What do you eat out there?" From people expecting me to say bramble roots 😅
      Good luck with your channel, I hope it goes well!

    • @spatialinterpretations449
      @spatialinterpretations449 9 месяцев назад

      Yip you can take a rod but don't need it, I think that was the pointy point.. - even you admit to only for recreation.

  • @williampennjr.4448
    @williampennjr.4448 Год назад +2

    deodorant attracts mosquito's too.
    What about micro spikes in the winter. You said in April, so that leaves a little confusion.
    I would add,
    There's no need to take a 4 person tent or larger. If you're in a large group, each person or couple should have their own tent.
    No need to bring a large shovel or pick. There is no reason to be digging holes. The only hole you will need to make is a small one for going to the bathroom.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      I've not hiked the AT in winter, I would imagine the weather is vastly different and they might be useful in some parts. Some great points you've added there. No need to overpack.

  • @jax9224
    @jax9224 Год назад

    I take three and not two so I have an extra for myself and one to give away if someone needs.

  • @wthurman5910
    @wthurman5910 Год назад +1

    Merry Christmas Al ⛄🎄🎀⭐

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      Merry Christmas! Thank you for all of your support this year!

  • @loufaolla
    @loufaolla Год назад +7

    After this video, all the freaks will know the hikers aren’t carrying and be easy prey 😂

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      I don't think freaks care whether you have a snake bite kit or not 😅

    • @christopherm7592
      @christopherm7592 Год назад +2

      He’s not exactly the authority on self defense now is he? He comes from a country where you aren’t allowed to own the kinds of weapons we can in America. To each their own, I say. If you feel more comfortable having a pistol, take it.

  • @unknowuser1843
    @unknowuser1843 Год назад +2

    I'm staying true to my trail name (blades) and carrying a big knife

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      Here I was thinking you got your name after your passion for Roller Blading 😂

  • @spuriouseffect
    @spuriouseffect Год назад +3

    I'm gonna take an AR-15 and a Taser! Heck yeah! LOL

  • @HolisticHikes
    @HolisticHikes Год назад +1

    Thanks! Chipping away at weight for hikes next summer! 🫶🫶

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      You'll get there. My advice is don't take "just in case" and "spare" items.

    • @HolisticHikes
      @HolisticHikes Год назад +1

      @@Adventure_Together thank you! Sort of starting our lists now! Going to keep tabs on your content for tips!

  • @sigmalife0570
    @sigmalife0570 Год назад +1

    Iron skillet?😂

  • @L2theWcarscoffeelife
    @L2theWcarscoffeelife Год назад +3

    ahhh the deodorant argument, so you go into town take a shower put on clean clothes your going to take a zero maybe 2 and you stink right away for no reason at all. Merino wool doesnt hold odor so if you wear that and use deodorant you wont stink I used it just fine so yeah I dont agree with you on this. I had a guy at Hawk mountain shelter had a tripod with a pot hanging from it to cook!!

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      That's fair enough if it works for you. I can't imagine wearing wool in summer. To be honest, most thru-hikers reeked no matter what they wore. I certainly did. There's not much a deodorant spray could have done.

    • @L2theWcarscoffeelife
      @L2theWcarscoffeelife Год назад +1

      @@Adventure_Together merino wool is amazing it wicks away moisture and drys very quickly I was skeptical at first too it is amazing totally different than the normal wool your used to not itchy or hot you can even get it in lighter weights they are pricey for shirts to me as a traveler its worth it to not carry 7 shirts and have to do laundry every few days.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      I wore the same t-shirt every day.Maybe that's why deoderant wouldn't work 😂

  • @sld2155
    @sld2155 10 месяцев назад

    A British guy telling Americans not to carry a gun. What a way to start a morning....🤣🤣🤣

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  10 месяцев назад

      I'm not telling you not to carry one. I'm saying that if you didn't already plan to, you don't NEED one. There are a lot of people who didn't plan to hike the AT with a gun, who have had people around them tell them that they should. The majority of people don't carry one. If you're in rural Svalbard or the wilderness of Alaska, it'd be totally different, but on a footpath with over one million other hikers, it isn't necessary.

