nitro wrote:I would start with single day hikes first for sure. Get an idea of how much distance you can cover and how much water you will both need. Plus single day hiking requires much less gear.
My first priority item for single day, or multi-day hikes is good comfortable footwear. For single day hikes you don't need a great deal of specialty items. Just a day pack for water, snacks, track maps/notes, sun block, phone etc.
wayno wrote:now you tell me, you mean i've been carrying all that heavy parachenalia around for nothing after all these decades?
wayno wrote:nitro wrote:I would start with single day hikes first for sure. Get an idea of how much distance you can cover and how much water you will both need. Plus single day hiking requires much less gear.
My first priority item for single day, or multi-day hikes is good comfortable footwear. For single day hikes you don't need a great deal of specialty items. Just a day pack for water, snacks, track maps/notes, sun block, phone etc.
now you tell me, you mean i've been carrying all that heavy paraphernalia around for nothing after all these decades?
nitro wrote:I would start with single day hikes first for sure. Get an idea of how much distance you can cover and how much water you will both need. Plus single day hiking requires much less gear.
My first priority item for single day, or multi-day hikes is good comfortable footwear. For single day hikes you don't need a great deal of specialty items. Just a day pack for water, snacks, track maps/notes, sun block, phone etc.
gamergonehiking wrote:wayno wrote:now you tell me, you mean i've been carrying all that heavy parachenalia around for nothing after all these decades?
Haha! Great advice guys. Thanks.
I've been doing a lot of reading of the forums and you're right that lightweight stuff really costs, starting to feel like I am going to send myself broke just setting ourselves up. Having said that, I know it will all be worth it in the end.
Tell me, are there any websites that list hiking tracks/trails by locations or make it easy to find exactly where I might want to go? I've done some googling, but I seem to hit a lot of dead-ends, particularly when trying to find stuff that is a reasonable distance from where I am.
Onestepmore wrote:More gamers converting to bushwalking. I'd have thought the two were quite the opposite
I've played WoW as a badass UD shadowpriest for almost eight years (had a break the past six months, and just reactivated my account) Played on US realm pretty hardcore for a while, used to get up at 3 am to raid with my east Coast guild. I did this with two kids and a full time job. Maybe it's the obsessive side that likes researching, and detail (and beating people and pixels, lol) that transposes itself to bushwalking.
If you want to start out with car camping and day walks and your partner likes a bit of comfort, I'd suggest to have a look at a book called 'Camping in Style' by Aussie couple Angela Armstrong and Stephen Rado (I am sure i recommended this is another recent post)
Then you can work up to the privations of walking in with a backpack, then get obsessed and intrigued by going lightweight, or, shock horror, get obsessed with muckng around with hammocks!
It's a fun journey!
Haematocrit wrote:For the Horde!!!
gamergonehiking wrote:The title says it all really. My girlfriend and I are both fit, healthy people but we spend a lot of time indoors. We gym frequently and have a level of fitness, but we're really looking to get ourdoors more and do some hiking.
We're based in Dubbo, NSW and I believe we have a lot of options as to where to go, but we really want to get our experience up and do some overnight hiking. Ideally we're looking to get to the point where we can hike several hours, set up a camp, and hike out the next day. We don't have a vehicle capable of anything other than road travelling so we'd probably hike to a camp spot, set up, and hike out the next day.
So, I guess what I am asking is, what are our unknown unknowns? My girlfriend has never camped outside of a caravan, I've camped plenty of times when I was younger but I was never responsible for ensuring everything was safe and everyone was fed. Should we start with small single-day hikes first? What are some good nice-to-have items? Any things to look out for?
gamergonehiking wrote:Hey mate!
I'm not inexperienced no. Grew up camping, fishing and hunting. I still frequently go out on hunting trips for a few hours / overnight and I have decent fitness.
davidmorr wrote:gamergonehiking wrote:Hey mate!
I'm not inexperienced no. Grew up camping, fishing and hunting. I still frequently go out on hunting trips for a few hours / overnight and I have decent fitness.
Then you should have said that…...
Jaala wrote:Haematocrit wrote:For the Horde!!!
For the Horde!
Onestepmore wrote:Lol, I played a drood too. Was a boomy for ages (when they were the bomb in Wrath ), then got conned into healing for my monk tank meat shield friend in MoP. She looked great as a sexy Draenei goat when I defected to Ally for a year in Cata, now she's back to her udderly awesome cow self. I must play her again. Snugglebare
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