by Warin » Thu 08 Feb, 2018 8:13 am
Both. The order depends on where I am, and what I think the weather might throw at me.
Wet weather clothing into one bag; jacket with hood, pants, gloves
Ready use bag: map, pencil, paper, insect repellent, sun cream, phone, first aid kit, PLB
Read consume bag; lunch, snacks, steripen
Cold clothing into one bag; hat, shirt, pants, thermals, socks, jacket
Fecal ( changed from S* as site objects) kit -one bag; small hand shovel, 10 sheets of toilet paper in ziplock bag (this is the ready use bag.
The above might be packed into a day bag ready for use on minor side trips.
Warm clothing into one bag; hat, shirt, pants, socks, jocks(spare), hankie (spare)
(Obviously wearing either warm or cold so some of this will be on me.)
Food store - one bag: any wet stuff goes into its own zip lock, then into the one common bag.
Cooking pot -one bag;pot with lid, inside it stove, matches, pezio or fire stick, spoon, scrubber, possibly a cup of soup mix, hot chocolate mix ready for a quick hot break.
Over night goes into one bag; sleeping bag (in its own compression bag), Inflatable mattress (again in its own bag), sheet, thermals, socks, hat and large quantity of toilet paper. I might combine things into the one compression bag depending on the gear.
Some things are not bagged e.g. camp thongs.
Tent goes into 1 or 2 bags, 1 if dry and goes inside main pack, 2 if wet- separate inner with should be driest from wet outer, if possible place 2 wet bags outside pack ready to hang out to dry when stopped.
There are many choices to be made .. there needs to be suitable provision for them in the packing. I have skipped some things .. cannot be fussed as things change one trip to another, even on the trip itself as you adapt to circumstances.
As for round logs vs square logs ... the backpack is not square. So the things you pack should have some give in them to conform to the shapes available - one of the reasons why compression sacks should not be done fully compressed .. fully compressed they are firm and won't conform to the shapes required. The term 'pack density' is used to describe the efficiency or otherwise of the use of the avalible volume.