    • @sld2155
      @sld2155 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Adventure_Together joking with ya...

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  9 месяцев назад

      I thought it was serious, and I was drawn into it. Sorry 😞

  • @Andy-Mesa
    @Andy-Mesa Год назад +1

    Some of those items seem fine. I would use my polypropylene cold soak jar to put hot water in, but otherwise I could see carrying a bottle you can put hot water in for keeping warm. A rubik's cube seems like a perfectly okay luxury item. Jupiter carries a yo-yo and a watercolor paint kit, and you're definitely not more ultralight than him. Lots of people carry books and journals on trail.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      I did carry a lot of stuff I didn't need when I started. A lot of energy and aching shoulders from packing my fears (cold) and extra energy lugging it all up and over hills. It's all about working out what you need and don't need, and everything I saw on that list ended up in hiker boxes real quick.

  • @badasshiker9637
    @badasshiker9637 8 месяцев назад

    I respectfully disagree about the matches. If your BIC malfunctions or runs out of fuel, then matches comes in handy. What you do to prevent the wetness problem, before you hike, get a chunk of paraffin wax and melt it. Take stick matches and dip them in the melted wax, then lay out to dry. Get a medicine bottle to store them in. Cut a small piece of the striker plate, or a piece of sandpaper, and glue it inside the lid of the medicine bottle. place the dried matches into the medicine bottle and viola, a back up lighter.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  8 месяцев назад +1

      We all have different opinions. That's what makes our hikes so personal. We make different choices on gear, and that's OK. It would be boring if everyone used all of the exact same stuff.
      I feel a common comment I see on this video is that people believe I am saying it must be this way or not at all. I didn't communicate my message well, and that's on me. What I meant by making this video is that some people were insisting that I must take all of the items mentioned in this video or else my hike was doomed to fail. I wanted to assure first time long distance hikers that they needn't think they need these items if they don't already want to take them. Feel free to take them if you want. But don't feel that you have to, was the message I meant but didn't make that point obvious enough.
      Regarding the matches. I use a ferro rod. That's kept me out of trouble so far ☺️

  • @willswalkingwest7267
    @willswalkingwest7267 Год назад +1

    Now THAT'S a knife!

  • @dannynye1731
    @dannynye1731 2 месяца назад

    What about garmins, ear buds and other useless gear?

  • @twofoots5955
    @twofoots5955 Год назад

    This is for the tourist hikers. Who wouldn't want to fish and protect themselves and hike AND camp?

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      Not going after car campers or people that go out hiking and camping with fishing or hunting as their purpose, but more talking about thru-hiking, where we want to carry as few things as possible so it doesn't weigh us down.

  • @mitchellbarnow1709
    @mitchellbarnow1709 Год назад +1

    Lookout, you do know that people are going to take this video and bring all of these things?

  • @jax9224
    @jax9224 Год назад

    Take a actual bic lighter and not the kind that was shown. Those are junk and not reliable in my opinion. I actually take three lighters. One in my pocket. One in my first aid baggie and one just in my pack somewhere.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  11 месяцев назад

      Mine has lasted two thrus so far. Hopefully, it'll make it through all three. We will see.

  • @clbbig
    @clbbig Месяц назад

    Better to have a gun and not need it than to need a gun and not have one. Remember the poor veteran who was attacked and killed by a nut with a knife in va about 5 years ago. But to each his own.

  • @Oslohiker
    @Oslohiker 6 дней назад

    naglene bottle is goodnaglene bottle is good if you have take a piss in the middle of the night.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  3 дня назад

      🤮

    • @Oslohiker
      @Oslohiker 3 дня назад

      @@Adventure_Together Some need it (and it will of course be a dedicated bottle).

