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Setting Your Pace

JustRob

Member
While we're on the subject of equipment, I thought I would share a few suggestions about pacing yourself on a long hike that I've derived from various scouting & military friends that have worked for me.

1) When you first start out for the day, walk about twenty minutes then take a five minute break to see how your equipment is feeling that day. Check your boot laces to see if they're not too tight or too loose. Check you pack straps to adapt to any shifting of the contents from the previous day (especially since you never pack your kit the smae way twice).

2) Take a five to ten minute break every hour. Unsling your pack and give your legs a rest. Take your shoes off and air them out if you want. It's a marathon, not a race. Change socks as the need arises.

3) Change socks immediately if you feel a hot spot. The feeling will never just go away. In fact, it will get much worse.

4) Finally, I'll pass along an army saying that was probably first said by a Sumerian soldier and repeated by successive generations in armies throughout history: "Don't stand if you can sit, don't sit if you can lie down, don't stay awake if you can sleep."
 
Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

€83,-

Or as my walking companion, Jofrid, said : Why be brave if it is enough to be smart... :wink:

Liv
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
There's more...

The Sumerian had a few other insights as well:

1) The food is always bad.

2) The general (or some other officer in his chain of command) is an idiot.
 
WolverineDG said:
Another addendum to the advice from the Sumerian: Never pass up the opportunity to use the restroom.

Trust me on this one.
dg

A good pilgrim always go to the toilet when he/she can. Especially if there is toilet-paper. And soap. And paper-towels to dry your hands.
Wich there never really is. Only toilet.

So, bring your own roll of t-paper, and wet-wipes to wash your hands before eating.

Love from Liv who has survived toilets both in Azerbaijan and Nepal.
 

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