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general hiking moosling

Planning for camping

With a successful hut trip under our belts, I’ve started doing some planning for Summer trips with the Moosling. Starting off with a lot of research, and considering how other people manage things (especially people like Ground Truth Trekking), we came to the conclusion that if we want to get out on overnight hiking trips with an extra person to carry, we really want to be travelling as lightly as possible.

First up was a tent. The Big Agnes Seedhouse 2 we used on our bike trip only just had enough room for the two of us, so we’ve decided to move onto something bigger. And lighter. But to avoid this also being more expensive, we’ve gone more simplistic, and have ordered a Tarptent Rainshadow 2. A single wall tent with some good reviews, recommended by others hiking with offspring. It weighs in at 1.2kg (42oz) without poles, and can be set up using trekking poles if you are using them.

Without having used it yet, the main disadvantages I can think of at the moment are the fact that it’s not free standing, and the fly doesn’t offer full coverage to ground in case of rain. We’ll see how we go with any potential condensation issues too.


Now the tent is ordered and on it’s way, I’m trying to work out what to do for sleeping arrangements. We’ve got two thermarests, and won’t get anything extra for the Moosling just yet. But the two separate sleeping bags don’t work too well when sleeping as a family – plus we only have snow bags over here, which are enormous, heavy, and much warmer than they need to be.

So I’m thinking 2-person down quilt – light, warm, and just what we need for Summer camping in the mountains. And because the ones for sale are quite expensive, or not quite what I’m looking for, I’ve been busy studying home-made quilts. Thru Hiker stocks everything you need to make your own quilt, and the plan would be to end up with something like this (from tarbubble).

Everyone seems to want to sew in footboxes into their quilts though, and I hate the idea. I’m not sure if I need to be convinced that a footbox is reasonable, or I just need to make my own quilt the way I want it. And I’m still wondering if I should make two individual quilts that can join together instead – but if we were camping individually, we’d be using sleeping bags!

Right now, my theoretical quilt will be about 2m x 2m (79″ x 79″), with a little tapering at the end, some draft-excluding wings around the edges to allow tucking under thermarests if need be, and maybe a little velcro/clips on the wings around the foot end, so it can be closed in if need be. And it’ll be a lovely bright orange colour.

We’d bring along a light polar fleece blanket to be our under-layer, then with the down quilt weighing in at under 1kg, it should be a nice light-weight (but warm!) sleep system for hiking with.


Some awesome quilt making tutorials here:
Two person down quilt by Wystiria
Brian and Lis two person down quilt
Single down quilt

Categories
canada general hiking moosling

Failing to hike up Ha Ling Peak

Last Winter, we got so little snow that hiking up Ha Ling Peak in February wasn’t a problem. This year has been a little different, it was obvious from the start that there was still a lot of snow, with fresh skin tracks heading up beside the trail.

Still, with a nice packed trail, hiking in the snow was pretty easy. Until we hit the treeline.

Then our nice packed trail dispersed into a myriad of snowshoe trails. We did some tentative exploration on one of them. Brendan post-holed a lot. So did I.

This was the view from one of my holes.

Meanwhile Finn just hung out in the Ergo with his sunnies on.

So, conclusion? Bring your snowshoes if you want to get to the summit. Or maybe wait another month.

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canada general hiking snow trip reports

The first hike of the year

“Do you wanna go skiing?”
“Yeah, ok.”
“How about Mount Shark?”
“Yep, sounds good.”
…..
“The road over Whiteman’s Gap keeps being closed due to avalanche.”
“And it sounds like the trails will be bullet-proof anyway.”
“Yeah, lets not go skiing there.”
“I’d still like to get out and do something.”
“Yeah.”
“How about we go for a hike?”

And so we hiked up Lady Mac. The trail was actually dry or just a bit muddy for maybe 10-20% of the way. Then there was just a lot of packed snow. Which got less and less packed as we got higher. We stopped at the teahouse for a quick bite to eat (the Moosling had a suck on a vegemite sandwich and a banana), then fled the horrible wind, and did some good butt-sliding on the way down. The butt-sliding was the main reason I kept carrying the Moosling on my front, as I’d have much preferred the weight on my back.

Photos from Kristy (because I forgot my camera!!)

Categories
bikes canada general hiking moosling snow travel

2010 in photos

I think I was planning to do this last year, but was completely overwhelmed by the task of choosing one photo per country, let alone one photo per month. This year, that’s not such a problem. We rarely strayed from the Bow Valley, so all adventures were pretty local, although some were admittedly quite life-changing. A few days before the year began, I found out I was pregnant. And so that provided the frame for my year to unravel in (and decided us on staying in Canada for the rest of 2010 at least).

 

January: I started working for a heli-skiing company in mid-December, after arriving back to Canada from the epic Japan-Europe bike trip. When the opportunity for a free four day heli-skiing trip came up through work, I thought I’d better jump at it (as in a few months time I might be getting a bit too pregnant). The rest of the month was largely spent being exhausted and nauseous, thanks to the pregnancy hormones kicking in. I did squeeze in one day of ice climbing though, seconding up a 200 metre long WI4 – lots of fun, very tiring. There were also family friends visiting, who we went out adventuring with a little (and managed to dislocate Brendan’s shoulder on his first backcountry skiing experience – although we got it back in, and he came back to Canada to live for the Winter, so it can’t have put him off too much)

 

February: The first few days of the month I was still away heli-skiing, then returned to Canmore, absolutely exhausted (although sated on much tasty food). I did my first hike up Ha Ling Peak for the year, as the unseasonably warm Winter continued. An ultrasound in Calgary proved that there was only one wee beastie growing inside me, to my considerable relief. The Winter Olympics were on in Vancouver, and I spent my 30th birthday watching the Olympics and eating chocolate fondue and pie (but not together) at a friends place. Otherwise I spent a lot of time being incredibly nauseous, and having a lot less energy than usual (although I still got out skiing a few times). Sleep was king.

