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  1. #1
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    Default How much clothes to bring?

    Good evening folks, i'm looking at doing a 100 mile section hike from Springer to NC departing in mid April. So far I'm looking at bringing one pair of hiking shorts, pair of hiking boots, crocs for camp, one pair or convertible hiking pants, two athletic t-shirts, two compression type underwear, 3 pairs of merino wool socks, an REI down jacket and a rain jacket. What am I missing??? Thanks for the help

  2. #2
    Registered User kayak karl's Avatar
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    Head and hands ?
    I'm so confused, I'm not sure if I lost my horse or found a rope.

  3. #3
    Registered User egilbe's Avatar
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    Baselayers? Still kinda cold at night that time of year.

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    Quote Originally Posted by garminator View Post
    Good evening folks, i'm looking at doing a 100 mile section hike from Springer to NC departing in mid April. So far I'm looking at bringing one pair of hiking shorts, pair of hiking boots, crocs for camp, one pair or convertible hiking pants, two athletic t-shirts, two compression type underwear, 3 pairs of merino wool socks, an REI down jacket and a rain jacket. What am I missing??? Thanks for the help
    Might be 55 at night, might be 25. You will know 1 week before.

    normal gear for hikers would be:

    Worn: shorts, synthetic or wool tee shirt, socks, shoes, underwear
    Carried: Long john top, long john bottom, 1pr spare socks, rain jacket, rain pants, insulation jacket, fleece beanie, glove liners, fleece top if really cold

  5. #5
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    Yeah sorry guys, I forgot to mention a set of thermals, beanie and gloves that I've got. Are rain pants and gaiters necessary?

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    Gaiters arent unless hiking in deep snow
    If its 35 and raining, rain pants come in handy.

  7. #7
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    Suggest having a subset of "camp only" items that will kept dry under all circumstances and not worn while hiking. This is your fallback for long days of hiking in cold rain, sleet, whatever.

    I like having a wool (or synthetic) flannel shirt in my kit. Extremely versatile item.

  8. #8
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    You don't need two SS tee shirts, but if you make one of them long-sleeve, it can do double duty and replace your thermal underwear top, to save almost half a pound, while also giving you a change of shirts that you can wear in town.

    You'll want long sleeves for hiking on cold mornings, but you need to keep your LS tee dry for camp. If it's above freezing, your puffy jacket will be too warm and your rain jacket to sweaty. A good solution is a 4oz wind shirt like a Houdini.

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    You might want to throw in a few bandanas for use around your neck or face. Comes in handy is there is a wind blowing to protect your face or to keep your neck warm, or other uses like wiping condensation from the inside of your tent, etc.

  10. #10
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    Great advice, thank you folks.

  11. #11
    Registered User lonehiker's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MuddyWaters View Post
    Might be 55 at night, might be 25. You will know 1 week before.

    normal gear for hikers would be:

    Worn: shorts, synthetic or wool tee shirt, socks, shoes, underwear
    Carried: Long john top, long john bottom, 1pr spare socks, rain jacket, rain pants, insulation jacket, fleece beanie, glove liners, fleece top if really cold
    I fundamentally agree with this list. I deviate a bit in that I prefer long pants and long sleeved shirt year round. I also replace the rain pants with rain kilt.
    Lonehiker (MRT '22)

  12. #12
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    That sounds good, ty lonehiker

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