So I finally got most of my gear together and decided to do an overnighter at starr pass after work. I got a little concerned when I left work and saw big black clouds but the weather forecast called for only a slight chance of t-storms, good enough for me. I showed up at the trailhead around 8 and set off with my $20 led headlamp (not HID but surprisingly bright and weighs soooo much less than my niterider + brick battery), SPOT, escape pod (courtesy of eric), camelbak, hammock, emergency bivvy and cooking gear which had a combined weight (including 75oz of water) of 12 lbs, not bad if you ask me.
ready to go at the trailhead
city lights
I ran into some guys on the trail (sorry I forgot your names) and we got to talking for a while about bikepacking and the race that was going down in colorado. It seems like Tucson has a much larger bikepacking scene than I thought. Rolling on I was having problems finding the right anchor for my hammock, there were plenty of saguaros but I didn't want to find out the hard way that there's a saguaro assault law on the books (I wouldn't doubt it, there is always mention of saguaro "murder" around here). Lucky for me I found the perfect pole just around the bend from the 36th st. turnoff, I have no idea who put it there but it was just right.
camp, the setup may look slick but it took 4 tries and half an hour to get the hammock to hold
penny stove blazin away, mmmmmmm........ ramen
lesson learned:
- ramen may taste alright but its probably not a good candidate for multi day bikepacking (low calories and bulky)
- although the hammock is super comfy it is a pain to hang it from the bike especially when racing (azt 300, 2010 mabe?) guess that means I need to look into a ground pad
- evan though I'm in Tucson and its late May, having only shorts, jersey and emergency bivvy does not make for comfy sleeping. I cannot lug my huge car camping sleeping bag around either so I guess that means a compact sleeping bag is on the list with the ground pad
- dry camping is alright but I need to find a way to weatherproof my setup. I'm real hesitant to spend big $$ on a tarp though, even if its silnylon weighs >1oz and folds smaller than a pack of cards
- bikepacking is fun!