>>1215951No problem. Seems about right to me. I'd personally bring some kind of light stove or just a small pot to cook over a fire because I like cooking warm meals and tea in the evenings, but you could do without if you want to.
Anyways the list would look somthing like this:
- Worn clothes: suitable for the inviroment while waking. Priority on good socks and shoes/boots, and quick drying if rain is expected.
- Extra warm clothes: just enough to keep you warm while inactive in the morning/evening when you wear it all. A hat, thin gloves and maybe a neck warmer make a lot of difference for little extra weight. Consider long underwear if the nights get cold for the same reason. Also good to sleep in.
- Rain clothes if needed in the inviroment. Preferably breathable if you are going to hike while wearing it. For hiking its best if it's light and packable. Pants with zippers allow you to put it on without taking shoes of. A breathable shell jacket with good ventilation (like zippers under armpits) will serve as being both your rain jacket and go-to outer jacket in cold winds.
- Sleeping gear: Mat, sleeping bag and tarp/tent suitable to enviroment (for tarp you need some cordage and maybe pegs and poles if the enviroment doesn't offer.
- Cooking gear if needed: Can be a small gas stove or pot to go over fire etc. A million different possibilities and religions when it comes to this.
- Utility gear: small light for the evenings and nights (headlamp is best), knife/multitool if you want to prepare food and for other small tasks. Orientation stuff like map and compass, GPS if you need/wan't it. Powerbank if you use your phone.
Toiletries: What you need. I personally only bring a toothbrush and toothpaste on short trips.
First aid: I just bring something for potential blisters, a small bandage and some disinfectant wipes.
Food and water: Won't go much into this as this would take up a whole post in itself.
Some entertainment like books/tea/tobacco