Title: Trail Food
1Trail Food
Brought to You by . . .
2Car Camping (surfing, climbing)
- Breakfast backpacking stove food
- Lunch backpacking type
- Dinner individual foil cooking over open fire
- Scout Advancement
- Tenderfoot (help prepare meal)
- 2nd class (cook over backpacking stove, cook over
open fire, make fire) - 1st class (plan a menu for a day and lead the
cooking)
3Dutch Oven
- Cook time 30min to hours
- Fuel charcoal briquette
- Stews, meats, desserts
- Inexpensive brands of pots are fine
- Good for car camping, especially for cold weather
4Foil Cooking
- Everyone makes own meal
- Cook time 20 min
- Fuel wood coals or charcoal
- Great for 2nd class cook over an open fire
- Great for last meal before a long term backpack
2 kinds of meat (5 scouts/lb) 5 kinds of veggies
(5 scouts/lb) 3 kinds of condiments 2 kinds of
spices Salt / pepper Optional tortillas, bread,
raw garlic, onions
5Philmont Triangle
Wheres the bathroom ??
6Bear Canisters
- Required in Most Areas of the Sierras
- Designed to Hold Food for a Week
- Worth Their Weight in Food
- Never Lend a Bear a Quarter
2.75 lbs 614 in3 (10,000 ml)
7Backpacking Rules of Thumb
- Bring what scouts (and leaders) will eat
- Practice on training hikes and KEEP SCORE
- Fit the trip
- Cooking, eating, and clean-up Speed
- Size
- Water
- Taste
- Perishable
- Durability
- Energy
- Stove and cook kit type
8Food types stores
- What to EAT ??
- Fresh Fruits Vegetables
- Canned
- Retort
- Dry
- Freeze-Dried
- Dehydrated
- Where to Buy IT
- Ralphs
- Costco
- Trader Joes
- REI
- web
9Breakfast
Meals
Lunch
- Cook eat in dark and cold
- Lots of Non-Suger carbs to last until lunch
- Warm food OR drink
- Some sugar to start day
- Not too much fats
- Usually non cooked
- Be sure to include enough calories
- Some fats, sugars
Dinner
Snacks
- Start with soup
- Dessert on about 1/2 dinners
- Hot drinks
- Eat and clean up in dark
10Breakfast
- Packaged oatmeal
- (maple and brown sugar, strawberries cream)
- Breakfast burritos
- (tortillas, REI eggs, taco bell sauce)
- Eggs Hash Browns
- (REI eggs, REI or Smart Final hash browns, taco
bell sauce) - Pancakes and Syrup
- (from Ralphs, takes 3 hours, great on layover
days)
11Lunch
- Salami String Cheese
- (non Nitrate Salami at trader joes)
- Peanut Butter Jelly on crackers
- (jar of PB squeeze tube of Jelly, strong
crackers) - Tuna Cheese Crackers
- (7 oz bag of tuna, cheese in wax, strong
crackers) - Cook dinner type meal (eat trail lunch at night)
12Dinner
- Tortilla Soup, Spaghetti, Garlic Bread
- Bear creek minestrone soup handful of TJs
tortellini's, REI Spaghetti, French rolls,
butter, garlic seasoning - Tacos
- Frozen hamburger or dried taco tofu, tortillas,
fresh grated cheese, taco bell sauce, fresh onion - Traditional
- Top Raman REI (mountain house) bag food
- Thanksgiving dinner
- Can turkey, bag of stuffing mix, cranberries, in
single pot, add gravy to suit
13Snacks, Dessert, Drinks
- Trail Snacks
- Payday, Tootsie rolls, Starburst candy bars
- Dried fruit from TJs (pineapple circles, apples,
etc) - Trail Mix from TJs, Ralphs, Costco
- Jerkey
- Drinks
- Gator Aid, Kool Aid, Tang, powder mix
- Cocco, Spiced Apple Cider, Coffee (bags, brewed,
french press) - Desserts
- Instant Pudding, Oreos, Rasberry Crumble
(Mountain House), Chocolate Bar
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15Efficiency
Energy
Cal
Energy Efficiency
Weight
Oz
Table source Mountaineering The Freedom of the
Hills, 7th ed
16How much food do you need ?
Hard hiking day Winter
4000
100cal/oz
150 cal/oz
75 cal/oz
3000
Hard hiking day
Calories
2000
Easy hiking day
1000
8 oz 16oz 24oz 32oz 40oz
Weight
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18Rookie Lessions Learned
- 1. Carrying more food than you need.
- 2. Not planning all your meals.
- 3. Carrying food in original packaging instead of
repacking in lighter zip top plastic bags that
compress easily or can be used to store trash. - 4. Taking junk foods that have little or no food
value along. - 5. Packing canned drinks. You will have to carry
the empty can around after your done. - 6. Putting a loaf of Wonder Bread in your
backpack. - 7. Thinking Bear Canisters are only to keep bears
away from your food. - 8. Trying to carry all the water you will need on
a trip. - 9. Not knowing how long it will take to cook each
meal. - 10. Wasting fuel by letting the water boil too
long. - 11. Not making sure some morning meals are quick.
- 12. Not testing meals with your scouts on a short
outing or at Camporee. - Purchasing a heavy mess kit when all you really
need is a plastic cup, bowl and spoon. Remember
you are already carrying a knife in your ten
essentials. - Drinking directly from a stream or lake.
19Next Step Backpack Leader Training
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