View Poll Results: Did you use a wacth on you thru hike?

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  • Yes

    144 79.56%
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Thread: timekeeper

  1. #1

    Default timekeeper

    Did you use a watch on your thru-hike? The only time I seem to use one when backpacking is to see what time it is when I wake up in the middle of the night.

  2. #2
    GO ILLINI! illininagel's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rob Motz
    Did you use a watch on your thru-hike? The only time I seem to use one when backpacking is to see what time it is when I wake up in the middle of the night.
    I think a watch helps me set the right pace for the day. It gives me some comfort to know that I'm on schedule to make it to that day's destination on time. You can't always go by the sun---that is, if it even appears on an overcast day!

    I would think that on a thru-hike a watch is even more important. I would want one with the day on it, because I'm sure I would lose track after a while. It would also help make sure that I make it to the post office or whatever before they close.

  3. #3

    Default Absolutely

    Its late afternoon/early evening. You're at a shelter...should you stay or can you make the campsite with a great view and water that is 6 miles away? If you have a watch you will KNOW if you can make the campsite or not.

    Also, I usually slept in my tent. I always set the alarm on my watch to ensure an early start.

  4. #4

    Default

    Although not all that needed on the actual AT (blazes are better'n maps) but if lost without a compass, A watch and the sun will help ya back on track.

  5. #5

    Default

    well yeah but have you ever tried that with a digital watch (grin)

  6. #6
    Registered User Doctari's Avatar
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    I will carry one from now on. And it's not for any "noble" reason, its because I seem to obsess about the time, without a watch I go Nuts. And I don't even need to know what the time is 99.9999 % of the time, I Just WANT TO KNOW!

    I did without a watch last section hike, every five minutes I looked at my naked wrist & said "Damn" for 15 days.

    Sigh!

    Doctari.
    Curse you Perry the Platypus!

  7. #7
    2005 Camino de santiago
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    Talking Date, Too!

    I find its not just about the time of day but also what day it is too.

    After a few days of not needing to know, I find I really don't know and its comforting having that little square on my watch to tell me when I need to know.

    The DAY, that is!

  8. #8

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hog On Ice
    well yeah but have you ever tried that with a digital watch (grin)
    I'm still an analog user for many reasons.

  9. #9

    Default

    When you've been in the rat race for your entire life it is very very hard to stop. I would truly rather carry a hundred pound pack than give a rat's ass about time while hiking.

  10. #10
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    Default watch on trail

    i DO wear a wrist-watch while on the trail. an analog "el-cheapo" from Wal-mart that has "indi-glo" feature that lets me know what time of the night it is when i have to go "visit the pee tree!"

    strictly out of habit..i wear one.

    i usually wake-up, like most hikers, @ sunrise...get the coffee going & the days breakfast....i usually check the time about mid-day to see if i'm "on pace" for that day's particular mileage goal.


    see ya'll UP the trail in 2004!
    see ya'll UP the trail!

    "Jaybird"

    GA-ME...
    "on-the-20-year-plan"

    www.trailjournals.com/Jaybird2013

  11. #11
    LT '79; AT from Springer-Rangeley in sections; Donating Member Kerosene's Avatar
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    Default

    Wow, I'm surprised at how many hikers use a watch. I've always used one, mostly to keep track of pace. Since I do a lot of fall hiking with darkness falling by 6 PM, I also need to make sure that I reach my destination in time to set up camp. I find that I will refer to the watch several times over the course of a 12-hour night since I can't sleep!
    GA←↕→ME: 1973 to 2015?

  12. #12
    Yellow Jacket
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    No one has mentioned using one for water treatment or make sure you get the post office (or other places in town) before it closes. Seems like the later issue is probably the most important reason to wear a watch.

    Without one you might think it is Saturday but it is actually Sunday. Or the PO closes at noon on Saturday, so you better haul ass into town to get your package, otherwise you'll need to wait until Monday.
    Yellow Jacket -- Words of Wisdom (tm) go here.

  13. #13

    Default

    I tell time like the acient Incas....


    ...I ask the guy next to me.


    No seriously, I didn't carry any type of watch on the AT, but so many other people did that if I ever wanted to know, the next time I ran into someone I could get it. But time never mattered on the trail (except when you have to get to town from resupply before a certain time). You can hike in the dark if you want to. I always got up with the sun, and went to bed shortly after it set. I still don't carry a watch, per se, but there is a clock device in the pocketmail device that I got after the AT. It's there if I want it, but it doesn't stare me in the face all day. One of the greatest things about being out in the trail is learning REAL time - The relationship of the sun and the earth's daily rotation. Given the choice, 9 times out of 10 I don't want to know the time while on the trail.

    -Howie

  14. #14

    Default

    I don't even want to know what month it is. Free your minds the rest will follow.

  15. #15

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Blue Jay
    Free your minds the rest will follow.

    Isn't that a song?


    I wore a watch until it broke about half way. I did not miss it at all when it was gone. But my wife hated it, or me for asking her what time it was 10 times a day.
    Profile '00
    www.hikerhostel.com

  16. #16
    Registered User gravityman's Avatar
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    Default out of sight

    I wore mine on my wrist. My wife put hers out of sight. I think that I will start to do that. There is nothing more discouraging than thinking "phew, how far have been been going? 10 minutes!??!?"

    Precieved time is a strange thing. It's tough to get intp the zone, when when you do, the time just flies by (and time = miles)

    Gravity Man

  17. #17
    Registered User walkon's Avatar
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    Default

    Suunto vector, good visibility, compass just in case. barometer and altimeter were fun too.
    walkon

  18. #18
    GA --> ME '02-? bigcat2's Avatar
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    I use my Timex Helix for a lot of things. It's got the thermometer, barameter, altimeter, oh, and the time of course. I use it mainly for pace to make sure I am able to get to my next shelter before dark. Basically, I'm a time addict. What can I say.

  19. #19

    Default

    I thought i'd not want to care about time, so started off w/o a watch purposefully. I bought one in Fontana. I was driving myself nuts stopping way too early, thinking it was later than it really was. Going by the sun sounds great, but in the spring, you often cant see it and the day is often overcast, hazy, and feels like dusk about 2-3 hours before dusk.
    after a few nights sitting in front of my tent cursing the lost hours and short miles - the watch became necessary. It was also handy to know the day of the week, not just for the PO, but to know if rooms in town might be difficult to get competing w/ weekenders in some locations. Plus, when to expect weekend hikers to start appearing.
    I rarely look at it during the day, but its sure handy to double check my perception of time passing.

    Cheerio

  20. #20
    American Idiot
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    I can just imagine a shelter full of people with half of them setting their alarms for 5am. Beep beep! Beep beep! lol
    How many more of our soldiers must die in Iraq?

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