Bushwalking gear and paraphernalia. Electronic gadget topics (inc. GPS, PLB, chargers) belong in the 'Techno Babble' sub-forum.
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Bushwalk Inventory System can help bushwalkers with a variety of bushwalk planning tasks, including: Manage which items they take bushwalking so that they do not forget anything they might need, plan meals for their walks, and automatically compile food/fuel shopping lists (lists of consumables) required to make and cook the meals for each walk. It is particularly useful for planning for groups who share food or other items, but is also useful for individual walkers.
Sat 24 Jul, 2010 4:41 pm
Bought a couple of these today- Colgate wisp
http://www.colgatewisp.com.au/wisp/HomePageThey are designed as single use toothbrush- thought it would be great for overnight or bring along a bit of baking soda for use on multi-day... they are tiny and hardly weigh a thing (give or take a gram- lol). 9cm long and very slim.
Cheers
Lizzy
Tue 27 Jul, 2010 12:55 pm
Hi Lizzy,
Great idea. They would be good if you could re-use them a fair bit - otherwise not so good. Have you seen the little finger pads that you use instead of a brush to clean teeth. Super weight saving. Still need to carry a small tube of paste though. Quite a while ago I saw them in the supermarket, but didn't purchase any at the time and now they either don't stock them or they are a discontinued product . Maybe they are easy to make - like a little finger sock of some type and if you could put some small bristles on it, you would have a new lightweight toothbrush. Now there's a thought.
Cheers
Andrew
Wed 28 Jul, 2010 11:43 am
I use a toothbrush from an airline toiletries bag, along with a small sample tube of toothpaste the dentist gave me. Weighs 30g total. When I use up my stock these wisp could be the way to go.
Wed 28 Jul, 2010 7:03 pm
From other reports I have seen , they are pretty much single use.
You can get children's toothbrushes lighter and smaller than standard.
A little bit of baking soda goes a long way.
Franco
Wed 28 Jul, 2010 11:00 pm
You could cut a proper toothbrush down to 9cm get its weight down to around 5g use it for years and reduce you carbon footprint by not using disposable ones

corvus
Wed 28 Jul, 2010 11:01 pm
corvus wrote:You could cut a proper toothbrush down to 9cm get its weight down to around 5g use it for years and reduce you carbon footprint by not using disposable ones

corvus
hell, just cut it down so only the head remains!
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 1:01 am
Macca81 wrote:corvus wrote:You could cut a proper toothbrush down to 9cm get its weight down to around 5g use it for years and reduce you carbon footprint by not using disposable ones

corvus
hell, just cut it down so only the head remains!
Trim the head too. Ten bristles is enough.
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 4:10 pm
corvus wrote:You could cut a proper toothbrush down to 9cm get its weight down to around 5g use it for years and reduce you carbon footprint by not using disposable ones

corvus
better yet chew on a stick....
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 4:10 pm
Don't worry about the bristles, just use your finger and a dab of powder!
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 4:28 pm
Here's a quick picture next to a regular toothbrush.... and while you can certainly cut down a toothbrush, not use one, chew on a stick, yada yada yada- just thought someone may be interested... Having tried it out, the bristles are not super robust but it could definitley be more than single use. Anyway- all you gear freaks out there can hardly talk about carbon footprints
Cheers
Lizzy
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Thu 29 Jul, 2010 5:03 pm
Hahaha this thread got sillier and sillier.
I agree with Corvus. A cut down normal toothbrush is lighter than a small disposable, and better long-term for the environment.
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 9:13 pm
I've never taken a toothbrush walking, and don't plan to start now. I figure that with all the BO, nobody is going to notice bad breath. And it's lighter than any of the other options mentioned so far*.

If I ever do start taking a toothbrush, I wouldn't bother using either toothpaste or bicarb or anything else with it. Even at home, I used a toothbrush without toothpaste for about 10 years, and had much less trouble during those 10 years that the previous 10 years, or the subsequent 8 years.
* the real reason though has nothing to do with weight - I'm just lazy
Fri 30 Jul, 2010 7:58 am
Can't stand furry teeth. So I always carry toothpaste on overnight walks. Can use a finger as a tooth brush if needs be, but I think I would give up walking altogether the day a tooth brush was too heavy to carry.
Wed 18 Aug, 2010 1:26 pm
I manage to fit all of my toiletries into a plastic soap box... disposable shaver head one without the handle for the end of the walk , cut down toothbrush, cut down comb (for the kids... i have a hairdo like a tennis ball), soap, mirror, cotton buds, toothpaste, etc...I even have taken a piece of deoderant stick in a tiny snaplock in this kit(don't bother now)... wrap a large face washer around it as a towel etc... cant get crushed when jumpin on your pack in the mornings... and it can be easily lifted.... even by ill pigmies!
Wed 18 Aug, 2010 1:30 pm
Liamy77 wrote:cant get crushed when jumpin on your pack in the mornings
I was starting to think that my camp site morning routine was a lot more mundane than yours... but then I figured that you're probably talking about the kids.
Wed 18 Aug, 2010 3:17 pm
Son of a Beach wrote:I was starting to think that my camp site morning routine was a lot more mundane than yours... but then I figured that you're probably talking about the kids.


..... Oh er... yeah, the kids... yup that's it... so long as it isn't followed up with more questions?!
Truthfully: Yeah my kids like the "sack race" method of compression packing.... when ya get hollered at to hurry up so ya throw it all in.... and do an impersonation of a drunk sack-racer....
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