|
|
| Author |
Message |
| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
|
 Posted: 06:58 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: absolute bare bones camping - what's the least you've used? |
 |
|
Simple question - what's the very least amount of stuff you've used when touring on the bike. Imagine B&Bs and hotels aren't an option, and that you've got to camp.
I thought I'd got mine down to a fairly minimal set up last year - think it was this (afaicr):
1. Highlander Blackthorn 1 - a roll-in, roll-out canvas coffin essentially.
https://www.jacksonscamping.com/prodzoomimg8377.jpg
2. Ten quid Tesco ruck sack.
3. Tiny Tears cooking set (just a small saucepan / kettle that fits in the saucepan style deal).
4. Sleep roll.
5. Fold out tablets stove - about the size of a fag packet, deck of playing cards - slightly bigger but you get me.
6. Tesco sleeping bag - goes down really small, but there will of course be warmer, smaller, lighter ones out there.
7. Sundry items of food and water (also wet wipes, bog roll, etc.). Water is the killer. You need a brew but even a pint of water is heavy and bulky.
But I think that was basically it. I want to try and do it with much less if I can, but I really don't know if it's possible to do that without turning feral and basically becoming more animal than human. ____________________ "Life is a sexually transmitted disease and the mortality rate is one hundred percent."
Mobylette Type 50 ---> Raleigh Grifter ---> Neval Minsk 125 |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| doggone |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 doggone World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 May 2004 Karma :    
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| Copycat73 |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 Copycat73 World Chat Champion

Joined: 11 Jan 2013 Karma :    
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
|
 Posted: 07:57 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
Pretty much same as mine then. I want to do more than one night though - 4 or 5 max. Might schedule a B&B night just for a shower and proper bed though, at some point - maybe on homeward leg.
Anyway, thinking about it, I reckon if I went with the tent / sleep mat / sleeping bag combo I could easily ditch the sleep bag. I really didn't need it, and found I was taking layers off to get in it. What's the point of that?!?!? Might as well keep the layers on and not bother with the bag. Or even have some thermals stashed, and put those *beneath* your "day" layers. I think that would be a smaller and lighter solution than lugging a sleeping bag around.
So far then I've ditched all cooking crap and the sleeping bag. Theoretically at least. Not sure how this would "pan" out in practice.
Haha.
 ____________________ "Life is a sexually transmitted disease and the mortality rate is one hundred percent."
Mobylette Type 50 ---> Raleigh Grifter ---> Neval Minsk 125 |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| LessIsMore |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 LessIsMore Borekit Bruiser
Joined: 27 Mar 2014 Karma :     
|
 Posted: 11:49 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
I’ve toured France two-up on a Vespa with not much gear, but since I wasn’t camping I don’t have much advice for you. However, I also cycle, and there are many cyclists who tour with very little equipment indeed. One of them I know only as Mr Iik, an ascetic Slovene who roams far and wide – very wide, since he covers 150 km a day for weeks at a time – with less than 4 kg of gear including the clothes on his back.
He sleeps on plastic bubble wrap, subsists on ketosis and one good local meal a day, takes neither GPS nor phone, and even encodes his itinerary on a cue-sheet to save the weight of maps, like this.
Start here if you think he might have a good idea or two. |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| Northern Monkey |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 Northern Monkey World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Nov 2013 Karma :   
|
 Posted: 12:09 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha wrote: | Pretty much same as mine then. I want to do more than one night though - 4 or 5 max. Might schedule a B&B night just for a shower and proper bed though, at some point - maybe on homeward leg.
Anyway, thinking about it, I reckon if I went with the tent / sleep mat / sleeping bag combo I could easily ditch the sleep bag. I really didn't need it, and found I was taking layers off to get in it. What's the point of that?!?!? Might as well keep the layers on and not bother with the bag. Or even have some thermals stashed, and put those *beneath* your "day" layers. I think that would be a smaller and lighter solution than lugging a sleeping bag around.
So far then I've ditched all cooking crap and the sleeping bag. Theoretically at least. Not sure how this would "pan" out in practice.
Haha.
 |
How about a fleece sleeping bag liner? They're very thin and light |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| The Shaggy D.A. |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 The Shaggy D.A. Super Spammer