 

March: My nausea was thankfully fading by now (except for mornings, when ginger ale was my saviour), and I was starting to get my energy back, so I started getting out doing things a little more often, which felt great. The beginnings of movements were starting inside my tummy, and I got some hiking and biking done. I acquired a full body harness as well, and started a routine of going to the climbing gym every couple of weeks to do some easy climbing.

 

April: I did a lot more hiking this month, as the “Winter” seemed to have disappeared altogether now – although I still got in a few days of skiing. We started house hunting, looking to move to somewhere a little larger, hopefully downtown. There were obvious rollings around going on inside my stomach – by the end of the month I was more than five months pregnant, and some days it felt like I had a herd of elephants loose inside my tummy.

 

May: Alex and I did our last ski tour together for the year, to Egypt Lake (we got the hut to ourselves, and it’s fantastic). We started getting cyclists trickling in to stay with us via the warmshowers.com website. And we got a Magic Bullet blender, and the obsession with making smoothies began – thankfully my appetite had finally returned to normal, and the hypersensitive sense of smell had vanished. Mid-month we moved to our new house – a 2-bedroom four-plex that’s right downtown. Otherwise the month was filled with hikes, bike rides, yoga, and kicks in the stomach.

 

June: Early in the month there was an alarming pie explosion incident. It was followed by lots of hiking up the neighbourhood mountains, and I noticed my available oxygen was gradually decreasing over the month. Mid-month there was an attack of visa stress as our current work permits were due to expire, yet the application for new ones wasn’t going as smoothly as anticipated. We also had a tame ferret break into our house via the tumble dryer ducting – sadly we found his owners and returned him the following afternoon.

 

July: We did a three day hike from Sunshine Village to Mount Assiniboine and out via Mount Shark, while I was 34 weeks pregnant. Getting in and out of the tent was challenging, and my feet were swollen and enormous by the end of it, but it was fantastic anyway. My oxygen started returning as the baby started settling head down. Despite that I was still finding it harder to get out hiking, as I was moving so much more slowly, and all the warm weather was making my feet puffy and swollen. At the end of the month I was a volunteer for the work team doing the 24 Hours of Adrenaline (a mountain bike enduro event), which Alex competed in – dislocating his shoulder half-way through the event when we ducked off for a swim in the lake to cool down. I biked the Legacy Trail between Banff and Canmore for the first time and was kicking myself for not doing it earlier.

 

August: At the start of the month I was 37 weeks pregnant and staying at the Bugaboos Lodge. Thankfully the long long very bumpy road in to the lodge didn’t set off labour. I did my last hike up Ha Ling Peak, and finished up at work. By August it was almost impossible to get any sleep overnight, everything was uncomfortable, and rolling over in bed was an epic mission that had to be contemplated for minutes before commencing. Walking around was increasingly uncomfortable as my pelvis hurt so much, but I found cycling was really comfortable, with my pregnant stomach hanging hammock-like, and barely any weight on my poor feet. Some friends stayed for a few days, visiting from Australia, then I spent my last week of pregnancy being domestic. And then on the 21st my waters broke just before midday. 40 hours later, the Moosling had arrived. The rest of the month disappeared in a blur of getting to know him, and learning how to look after him.

 

September: We took the Moosling to see his first pipe and drums bands at the Canmore Highland Games as I gradually regained the ability to walk more than a hundred metres. Mum came to visit for most of the month, and spent lots of time cooking and looking after us. By the end of the month I was feeling recovered enough to join in on the family hike up Ha Ling Peak (my tenth summit of the peak for the year, and Finn’s first summit on the outside).

 

October: This was the month of adapting to life with the Moosling, with Alex back at work and without my Mum to help out. Friends visited, we had a big Thanksgiving dinner, and I started hiking and bouldering again, and doing yoga. We started getting out and about with Finn in his Chariot. And someone bought a copy of the boardgame Settlers of Catan, which we started playing several times a week.

 

November: Early in the month the Moosling and I did a flying day trip to Vancouver to get his Australian passport sorted. Then there was enough snow around to start skiing at the Nordic Centre, testing out the Chariot in ski mode, and we got a family day out at Sunshine. I kept bouldering, and for some reason I did nanowrimo and got a short novel written.

 

December: After a few days of skiing early in the month, we flew to Australia. There we spent a couple of weeks in Melbourne, going to a wedding and doing a whirlwind visit of friends and family. Christmas and New Years were then spent up at the farm (while Alex went back to Canada to work… and ski).

Categories
canada general hiking moosling

Through the snow to Chester Lake

A neat little hike that I’ve done as a ski tour in winter. Not quite enough snow for skiing at the moment, but not so much that hiking was impossible. There was some snow being flicked up into boots though (gaiters would have been a good idea) and thankfully a few other people had been out there before us to stamp the trail down.

 

Starting out along the trail to Chester Lake – not too much snow yet

 

It was also the first test of the fancy new Ergo backpack – an upgrade for Finn from the sling, as the weight on one shoulder was getting a bit too much for longer hikes. He’s not quite big enough to sit in it normally yet, so it’s being padded with blankets and a mini-pillow, in lieu of buying the proper infant insert (which he’d probably only need for a few weeks anyway).

 

In the meadows before the lake, with views back to Burstall Pass

 

 

Chester Lake

 

 

Megan and the Moosling, hanging out at Chester Lake

 

Distance: 10km return
Elevation gain: 310m (1900m – 2210m)