Veronicad1
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Hopefully this fall!
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I'm hoping to walk the Camino this fall and I'm currently going through everything I've purchased and now cutting it down. I would like to know what would be the best compression sack or sacks for clothing and/or a sleeping bag and a case for first aid supplies. I have a Deuter Act Lite 45+10 Liter. Based on the list below, what size(s) should I get? Too much stuff?
Items to pack: 1 pair of silk glove liners, 1 pair of waterproof gloves, 2 Buffs, 1 wool blend hat, 4 pair of Exofficio underwear, 3 sports bras, 3 pair Columbia zip off pants, 3 pair of silk long underwear, shirts TBD, 4 pair of silk sock liners, 4 pair of Smartwool socks, 3 under shirts - 1 silk 2 merino wool blend, 1 micro fiber towel, 1 fleece, 1 rain poncho, 1 light weight jacket, 1 bar of Dr Bronner's, small toiletries/first aid, 1 rollable hat, 1 silk sleeping bag liner, sleeping bag TBD, 2 NASA reflective mylar blankets, 1 small bag for electronics and power converter, small plastic clothes pins, 2 pair reading glasses, 1 head light. It fits with no compression now and no sleeping bag.
I don't know what kind of shirts to wear over my long underwear so a bit of advice on that too would be a great help.
Take what you want!!!!! If you get tired of it give it away or ship it home. It is your way. I carry extra stuff cause I want it available to me. I also am in spain for 10 weeksI'm hoping to walk the Camino this fall and I'm currently going through everything I've purchased and now cutting it down. I would like to know what would be the best compression sack or sacks for clothing and/or a sleeping bag and a case for first aid supplies. I have a Deuter Act Lite 45+10 Liter. Based on the list below, what size(s) should I get? Too much stuff?
Items to pack: 1 pair of silk glove liners, 1 pair of waterproof gloves, 2 Buffs, 1 wool blend hat, 4 pair of Exofficio underwear, 3 sports bras, 3 pair Columbia zip off pants, 3 pair of silk long underwear, shirts TBD, 4 pair of silk sock liners, 4 pair of Smartwool socks, 3 under shirts - 1 silk 2 merino wool blend, 1 micro fiber towel, 1 fleece, 1 rain poncho, 1 light weight jacket, 1 bar of Dr Bronner's, small toiletries/first aid, 1 rollable hat, 1 silk sleeping bag liner, sleeping bag TBD, 2 NASA reflective mylar blankets, 1 small bag for electronics and power converter, small plastic clothes pins, 2 pair reading glasses, 1 head light. It fits with no compression now and no sleeping bag.
I don't know what kind of shirts to wear over my long underwear so a bit of advice on that too would be a great help.
Wow, no one has called me that for at least 40 years.45 litres is as big a pack as anyone would need. Your stuff will fit easily, or at least it should. If it doesn't, then you have too much stuff. You don't need the NASA poly film miracles. You are not going into space....its a rural farming district with towns every few miles. Most people don't need the headlight unless they plan on walking in the dark. Remember that most modern phones have a flashlight built in.
As to your questions, I used a compression bag only for my sleeping bag (the one it came with) and my toiletries (OK, not a compression bag really). Everything else was either loose or in a plastic bag. You have a poncho, so there is no need to waterproof internally. If you must separate things in your pack, pick the lightest bags you can find. I used grocery bags.
As to shirts, its all about layering. Depending upon when you go and how lucky you are, it could vary from very hot to near freezing temperatures. You add and remove layers to allow for adjustment. You already have a fleece (the most important thing in the bag), and I hope your light jacket is really a wind jacket. Beyond that, you should be OK with one or two long sleeve pullover types and a couple of T-Shirts. As you are selecting the long sleeve, think both warmth AND sun protection. I suggest merino for all of these, but anything synthetic is also fine. No cotton.
Oh, and forgive me I simply cannot resist. Two pairs of reading glasses? No wonder they called you four-eyes at school!Sorry, I had to get it out.
Buen Camino!
Yes thank you - southeast Florida is where I am for the summerYes, cotton shirts are a very bad idea, but tech (wicking moisture away from skin/quick drying) shirts are cheap and easy to find. If you would tell us where you live, we could even give you more detailed information ;-) BC SY
I never thought of doggy poop bags! Thank you. I may forgo a pair of zip pants. Even so, it all fits and is under 10 lbs before the backpack. MosWe are going in the fall as well. The list below weights in at 12 lbs. (5k). Add water & food = 15 lbs. This is fairly heavy for me, as I weight 105 lbs and am 63 yrs old with a dicey back.
I have:
1 pair hiking pants (wearing)
1 warm leggings
1 winter weight panty hose
1 long sleeve wicking T-shirt (UV protection)
1 short sleeve T-shirt
1 long sleeve fleece shirt
1 wind jacket (will wear 1 or 2 or more of tops as needed)
1 buff
1 sun hat
1 warm beeny hat
1 caftan (after shower, can wear to town, can put leggings & warm shirt under, sleep wear, privacy curtain, wear while doing all the other laundry)
1 pedi socks (for after shower & lounging)
2 bras
3 knee high hose (sock liners)
2 thin socks
1 wool socks
1 waterproof socks
1 pr fingerless, padded gloves for use with hiking poles
1 pr warm gloves
1 shower & evening sandals
1 poncho for me and my pack
1/2 of sandwich size bag for medical
1 xs stuff sack for my meds
1 shower bag (Sea to Summit) 2/3rds empty. Has all I need.
