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Lightweight Backpacking with Young Children

August 17th, 2007 . by Jetman
Disaster Readiness and Backpacking

I remember watching the first prep stages of Hurricane Katrina, oh, about +30 hours before landfall and seeing, among the people carrying small suitcases, a college age girl with a full-on backpack. Right there at the stadium. I was thinking to myself, well, she’s certainly prepared for the stay.

Why Backpacking? | Hiking / Camping Relevance To Disaster Preparedness

After my good friends for nearly 18 years moved to Florida as part of an Aircrew Instructor tour duty station change several large hurricanes (Ivan and Katrina, to mention two) rolled through their area.

Seeing pictures of the devastating effects these storms had on just about everything in sight along with the catastrophic tsunami that hit Indonesia have made me realize that even when everything is simply peachy in the world, bad things can happen at any time.

My friends were always prepared for any emergency, therefore Ivan and Katrina just added to their repetoire of excellent Beer Stories.In fact, Katrina forced the move of a retired Aircrew Marine’s family as they were displaced from their home on the coastline of Mississippi, so my friend took them in for a short time. Yes, we take care of our own.

My philosophy is that most Americans are doing just fine as long as food comes in trucks to restock supermarkets, roads are relatively clear of traffic, and gas stations stay resupplied with no interruptions.

When there are problems, the worst in human nature tends to come to the surface. Luckily in some areas with Hurricane Katrina there were a few who chose to keep watch, in California I’m not so certain that would be an option.

Best bet, have your own food and water, plus the means to keep it.

Earthquake Kits - Not Just For California

Every California native has heard of Northridge and the Bay Area has made it a point that they are expecting a 7.0+ quake at any time. Public awareness in school age kids starts before kindergarten. See |

As part of the ‘Earthquake Kit’ that no Aircrewman has failed to assemble at some point in their lives, I would add some skills and training that would easily fit into the next family camping trip. The standard cupboard fare that we keep at home works quite well to meet the ‘Minimum 3 Day’ rule, but if there’s a mandatory evacuation you might well have to shoulder the load and trek out on foot. If you’re lucky then someone’s secured public transportation.

That means person-portable items to keep ready for an indeterminate period of time, and as the Katrina survivors found out, this meant food, clothing, bedding AND clean water or a means to filter dirty water.

Backup Plan For Carrying Water? Make Everything Else ULTRAlight

Planning on taking the kids and water enough for the entire family means that you’re going to be left with very little room before your own personal Delta-V for walking burns too much energy to carry everything.

From Lightweight Backpacking with Young Children at Backpacking Light

Infants can’t walk, and letting them crawl to your destination is neither timely nor hygenic. So that means that Mom’s going to carry the baby in a backpack and Dad’s going to shoulder the rest of the gear. Dad may be shocked at the realization that he’s not going to get to carry the same sub-twenty pound pack that he gets to carry on a summer trip with his buddies, but rules are rules!

The bottom line: you’re both going to be shouldering some weight, so slow down, take it easy, and lower your mileage expectations. A great gear list for cold / snowy trips with kids can be downloaded here.

Clearly the same goes for prepping your lightweight version of your Earthquake Kit / Bugout Bag.

Building Camping and Backpacking Skills | Backpacking with Young Children

Backpacking and lightweight camping is a great way to build important skills, along with building your skills in distributing a family’s load properly with all members shouldering their fair share.

If your kids know how to use their gear, should they ever need to use the mandatory Earthquake Kit at school, it becomes more of a ‘Cool, this is just like camping with Mom and Dad’ experience rather than a traumatizing situation. PMA - positive mental attitude.

As we remember the key to everything is being aware of the tools at hand and survivability programs stressed the value of keeping a level head in a crisis situation. That comes with experience, so get outside and enjoy the outdoors as much as possible while building your family’s knowledge base and confidence.

Camping Safety - No Getting Lost Here!

Kids Hiking Safety - this site has a great philosophy to teach your kids about getting lost/separated. The signal devices every kid should carry while hiking are a whistle and a mirror, add that to a folded up Hefty bag and you’re on it. I recommend putting those three items within the ‘Earthquake Kit’ that most SoCal childcare and preschools have as a mandatory piece of gear.

My son’s preschool asked for specific items within a one gallon Ziploc bag. This had plenty of room for a small flat whistle, non-shatter mirror, and a Hefty bag along with some Neosporin and bandages.

From Hiking With Children:

This is the time to give them a safety whistle, and the beginnings of the essentials in their pack: a snack, some water and a spare layer. Some things that may have been taken for granted now need to be reconsidered: The campsite by the lake, a fire, or the camp spot on the ledge with the great view may now be a safety issue.
In areas where mountain lions and other stalking predators are a concern, simple rules are good. For example, “no running, have a whistle at the ready and always keep in sight of me” might be a good place to start.

