>>1302201Depends on the outing.
I'm camp director at a fairly isolated camp serving 8-15 y/o with practically no /out/ experience, so little injuries are pretty common but big ones usually get sent all the way up to the infirmary or, possibly, back into town, so I prep in tiers.
The most basic tier is a tiny kit with 2-3 alcohol prep pads, 4-5 bandages, 1 pair of gloves and a gauze pad. Someone from every cabin has access to that (although for some reason, they still always ask me to come sort shit out.)
My kit goes out on nature hikes and rappelling as well as floating around the campsite, so it has 3 pairs of gloves, 6-8 alcohol pads, 10-12 bandaids, 2-3 gauze pads, 2-3 insect sting kits, 2-3 iodine tubes, 2-3 Neosporin tubes, a couple pieces of candy, 2 ibuprofen, 2 acetaminophen, a triangular bandage and safety pins, two sets of tweezers, surgical scissors, a straight hemostat and a bent hemostat, and an emergency albuterol inhaler that I pray I never have to use because oh shit the lawsuit possibilities. I rotate through about 50% of this every day, mostly gloves, bandaids, prep pads and sting kits. The tweezers and tools see a lot of use too, though. A few big scrapes on longer hikes get the whole Neosporin treatment and gauze, but it's a good kit.
Easily packs into the smallest pocket on my backpack. I'd feel pretty comfy taking this on almost any day hike; everything I've hit so far across three years of camp could either be handled with this kit or really needed to be professionally looked at. (Instant ice might be a good addition though, lots of heat related stuff comes up every year.)