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Camping Checklist

Posted: Tue Apr 09, 2019 5:07 pm
by Neumie
I've got a trip coming up in about a month on the Brazos River (Rochelles to Hwy 180) and started to put together a checklist and thought I would share it. Anything I'm missing? Oh, I prefer to cook real meals while camping and not dehydrated meals, thus the rather lengthy cooking items section. Only thing not included is what ever meals I have planned for breakfast and dinner. Snacks and beer are always a given.

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2019 5:54 am
by Earl
I am with you on real meals for short trips. Are you taking a canoe or kayak? If canoe a bailer for paddle drip/rain. If kayak a pump or sponge although there is no whitewater on that stretch of river you never know when you might develop a leak and need to pump out. For me I always have a throw rope on deck, just one of those safety items like a knife on my PFD it is part of the standard gear. Other than that looks good. Have a good trip and report on it when you are done. The Brazos on that stretch is pretty clear water so you filter will do fine. However, on muddy rivers like lower Brazos I take a collapsible bucket to let my water settle before I put in my filter.
SYOTW,
Earl

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2019 7:07 am
by Drifting Yak
Small bottle of hand sanitizer comes in handy - for cuts, scrapes, etc - but also good after bio break.

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2019 7:09 am
by Neumie
Earl wrote:I am with you on real meals for short trips. Are you taking a canoe or kayak? If canoe a bailer for paddle drip/rain. If kayak a pump or sponge although there is no whitewater on that stretch of river you never know when you might develop a leak and need to pump out. For me I always have a throw rope on deck, just one of those safety items like a knife on my PFD it is part of the standard gear. Other than that looks good. Have a good trip and report on it when you are done. The Brazos on that stretch is pretty clear water so you filter will do fine. However, on muddy rivers like lower Brazos I take a collapsible bucket to let my water settle before I put in my filter.
SYOTW,
Earl
I'm in a kayak (Ride 135). In my repair/safety kit is rope, paracord, duct tape, sponge, flares, extra whistle, signalling mirror, diagonal cutting pliers (hook removal), and heavy fishing line (hook removal).

My friend and I have done PK to Rochelles, S. Llano, a stretch of the Llano, and Lower Colorado. Not experts at this by any means, but I have been tweaking what I carry with each trip.

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2019 8:04 am
by JW FunGuy
I might have missed it but, small garbage bags. Not just for packing out garbage but if you need to weatherproof something.

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2019 11:29 am
by Neumie
JW FunGuy wrote:I might have missed it but, small garbage bags. Not just for packing out garbage but if you need to weatherproof something.
Yup, missed bringing a garbage bag of some sort.

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Thu Apr 11, 2019 2:19 pm
by Hirsch
Here's an old thread from 9 years ago that may help.

http://www.texaskayakfisherman.com/foru ... 2&t=146182

and from 10 years ago.

http://www.texaskayakfisherman.com/foru ... hilit=list

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Jun 24, 2020 1:02 pm
by lhargraves43
Great list! Ill save this for future reference but I actually prefer a flashlight compared to a lantern. I always have my GearLight TAC LED Tactical Flashlight with every time I have an outdoor activity. If youre looking to get a flashlight, you should read this review.

Re: Camping Checklist

Posted: Wed Jun 24, 2020 5:02 pm
by TexasJim
Josh: I didn't see Alcohol Swabs on your list. My wife and I use vodka and rum to combat Covid-19. However, we did that WAY before we ever heard of the new virus! ...TexasJim...