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14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | J. D. Adams
Hazards of Extreme Camping By J. D. Adams Seeking direction as a
youth, I bought a compass and wandered into the savage heart of
the wilderness. Oregon's history came alive as I retraced
pioneer trails and skied cross-country to skyline camps. Now,
grizzled and trout revering, I offer this to show that extreme
camping is so much more than surviving the crux of desolation in
wet shoes. Many campers have succumbed to their own camping
equipment. Mummy bags were named for their tendency to shift
around on the victim during the night, so you wake up facing an
ominously shroud-like interior. Only by struggling absurdly with
the sleeping bag can one return to the world of the living.
Often during the struggle, everything in the tent containing
Velcro will attach itself around the victim, creating a
monstrous appearance. The flailing around will eventually roll
the tent over, impaling the occupants on camping sundries and
covering them with loose oatmeal. The modified mummy bag with a
fuller cut is more comfortable and less likely to incite
claustrophobic reactions. Tents can function as rain collection
devices, drawing moisture into the seams and through the fabric
by a process still a mystery to camping scientists. Condensation
and leakage collaborate to float the occupant on an inland sea,
or upon rising, the victim is met by gallons of super-cooled
water holding in the tent fly such that rebirth and amphibious
regression are not unlikely. The stakes are high in the tent
game, where experience with a good basic design like the
freestanding dome tent will ensure dry and comfortable slumber.
Before setting up your tent, inspect the lay of the ground for
where water may pool up, and look overhead for precarious snags
and branches. The priming of gas stoves typically produces a
fireball that is great for trimming those bushy eyebrows, also
giving a hard outdoorsy look to the face. Working the stove is
always great fun, a bit like being an astronaut and firing the
afterburners. Some people get into character, shouting terms
like “throttle up!” and “more power!” as they operate the pump
and valves to avoid the dreaded “flameout”! Overcooking is the
result, like your mother’s pork chops. Periodic cleaning of the
stove hardware is necessary for easy starting. Backpacks have
come a long way from the L-shaped wooden frame and attached
rucksack. The principle is still the same, to explore the limits
of human endurance like Lewis and Clark on a bad day. The inner
frame pack is more streamlined, allowing gazelle-like movement
through the wilderness. Skiing and climbing is easier with a
pack that is closer to your center of gravity. The exterior
frame pack is the most comfortable for normal hiking conditions.
Regardless of the type of pack, choose a model with wide, firm
padding on the waist and shoulder straps. Prior to mastering the
telemark and snowplow turns, the novice skier will tend to
hurtle out of control across the unsuspecting landscape; their
approach marked by a cloud of forest debris and the raucous
cries of tormented wildlife. Elk and bear stampede fearfully.
Cross-country skiing with a full pack combines the grace of
drunkenness with the feel of a military exercise. Once mastered,
expeditions can be launched into the high country, where an
altered state will settle in from oxygen deprivation, and
annoying tunes may run through the head. Often giddiness will
persist well into the later stages of hypothermia that can only
be cured by fishing.
About Author :
I have worked with avionics, communications, computers, and
consumer electronics. I honed my skills in technical writing
during this time. Yearning to exercise my creativity, I
broadened my writing topics to include history, the outdoors,
and travel. I have been published in local newspapers and
several Oregon travel websites.
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