what to pack for a 5 night organized tour?
Hi everyone!
I am trying to put together my shopping list of "stuff" I am going to need to ride the Tour deKota in June.
We are allowed two "medium sized bags".
I've been able to find some great info on this site about what to carry on the bike each day... I have an expandable wedge bag under my seat for tubes, tools, patch kit, CO2 pump, cartridges, etc. My shopping list to buy yet, includes a road morph pump and either a bento box or a handlebar bag, I haven't decided yet...
Clothing? I'm planning a jersey and shorts for each day. What else should I plan on bringing for on the bike and in camp?
Then what about camping? I don't have any decent camping stuff anymore, (we have a 5th wheel and haven't seriously tent camped since Boundary Waters trips back before kids!) I'm looking at a couple of Eureka tents, Pinnacle Pass 2XTA or a Backcountry 2. Are they decent or should I fork out a few more bucks for something else?
Sleeping pad? I keep hearing about thermarest pads but there are a ton of different models; is there one that you would recommend?
Sleeping bag? Do I need to get a spendy Mummy one, or will one of the cheap rectangular ones we already have work as well?
Thanks in advance for any help you can give me...my husband says I'm obsessing about this, but really I'm just super excited!!!
Tents and wind and snug bags
Gear isn't always enough weight depending on the wind conditions. If Trek had been with us in the Canyonlands last week, she'd still be down in the Maze hunting for all her belongings.:p
Sand/rock anchors are cheap and work extremely well, assuming you have rocks or something to use for additional weight.
http://www.mountaingear.com/pages/pr...8%204294967278
I am a big advocate of semi-rectangular bags for comfort. Mummies can be very constricting and are really only useful when you need to minimize weight and dead air space. For our supported tours, we use Big Agnes Yampa bags. 40 degrees, down and the 2" thick BA self-inflating pad slips into the bottom so the bag doesn't rotate with you as you change positions. If you have the space for your big ole bag and it works for the temps you'll be in, it would probably be fine, just beware it may take up more space than you allowed. We also use cotton/silk liner sheets so the nasty polyester isn't against our skin and they add a couple degrees of warmth.
A couple extra carrabiners can come in handy, are versatile and are more secure than clothes pins. I use a pair to keep sandals clipped to my day bag so they're handy without having to dig into my luggage. However, I go on small tours of 7-10 people so dangling stuff from luggage isn't an issue.
A laundry line with pre-installed clips and hooks can be strung between poles. A folding wash bucket.
Headlamp like a Petzl Tika or a flashlight that converts to a lantern.
www.campmore.com and www.sierratradingpost.com will both have stuff at good prices.
Check the Argus Leader Site Too
Hey Kabymom,
Have you read the Tour de Kota Forum at the Argus Leader site? Someone started a thread on what to bring based on last year... though the ladies here are much more thorough! :) And not many people are posting to it... I would think it would scroll a little faster.
http://www.argusleaderonline.com/for...play.php?f=258
Summary: Ear Plugs to drown out potential snorers... Tylenol PM... other stuff seemed to be run of the mill... oh yeah, a few people stay in local hotels.
On camping: I've heard that cot tents are an alright deal