If you missed Episode 1, view it here.

Overview

This episode explores a few SUL alternatives for cooking and water treatment. While I’m not necessarily advocating one approach over another, I am making a case for the following choices that reflect my own SUL mindset:

  • The use of a UV pen for on-the-fly water treatment when using a cooking pot for water storage and forgoing a water bottle on routes with frequent water sources;
  • The use of small twig fires for cooking to save fuel weight and increase connectivity to the natural environment;
  • The use of a simple string and your pack for bear bagging in lieu of more complex and expensive bear bag hanging “systems”.

In addition, the video includes a segment showing how to minimize the impact of your firebuilding by restoring a burned area to its natural state.

The Video

Please click here if you do not see the video player below.

SUL Wanderer, Episode 2: Food & Water from Ryan Jordan on Vimeo.

Field Notes

This episode was filmed on several different trips in the Hyalite range of Montana and the Teton and Gros Ventre ranges of Wyoming. Here are a few notes and observations from these trips related to the techniques shown in the video:

  1. I had been using my thin wool gloves for grabbing pots from the fire. These work fine, and don’t melt like polyester or nylon. Having suffered a serious hand burn when tending a fire with synthetic fleece gloves (that melted to my skin) many years ago, I’m very wary anymore of using synthetics around fire. However, I’m taking gloves less often on my 3-season trips, and find that I just don’t need them very often. I started carrying leather gloves two years ago on guided trips where I knew I’d be tending a lot of fires for clients, and I have to admit, I’m hooked on them. They save my hands when I’m breaking twigs, allow me to move hot sticks while tending a fire, and they serve as a pot grabber. For SUL trips with a small pot, I only need one (shown in the video). I purchased my leather gloves (goatskin) at a hardware store for $20. They are thin and comfortable, and light (2.5 oz for the pair).
  2. I’ve always been an advocate of Light My Fire Firesteel firestarters. However, I’ve now broken so many of the little ones during routine use (the “Mini” model) that I know accept the extra weight of the more durable (and much heavier) “Army” model.
  3. I’m still not a fan of thin Spectra cord for bear bag hanging. The cord and rock sack used in the video is from Mountain Laurel Designs. It’s less than 2mm in diameter and cuts into tree limbs (especially softwoods like pine and fir, and especially when it’s wet) when hanging more than a few pounds. In addition, this particular bear bag kit has a rock sack that’s too small. Using too small of a rock means that your cord (and the sack) can get stuck in the tree if not enough weight is placed into the rock sack to overcome the friction of the cord running across the branch/through limbs after you toss it.
  4. I still hear many criticisms about the reliability of the Steripen – “batteries don’t last” or “shorts out too easily” or “shuts off without warning”. We’ve used Steripen Adventurers in our trekking school, and I’ve used them on nearly every guided trip, since this model was released, and I have to admit that while we have encountered the occasional glitch, these have generally been the result of operator error (the most common one being that the battery door was not sealed properly, so water entered the battery compartment). I remain a fan of this particular Steripen model.