Alpine Tips
Could this be the best free firestarter?
Want a terrific firestarter that’s free and burns great? Look no further than a supermarket - waxed cardboard produce boxes are your friend.
This tip is more for car camping or a home fireplace. For a superb fire starter, go to the produce section of any supermarket, and ask the produce person for a dark brown waxed cardboard box or two. (Or look around the back of the store and find a pile as shown below.)
These boxes are regular cardboard dipped in paraffin, so they can hold wet veggies like lettuce without falling apart. The boxes are free for the asking.
Tear the boxes into strips, and use them as starters for your next fire. They burn furiously for several minutes, are lightweight, mostly waterproof, and free. One box makes a LOT of fire starters!
Keep your water from freezing in a snow camp
Camping in sub freezing conditions? Drinking water is a valuable commodity. Here's how to keep it from freezing.
When you're in a frozen environment like a Denali high camp, liquid water is precious. After you melt snow, preserve that water by burying your pots of water.
You need a pot of water, a stuff sack or large plastic bag that goes over the pot (this is essential to avoid frozen ice against the pot the next morning), four wands, and a shovel. Bury your pot about 10 inches below the snow’s surface and cover it with snow (if powder is not available, use the shovel to pulverize snow as much as possible). It is key not to leave any air pockets. Use the wands to locate it the next morning. Even if it’s 60 below, your water will not be frozen! This works with water bottles as well, but you might have to bury those a bit deeper.
More tips:
If your water is in bottles, store those upside down so any ice, if it starts to form, will do so on the bottom, not the lid.
To keep the cap from freezing to the bottle you can coat the threads of your bottle with vaseline or lip balm.
If you have a platypus-type bottle, you can wrap the tube in foam insulation, and be sure to blow water back into the bladder after you take a sip so it won’t freeze in the tube. (Better yet, don't take a water bladder in the first place, they are prone to all kinds of problems when alpine climbing.)
If the water bladder water line freezes, just put the line under your jacket next to your skin (not as bad as it sounds, really!) Your body heat will melt the ice in a few minutes.
Get water on the go - 3 tips
Climbing on snow or hiking near mountain creeks? Here’s 3 tips to keep to you hydrated.
Here are some tips for “water harvesting” on the move.
1 - If climbing or hiking across a snowfield, keep your water bottle easily accessible. Frequently add handfuls of snow to your water, without stopping. On a warm, sunny day, this snow will melt or form a drinkable slush — bring a straw and some Gatorade powder for a poor-man’s Slurpee. (One more reason not to use a water bladder - you can't easily refill like this.)
When you grab or cut snow chunks to add to your water bottle, collect from the bottom edge of a snowfield or serac. This snow is heavily saturated with percolation and will add more water than the same snow volume gathered from lighter, fluffier snow.
2) Water running down a rock face face in a broad, yet shallow, curtain can be hard to collect. Here’s 2 tricks.
A - Carry a small length of aquarium tubing type hose; buy it any a decent hardware store or aquarium shop. Use it as a flexible straw to suck up water that you can't reach. (This is especially handy in desert areas, where water may be just a tiny trickle.)
B - Remove your jacket and long-sleeved shirt, and then spread and flatten your hand across the rock, giving the wet slab a chest-level “high-five.” The water will collect on your fingers and run down to your elbow in a stream; fill your bottle from this drippage point. (This last tip and image are from Climbing magazine.)
Face your tent door into the breeze to avoid bugs
Mosquitos. We all hate ’em. Here's a tip to help keep them at bay.
When it’s breezy, mosquitoes will congregate on the lee side of objects to avoid being blown away. So pitch your tent door into the breeze. You’ll be able to enter without bringing the swarm in with you.
Ridgelines often have more wind than hollows or valleys. If it's really buggy, try to camp on a ridgeline if you can.
Face the door of your tent toward an oncoming breeze to help avoid mosquitoes.