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  3 дня назад

      Some people use Gatorade bottles with the wide necks. To each their own, I suppose.

    • @Oslohiker
      @Oslohiker 3 дня назад

      @@Adventure_Together For many men the opening is too small on gatorade bottles.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  3 дня назад

      Never used one for that. I just go outside if I need to go.

  • @Net_Observer
    @Net_Observer Год назад +1

    👍

  • @doconawalk9367
    @doconawalk9367 Год назад +2

    A light weight chair. Great for weekend backpacking but all the folks I saw who brought one sent it home after a hundred miles or so. A sit pad that weighs nothing and your pack as a back rest are all you need. A chair is not worth the extra weight

  • @mhe8545
    @mhe8545 Год назад

    I take bear spray for humans!!

  • @scottmacmillan9707
    @scottmacmillan9707 Год назад +1

    Great list. Merry Christmas

  • @jjano2320
    @jjano2320 Год назад +1

    Wife.

  • @PacMan257
    @PacMan257 Год назад +1

    Don't hike in snake boots.

  • @planetclownfishbrain7052
    @planetclownfishbrain7052 Год назад +1

    With his accent, you just know he's an expert.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      It's all a cover. The English you sound, the more you can get away with 😂

  • @myleftthumb2294
    @myleftthumb2294 Год назад +1

    @4:07 - I can see the spare set of boots. Yeah, I know, you're looking at 2.5 pounds there, but being able to swap them out, keep feet dry, and accommodate for swelled feet with a larger size pair might not be something to laugh at. I know I'll be carrying more pairs of socks than most others, probably five extra pairs.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад +1

      Do whatever makes you most comfortable. It's a hard slog to make it even 100 miles, let alone over 2000. If it keeps your spirits high and you're happier to take a few extra things, then go for it.

  • @vegasjaydon1aauditstrump2024
    @vegasjaydon1aauditstrump2024 Год назад +3

    Alaminium? You mean aluminum? Lol

  • @kysngaming7787
    @kysngaming7787 Месяц назад

    I stopped this video so fast. Im taking a gun. Even if i dont need it, id rather have it.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Месяц назад

      That's up to you. Do whatever and take whatever makes you feel safe. My message was for the people who aren't already planning on taking one, that they don't need to worry about not having it on the Appalachian Trail. In my year, I only met three people with guns on them, and none of them completed the trail.

  • @randysmith6493
    @randysmith6493 Год назад +1

    Bears , you don’t need to take bear spray… likely. But if you have bear spray and are threatened , Bear spray is likely safer than a gun (this assumes you have a silly little gun that does not kill the bear in one shot, because bears don’t like that, and they get deathly mad). But bear spray disrupts their vision and it disrupts their sense of small, both of those they rely on to survive, and the bear is quite confused now, this is new, so it’s life was not threatened and it can run, and run they do. Just putting that out there because the presentation sounded a little off on spray. Fact Alaska Dept. St. Fish & Game has about fifty years of bear attack statistics , and in an attack the bear spray is 10 times more effective of you surviving an attack than If you had shot the bear. Bears don’t often die in one shot. The stats are online, you can look them up if you want. But for the AT, bears grew up knowing people are on that trail in great supply, they are quite use to you, you only have to not be stupid with food, trash, harassment of bears. Relax, keep eyes on, don’t approach and enjoy your hike.

    • @Adventure_Together
      @Adventure_Together  Год назад

      That's really interesting to hear the stats on bear spray efficacy. Being that it's Alaska, are those more likely to be Grizzlies than Black Bears?
      My point did sound anti-spray; I didn't mean it to be. My personal opinion is that on the Appalachian Trail, Black Bears aren't usually a threat if you follow guidelines. They will often leave the scene before you do. It's because of this that I feel friends and relatives warning hikers to take bear spray on the AT are overestimating the danger that Black bears pose compared to Grizzlies, that aren't on the AT.