What are people doing to simplify their equipment, lighten their load and increase reliability of vehicle and equipment? What are you doing without that you thought you needed? Cooler instead of fridge? Heating water instead of water heater? Compressed air instead of air compressor?
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Oh bloody hell, I am still getting rid of stuff I bought four years ago thinking it would be
necessary to survive, or that I wanted because I thought it'd be cool to have as part of a complete rig.
Much of it was still brand new, a lot still in-the-box, and a bunch of it so lightly used it still fetched a great price when I sold it. The more I got out there and the more long-term back country stays I made, and the more I found I'd rather be solo than part of a traveling group, or god forbid, a convoy of vehicles all doing the same exact thing for several days, the more I realized I really did not need a lot of the stuff I thought I would. My style evolved differently.
- A Murder Spork (Krazy Beaver Shovel of thicker/stronger steel, with serrated teeth, other cool features) - cool looking and very functional bit of kit, but I found myself reaching for my long-handled shovel and never missed the murder spork when I didn't bring it, even when stuck.
- A Pioneer Rhino Rack roller, that facilitates loading one's rack with ladders, lumber, etc. Knew exactly how I would install and use it, though never did. Even if my RTT was not up there, I don't see the need, in my case, for the roller.
- My
Oztent RV-5: once I settled into using my RTT and van and being solo far more than having, or being with, company, I no longer needed a big ground tent.
- Baofeng 8w handheld radio and accessories. Never used it, never installed it, sold it to someone who will.
- A terrific
Frost River Isle Royale waxed canvas backpack, with hip belt, great padded shoulder straps, etc. An amazingly well-made bushcraft style pack. One of those items that becomes a family heirloom, as in "This used to belong to your Great-Grampa Road, you know, who used it all over the US and Canada!" has become "I've never used this and now it's
for sale so my kid doesn't have to when I'm gone."
- I have a
Snow Peak Pack & Carry Grill with all the extras that I'll be selling, too. Used on two short trips, I think, and though I love it and would love to keep it, it just does not fit my packing style and keeps getting shoved to the back. So it's going, too.
I could go on. A lot was purchased thinking I'd be adventuring differently than I am now. A lot could be kept for potential future use, and I still think all the purchases were smart when I made them.
Though I look at my adventure gear like my wardrobe. If I haven't used something in a year--with the Big Pause of 20-21 excepted--then do I really
need it? Will I really even
use it in the next year, or is it just taking up space?
What I've learned in getting out there so much more regularly and for longer and longer than I used to--not just road-tripping from one gig to the next but camping for months at a time--is that so much of what we buy is not necessary.
We think it is because everyone else is buying it, hanging it all over their vehicles, and posting up about how they just got this cool thing or that. Or, because we're following the leader; that if someone we follow on forums or social media bought something, then we think we should, too. So much of what we think we should have is a fad.
There are some things that are worth spending big pesos on, and some things that are not.
What those things are will be different for different folks.
The trick is getting out there before you spend too many big pesos and determine for yourself what you really want or need. Then spend the big pesos on the shit you really want.
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