Joined: 12 Sep 2008 Karma :  
|
 Posted: 15:40 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
For long weekends, I get by with...
Argos Pro Action Hike Lite tent
3/4 length air mat
Sleeping bag
Silk liner
British Airways finest business class blanket
Poundland's finest £1 picnic rug
Mini Trangia kit + small bottle of meths
Mini LED torch
Spare undies, socks, T-shirt
Toiletries/drugs in a ziploc
Food I procure along the way, but I need my coffee fix in the morning, and if I get hungry later I carry a few small bottles of water, some porridge, some Smash, some Noodles, some Cup-a-Soup.
It all goes in the panniers (sleeping bag, air mat and blankets in one side, tent and rest in the other) but If I feel like having more I pop a small rucksack on the pillion with a cargo net. Any more and I'd be trading comfort for minimalism, and since I'm not actually carrying the stuff on my back, it matters not that a few bottles of water are a couple of kilos extra.
If the warm weather were guaranteed, I'd lose the sleeping bag and stick with the silk liner/blanket.
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/3526686/biketent2.jpg ____________________ Chances are quite high you are not in my Monkeysphere, and I don't care about you. Don't take it personally.
Currently : Royal Enfield 350 Meteor
Previously : CB100N > CB250RS > XJ900F > GT550 > GPZ750R/1000RX > AJS M16 > R100RT > Bullet 500 > CB500 > LS650P > Bullet Electra X & YBR125 > Bullet 350 "Superstar" & YBR125 Custom > Royal Enfield Classic 500 Despatch Limited Edition (28 of 200) & CB Two-Fifty Nighthawk > ER5
Last edited by The Shaggy D.A. on 15:47 - 14 Apr 2014; edited 1 time in total |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| ........................ |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 ........................ Spanner Monkey
Joined: 15 Jan 2014 Karma :  
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| doggone |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 doggone World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 May 2004 Karma :    
|
 Posted: 16:04 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
It's not just the stove though, you have to have other utensils and think about washing up
I managed two weeks in Germany and Austria without cooking anything, it was heavenly to have proper tea when back in Kent though.  |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| The Shaggy D.A. |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 The Shaggy D.A. Super Spammer

Joined: 12 Sep 2008 Karma :  
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| G |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
|
 Posted: 19:01 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
I took a petrol stove to go around Europe with.
Broke it on the first day before I'd even used it and did just fine.
I had budgeted for eating the local food at resteraunts and so on - and was happy to get some local bread/meat/cheese/desserts/etc. Pretty much just used my (locking) swiss army knife for cutlery.
However; if I've got a motorbike, I wouldn't be that bothered about being incredibly economical with stuff - maybe if it was a pushbike, but then the panniers on my push bike (which I'll often do 20-30 miles on in a day just shopping and the like) are the equivalent of a woman's hand bag half the time, never mind the motorcycle chain and various other bits, so maybe not!
I have wondered about various ways to use the bike as tent in the past.
With draping a tarp right over, you'd have to worry about the engine being hot if you've just parked up.
Not much use here, but there's a design for push bikes where you take one wheel off and use that to hold an end open.
On sleeping bags - I've got one that takes a roll mat inside it in a pocket. It saves spaces because there's no down on the bottom (on the basis you're compressing it, so it's not very effective anyway) and means you don't roll off your mat, which I'm prone to do.
I wouldn't wear a rucksack on the bike, but do like keeping a small backpack as a 'tank bag', which valuables etc can be kept in and easily taken off when leaving the bike. |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| stinkwheel |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
|
 Posted: 21:23 - 14 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
That style fo tent is fine. I used a Vango banshee 200 for my Round Britain tour. Also a backpacking therm-a-rest and a snugpak jungle sleeping bag. Within reason, that's about as small as you can go and still be in a tent without having to stash the rest of your gear outside.
https://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f216/stinkwheel/rbr/DSCN0730.png
The alternative is knocking together a basher of some sort or hammocking.
If I've gone lightweight for cooking gear, more for backpacking than motorcycling, I use a homemade meths burner (a type called a penny stove) and a 2-cup stainless teapot stolen from a service station. The stove and its fuel fits inside the teapot. I have a pyrex mug because I hate plastic cups (I also drink wine out of it), swiss army knife and a spork.
https://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f216/stinkwheel/66480019.jpg
The super lightweight way of cooking is to light a fire.
I usually take my Borde Bomb petrol stove though. The stove + Potstand + spork, lighter and SAK fits in the plastic tub. The mess tins are Czech army issue which gives you two nesting pots and a lid that doubles as a frying pan. Soap and socurer inside the mess tins. Old fashioned green soap can be used for cleaning the pots, your clothes (shave it into the hot water with a knife), yourself and for changing tyres.
https://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f216/stinkwheel/rbr/DSCN0801.png ____________________ “Rule one: Always stick around for one more drink. That's when things happen. That's when you find out everything you want to know.”
I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles. |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| thx1138 |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 thx1138 World Chat Champion