1 silk bag liner
1 cut down fleece liner to put inside silk liner (all in a waterproof sack)
1 puzzle book & pen
1 small drawstring bag for evenings & shopping
tiny wallet
passport & Camino passport in waterproof, marine grade zip lock
tiny bottle for 1 dose of meds if needed
phone, charger for Euro plug ins, cable
tiny flashlight
spork
sandwich box, plastic & light weight for food I don't want to smash.
tissues
mint strips
6 dipper pins for hanging laundry
1 long shoe lace for laundry and belt around poncho in the wind
doggie poopy bags (just in case) for ..... and dirty tissues
panty liners
several pages of travel reservation confirmations (toss as I go)
It's all you need, really. Heat, cold, rain. And if you must have something else, there are stores in Spain.
Thank you! Yes, I've lost readers and having a spair pair is the idea. They're the FG folding ones for my 59 year old eyes. I thought I was over packing and of course REI LOVES seeing me walk in! I need extra underwear for my equally as old bladder so that I won't foego but some of the stuff can go back to REI and Amazon. I have a poncho, wind jacket and gaiters too.In May, I ended up wearing just one pair of shorts and sent one pair of pants ahead to Santiago. There would never be a reason to carry even two pair of zip-off pants. If it got cool, I had long underwear bottoms to wear under my shorts. Two pairs of glasses I totally support. One pair of mine got knocked off an ancient Roman bridge into the water early in my walk and I was very happy I had another pair.
Oh, re. shirts... you can spend a lot of money on easy-dry, wicking, hi-tech tee shirts at places like REI (or similar sporting goods stores in other countries). I just found that Hanes makes a very inexpensive tee shirt called XTemp that will be perfect for the Camino. It feels like cotton but is cooling and dries fast. I got a couple at Walmart.
I am going in the fall and will be carrying for clothes:
Altra trail running shoes
Chacos sandals (they are a bit heavy, but I will probably end up walking in them as much as in my shoes)
2 pairs socks
2 pairs underwear
2 bras
1 set long underwear
1 shorts
(probably no long pants)
2 tee shirts
very lightweight rayon dress (I wear this when the rest of my stuff is on the line or when I don't need to look like a pilgrim)
rain jacket
rain pants
1 buff
1 bandana
lightweight gloves (I like to use them with my Pacer poles so my hands don't get sweaty, too)
I think that's it.
I need extra underwear for my equally as old bladder
Believe or not two pantyliners stuck together serve very well as an emergency boot insole.One word - pantyliners
Apart from socks and underwear, I cut everything down to two pairs. How late in the fall/autumn do you plan to walk. You should not need long johns, glove liners, or gloves. Woolly hats not really necessary. It is still quite warm through to the end of October. I have no personal experience of November but I have heard its not really cold then except at high altitudes like Pyrenees and Montes de LeónI'm hoping to walk the Camino this fall and I'm currently going through everything I've purchased and now cutting it down. I would like to know what would be the best compression sack or sacks for clothing and/or a sleeping bag and a case for first aid supplies. I have a Deuter Act Lite 45+10 Liter. Based on the list below, what size(s) should I get? Too much stuff?
Items to pack: 1 pair of silk glove liners, 1 pair of waterproof gloves, 2 Buffs, 1 wool blend hat, 4 pair of Exofficio underwear, 3 sports bras, 3 pair Columbia zip off pants, 3 pair of silk long underwear, shirts TBD, 4 pair of silk sock liners, 4 pair of Smartwool socks, 3 under shirts - 1 silk 2 merino wool blend, 1 micro fiber towel, 1 fleece, 1 rain poncho, 1 light weight jacket, 1 bar of Dr Bronner's, small toiletries/first aid, 1 rollable hat, 1 silk sleeping bag liner, sleeping bag TBD, 2 NASA reflective mylar blankets, 1 small bag for electronics and power converter, small plastic clothes pins, 2 pair reading glasses, 1 head light. It fits with no compression now and no sleeping bag.
I don't know what kind of shirts to wear over my long underwear so a bit of advice on that too would be a great help.
I was planning to take some because you know, I can sneeze and have to change clothes. However, the other comments about using them to dry your shoes and as insole liners are brilliant! They don't weigh that much or take up that much space so why not? LOL you ladies are brilliant!!!One word - pantyliners
South east Florida.Yes, cotton shirts are a very bad idea, but tech (wicking moisture away from skin/quick drying) shirts are cheap and easy to find. If you would tell us where you live, we could even give you more detailed information ;-) BC SY
Thank you. I have cut down to two of everything and I will take the long underwear only because those pants are quite there. Then again, they are silk so they're almost as light as air. I've been debating a fleece but everything else I have cut down and I'm weighing my pack to get it under 15 pounds.
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