Other areas to consider are altitude, sunburns, bee stings. just be aware and prepared. Especially for new parents: the built-in awareness that the baby in your backpack is getting sunburned/cold/ bit by bugs may take time to develop, so you need to be extra aware and diligent.

All in all, it’s best to have a good supply of camping gear that you’re familiar with, and to have your kids adapted to camping and hiking.

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The Big List — Contents for survival kit

August 15th, 2007 . by Jetman

The Big List — Contents: “The BIG List”

Basically this is meant for your do it yourself BugoutBag. You know, the earthquake kit that every aircrewman keeps…


PORTABLE AUTO SURVIVAL KIT

July 18th, 2006 . by Jetman

LAFD EARTHQUAKE HANDBOOK: PORTABLE AUTO SURVIVAL KIT:

“PORTABLE AUTO SURVIVAL KIT - FROM THE LOS ANGELES CITY FIRE DEPARTMENT’S EARTHQUAKE PREPAREDNESS HANDBOOK”


[Outdoors-Magazine.com] All Kitted Out

June 29th, 2005 . by Jetman

[Outdoors-Magazine.com] All Kitted Out:

“Modules is the best way to describe how my survival kits are constructed, each one is a self contained module that is complete enough to be used on its own or be used with another module, if the situation warrants it. There are five modules, taking me from the “everyday pocket kit”, up to the “72 hour grab & go bag”.”


Taking the Bug Out Bag Ultralight

June 29th, 2005 . by Jetman

Taking the Bug Out Bag Ultralight

After all, how else are you going to tote it around?


Paddling Straight Fishing Techniques, Rigging Explanations, Kayak Recommendations and more

June 21st, 2005 . by Jetman

Paddling Straight Fishing Techniques, Rigging Explanations, Kayak Recommendations and more: “Paddling a Sea Kayak in a Straight Line ”

Okay so some of us own Kayaks. We love to get out there and check out what we can catch while getting a workout. This whole straight line thing is harder than you may think, so here’s a good technique page.


Andy’s Tyvek Page

June 18th, 2005 . by Jetman

Andy’s Tyvek Page: “Tyvek: What it is and where to get some”

Tyvek is what they make those USPS Priority Mail envelopes out of. I use it for camping as a ground cover for my bivvy sack, and it’s super lightweight and durable. Instead of having to purchase a whole roll of it, mail Andy some money and he’ll cut you off some. I did.


Joe’s Ultralight Backpacking / Gear List

June 18th, 2005 . by Jetman

Joe’s Ultralight Backpacking / Gear List:

“ON THE BOD

Hiking Shoes (Lowa Tempest Lo) Watch

Nylon T-Shirt 2 pair ‘SmartWool’ Socks

Nylon Hiking Pants Sunglasses

Nylon running shorts Hiking poles (duct tape wrapped around)

Hat (O.R. Sonoran Sombrero)

THE PACK

NOTE: Sleeping pad is inside the pack, providing some form.

CORE CLOTHES

—- ——-

Backpack (GoLite Breeze, 3000+ ci) Nylon Anorak (pockets cut away)

Feathered Friends Swallow (20F, 800-fill) Long Underwear Top (lighweight)

6′x8′ Siltarp knockoff (Campmor) Long Underwear Top (Expedition-wt.)

A16 Bug Bivy Long Underwear Bottoms (lightweight)

50′ Nylon guy line (cut in pieces) Balaclava (O.R. Windstopper fleece)

Seven Kelty Nobendium stakes Gloves, Fleece (cutout fingertips)

3/4-length Sleeping Pad (RidgeRest) GoLite Dome Umbrella

Tyvek groundsheet (6′x3′) Bandana

SURVIVAL

——– HOUSEKEEPING/KITCHEN

——————–

1st Aid Kit

Leatherman ‘Micra’ Titanium pot w/ lid (1.3 liter)

Compass, Orienteering Esbit Pocket Stove

‘Hurricane’ matches Base Stove Reflector (aluminum foil)

Whistle (plastic) Windscreen (folded aluminum foil)

Iodine/Neutra”


Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada - Index Map

June 18th, 2005 . by Jetman

Recent Earthquakes in California and Nevada - Index Map: Just in case you’d like to see how strong an earthquake you felt was…


Lefty Ray’s Kayak Rigging Recommendations

May 29th, 2005 . by Jetman

Lefty Ray’s Kayak Rigging Recommendations