Joined: 06 Oct 2005 Karma :    
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| Az |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 Az World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Apr 2013 Karma :   
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| chickenstrip |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 chickenstrip Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Dec 2013 Karma :    
|
 Posted: 17:36 - 15 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
I slept in just an army slug at Le Mans in about '88. Woke up soaked and freezing at about 5am - not recommended!
I tried a Rab bivvy bag (eVent fabric) when backpacking in the Lake District, up on the fells. Weather was fine, but the bag felt very clammy and I decided bivvy bags weren't for me.
Most of my current camping kit comes from my backpacking kit now - lightweight, compact; it transfers very well to bike touring.
My main tent is a Vaude Power Lizard, but for longer trips I like the Vango Banshee 300 - bit roomier, I ain't gettin' any younger.
To keep your kit to a minimum, you need to consider multi-use items. Just as an example, i use a w/proof roll top bag to carry some kit - at night, I stuff my jacket and trouser liners in it, wrap a thin fleece pullover around it, and that's my pillow.
https://i1291.photobucket.com/albums/b550/nicknicklxs/DSCF1604_zps08f4bf0d.jpg~original |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| Peirre oBollox |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 Peirre oBollox Could Be A Chat Bot

Joined: 04 Aug 2004 Karma :   
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| Llama-Farmer |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 Llama-Farmer World Chat Champion

Joined: 23 Jan 2012 Karma :   
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| tatters |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 tatters Exxon Valdez

