Good hiking survival gear list

Good hiking survival gear list

Day hikes and backpacking trips don’t always go to plan – but do you actually have the things in your backpack that you need to survive? You might be surprised what can happen, here’s some of the real things I have encountered over the years:

  • Your hike may take much longer than you expect and the sun may go down.
  • You can get lost or have to re-route completely from your original trail due to washouts or dangerous conditions.
  • You can run out of water/food/snacks miles before you expect it. Sometimes bottles or water bladders leak. Sometimes squirrels/rodents eat your food or they fall out of an unzipped pocket.
  • The weather can unexpected change for the worse in a life-threatening way. Especially in higher altitudes where 1000′ of elevation can make a dramatic difference.
  • You or a member of your party can have a health emergency like a heart attack or a sprained ankle and be unable to walk out on your own power.
  • You might come across someone else who needs help.
  • Your car breaks down going or returning from a hike in the middle of nowhere. The road could become impassible on the way out – or you might even have your car vandalized or stolen from the trailhead.

Philip Werner has conducted CPR on hikers who’ve collapsed on trails, rehydrated hikers who were dehydrated, patched countless cuts, scrapes, bruises, and blisters, jump-started cars, changed flat tires, been overtaken by violent thunderstorms, and had water filters break days from civilization. I have encountered at least half of these things – and a few even more serious not on his list.

His list includes some very good recommendations/links for all the absolute necessities but I’d add a few more notes:

Bear Spray – useful even outside bear country. Sadly, here in Oregon, it is not unheard of to encounter dangerous people in the woods, homeless are living on public lands and can react in unexpected ways, armed cartels grow weed and performing other illegal activities. Sure this isn’t common for your day trip to Multnomah Falls with 2,000 other people per day. But anyone going on a hike alone or on very sparsely traversed trails would be wise to bring some minimal physical protection. Help is HOURS away – even after you call them (if you even have cell coverage).

Physical paper map and compass – Rescue teams in Oregon wish they had a dollar for each time they were told ‘I had the map on my phone’ when rescuing lost hikers. Phone batteries die way faster than people expect – especially when it gets cold or they are using the GPS constantly. Once that phone goes off, you’re completely without help. Bring a physically printed map in a ziplock bag in case it rains and a compass. And go learn how to use a compass. If you don’t know how to set a bearing on a compass and stay on target across rough terrain in a fog/storm – you don’t actually know how to navigate with a map and compass. Learn and practice!

Extra layered clothes – NO COTTON – If you get stuck overnight, t emps can and will drop almost 40 degrees in some cases. If you don’t have extra wicking layers to put on (not layers like cotton that will kill you when they get wet), then you might find yourself with serious hypothermia or death.

Emergency gear in your car – I have gotten back to my car and found that the battery was dead. I got back from a hike to find I had picked up a thorn and my tire was now flat. I had misjudged the hike, run out of water on the trail, and immediately GUZZLED all the drinks I left in the car. I was on a trail where the temps had dropped dramatically overnight and I ran across a guy who’s serpentine belt jumped off due to his half-frozen water pump. He was trying to get it back on in the snow, in freezing wind, with no tools and no gloves. And no cell service for either of us. My group once got back to the car to find the driver dropped the keys in the woods (fortunately we had 2 cars and a friend we called to bring a spare set – after an hour and half drive we waited out at a nearby pub). All of these could have become life threatening

Long story short: the adventure may not be done when you get to the car.

You should have a charged portable jump starter (that you checked before you left), a spare tire that you have checked the air pressure on and/or a portable air compressor with patch kit. Having a minimal tool set is a near essential too. Besides fixing the car, you should also have a jug of drinkable water, food, and extra clothing. You could get back and find your car won’t start. You could be facing an overnight in the car and a full day walk out to civilization – AFTER you’ve done a huge hike with soaking clothes. Have everything you need in the car to survive at least 2 more days.

Bic lighter and tinder – ignore those stupid flint and steel things. Fire will save your life – not having it could mean death. Unless you have trained on how to flint/steel in windy conditions with frozen hands in the rain/snow on wet material – use a lighter and pre-made tinder designed to light right up. Heck, leave a blow torch and a pile of wood in your car. You don’t want to die because you were screwing around with some hipster camping kit you got off Etsy.

Zip lock bags – you can spent hundreds on waterproof gear that inevitably fails/waterproofing wears off – or you can just get some Costco ziplock bags and make 100% sure your phone stays dry. And you can use it through the bag without opening it. You can keep your socks, the map, and anything else in them too. Get some one gallon ones and quart ones. You can even put the phone charger in the bag with the phone and charge it while using it – in the driving rain.

Is generalist indie game publishing over?

Is generalist indie game publishing over?

I was talking to one publisher last year on the subject of wishlists. They told me they won’t launch a game unless it has over a specific number. I told them how many we had when we launched PlateUp! and I was told that wasn’t enough. We sold over 200,000 units in the first month, which was significantly more than predicted. And they subsequently issued a profit warning.

There’s no hiding the fact the game industry is going through an implosion. From the biggest studios to the smallest indies, layoffs and studio closing have been going on for 1-2 solid years now with no end immediately in sight. It’s not just bad for developers, it’s been really bad for indie publishers too. Publishers are trying to navigate stiff competition from competitors and over-investment that has flooded the market with games and tons of free content. While there have been some breakout hits, publishers say there is almost no rhyme or reason to it.

Publishers are finding the old ways don’t work. The industry is going through what one person calls ‘organizational disruption’. Amazing talent is now freely available on the market and seems to be finding success in embracing new niches and sub-genres.

Devolver’s Lowrie adds that although it may seem counterintuitive, risk aversion is actually the riskier approach. “Those that are willing to experiment and remain agile will find their hits and build an engaged audience,” he says. “Playing it safe isn’t going to be very safe at all.”

Instead, new studios are staying close to the developers and the nitch games they are developing to, as one dev said, “put themselves in the best places to get lucky”.

Timberline ski passes go up due to 500% insurance increase

Timberline ski passes go up due to 500% insurance increase

The main argument for the Oregon Supreme Court’s ruling in Bagley v. Mt. Bachelor, Inc. (356 Or 275, 2014) was that the liability waiver signed by Myles Bagley was unconscionable under Oregon contract law, making it unenforceable for claims of ordinary negligence.

Bagley v Mt Bachelor (356 Or 275, 2014)

Because legislators could not pass House Bill 3140 nor Senate Bill 1196, Oregon’s recreational industry is being decimated as insurance carriers exit the state due to a “broken recreational liability system.”

A 2014 state court ruling that effectively nullified all liability waivers signed at ski resorts – which makes the resort or recreational provider liable for all costs in case of injury or death. Since that ruling, the majority of recreational insurance companies have stopped offering coverage in Oregon.

Timberline is no exception. They have reported their previous insurance provider has now just left the state too. They have secured a new insurer, who’s premiums are 166% greater with 10x larger deductibles. Since 2020, Timberline’s cost of insurance has gone up by 586%.

This obviously doesn’t just affect skiing or snowboarding – but any paid recreational activity in Oregon such as rafting, mountain biking, boating, snowmobiling, climbing, and even hiking. Sadly, as is the case in the decade long completely Democratic controlled run Oregon, nothing will likely be done until major sectors of the recreational industry leave the state or simply close down.