Joined: 04 Jan 2004 Karma :   
|
 Posted: 04:33 - 16 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
I spent 2 months riding/camping across Canada, With a Vango Tempest 200 tent, 3/4 thermarest, Vango Viper 500 sleeping bag, Vango microfiber pillow plus a silk sleeping bag liner. And cooking each night with a mini trangia meths stove.
Very impressed with the tent in heavy downpours it stayed waterproof and even more important in Canada it stayed bug proof even with sand flys about. Also lasted the whole trip with everyday wild camping use. ____________________ Past:NRG50,AF1125(x2),NSR125RR,ZZR250,CX500,VFR400,KR1S,ZZR600(x2),CB400N,YZF1000(x2),KH125,Z200,FX400R,CBR954RR(x2)GPZ500S,GT550,VFR750F(x2),RD350N,XR650R,CBR600F,CB250,KDX250,YZF750R,CRM250,400EXC,KLR650,TTR600RE,DR350S,R100GSPD,RGV250,VMAX1200,DL650,KZ750 Present:G650XC,C12,CRF450X,1190ADV |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
|
 Posted: 05:33 - 16 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
My aim is to get everything into a single medium-to-large ruck sack, and to go for 3-4 nights
I'm currently (still) thinking some sort of waterproof sheet / tarp shelter and sleep roll will be the minimum kip arrangements (must also include inflatable pillow of some sort). It will basically involve sleeping rough - but I think I can do it in almost as much comfort as if I had a tent and sleeping bag.
Cooking stuff - not sure about this. I intend to use fire rather than stove, so might just have a single small, very light saucepan (for noodles / brew).
My latest theory is that pitch is everything. Get that right and pretty much everything else falls into place. Iow, if you can find the right spot, you can basically have a comfortable night. Abundant dry wood, good kindling, out of the sight line of landowners / bailiffs, etc. Decent shelter from wind, but enough elevation to be out of damp, perhaps foliage coverage for further shelter. Etc. etc. One of the downsides is you need to expend a lot of time pinpointing The Ideal Spot, which will probably be at the end of the day (or late afternoon) when most knackered. Also you may need a suitable bike to get to the spot. So something light with clearance. For me a 250 - perhaps TTR? Basically an off-road-ish bike that actually has a seat rather than an ass crack reamer. I'm talking about incursions deep into forested locations. Etc.
Just dreaming at the moment. But would be into stripping my set up right down. ____________________ "Life is a sexually transmitted disease and the mortality rate is one hundred percent."
Mobylette Type 50 ---> Raleigh Grifter ---> Neval Minsk 125 |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| G |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
|
 Posted: 07:09 - 16 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
Or a CRM250?
You can make dirt bike seats more comfortable if needed - my KTM 690 was worse than the average (thinner, thanks to various design features not leaving much room), I've done a good few long days as stock (5 hour trips with just stops for fuel) as well as 3000 miles after got some gel inserts.
And the same was fine for wild camping - don't really need clearance to get in to woods etc. Some kinda-appropriate tyres helps, but I just had the Sahara's on when wild camping. |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| chickenstrip |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 chickenstrip Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Dec 2013 Karma :    
|
 Posted: 09:27 - 16 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
As to stoves, I just use a gas canister type in the UK - MSR Pocket Rocket. You're never very far from somewhere you can pick up a canister, and I usually carry two, which is enough for all my needs for about 12 days, including cooking.
I did a 100 mile stretch of the South West Coast Path and met a guy using a little home made wood burner stove - he just collected a few twigs and bits from around his pitch and had a brew on every bit as quickly as me. Not sure how he'd have faired if everything had been soaking wet though. He also just had a home made tarp, rigged up with a trekking pole, and a bivvy bag.
He certainly must have been comfortable enough - the fecker snored all night!
I did try my own tarp construction along his lines, made from an old tent I had knocking about, but it was a bit small:
https://i1291.photobucket.com/albums/b550/nicknicklxs/DSCF1173_zps22950146.jpg~original
The plan was to use it with the Rab bivvy bag, but never tried it in the end. |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| stinkwheel |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
|
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| chickenstrip |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 chickenstrip Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Dec 2013 Karma :    
|
 Posted: 11:49 - 16 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
| stinkwheel wrote: | You're on a bike. Weight is (largely) unimportant. |
Yes, true to a certain extent, but I find if I use my backpacking kit, I don't notice the weight on the bike at all, so can still enjoy the twisties between campsites. Also, it all packs into one 50l bag and a tankbag, so it's easy to strap to the pillion seat.
The simpler your kit, the quicker you can set up and strike camp to be on the move again. All little details, but when you consider all these things, it adds up to give a much easier time of things.
Yeah, those ally mess tins are crap! |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
| J.M. |
This post is not being displayed .
|
 J.M. World Chat Champion

Joined: 27 Mar 2011 Karma :    
|
 Posted: 12:30 - 16 Apr 2014 Post subject: |
 |
|
How big are you? I took an almost identical tent to Spain with me. I found it to be too small for my liking. Also, if the weather was poor outside, I was unable to (comfortably) take many things inside shelter with me. It was manageable though
I purchased one of these as a replacement now, but I've yet to use it: https://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/partNumber/9275647.htm ____________________ 2004 R1 & 2018 XSR900 |
|
| Back to top |
|
You must be logged in to rate posts |
|
 |
Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 11 years, 308 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
 |
|
|