Unexpected Trail Magic | Stove Woes | CDT Ep 141

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  • Опубліковано 2 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 41

  • @tomgarcialmt
    @tomgarcialmt Рік тому +1

    You have really hit The Sweet Spot balancing introspection with appropriate chattiness. These past few videos have been the best ever. And this is my favorite part of the trail

  • @quirkykindalife2948
    @quirkykindalife2948 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing your appreciation for New Mexico. It’s my favorite state, so beautiful and low key.

  • @PascalRimbaut
    @PascalRimbaut Рік тому +3

    Very nice video ! Mighty landscapes in NM desert. Beautiful mountain behind you on the thumbnail , like an old vulcano . Hike on !

  • @TXMEDRGR
    @TXMEDRGR Рік тому +3

    "Drink every cup of coffee like it's your last..." Wise words to live by, and maybe a great tee-shirt slogan. Thanks for sharing.

    • @DrDavidThor
      @DrDavidThor Рік тому

      Put a bit of hemlock in the coffee to emphasize the point.

  • @LenserX
    @LenserX Рік тому +2

    I really loved this stretch after Cuba. Mostly cuz it was great to FINALLY be out of the cold and snow. Of course I didn't know what laid ahead of me just north of Grants but, whatevs, we were finally in the DESERT. And I have a strong love for hiking in the American SW deserts. Also thanks for flipping through some pages of the log. I always appreciate the opportunity to see who else is on trail.

    • @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes
      @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes  Рік тому +1

      I always take pictures of them out of habit, but I normally don’t post them anywhere. It can be nice towards the end of the through hike when you know a lot of people around you to look back and see where everybody was when

  • @robbrandtBSA
    @robbrandtBSA Рік тому +1

    Those BRS stoves.... I had one and loved it until it could no longer draw fuel while hiking. It was odd, suddenly I could not light it. When I got back down to lower altitudes and warmer temps it worked, but for 2 days on the TST I was without hot food (and a popped mattress but that's another story). But the great thing about the BRS's is that they are so light and cheap you can take 3 with you! LOL
    The bigger problem is that they are not fuel efficient. The BRS was my first canister stove since ditching my whisper lite, so I didn't know it. But I swapped for a cheap version of a Jetboil and it used far less fuel than the BRS. So I did further research and found that a jetboil itself would use even less than that. So the BRS is really a false economy. It is amazingly light, but you are going to have to carry more (heavy) fuel to make use of it.

  • @TheSringel
    @TheSringel Рік тому

    I'm really enjoying seeing this trail and this desert country. thx.

  • @marleenvos4126
    @marleenvos4126 Рік тому +2

    Those desert landscapes are truly amazing; don't think we have anything like that here in Europe.

  • @markrenfrow9873
    @markrenfrow9873 Рік тому +2

    Hey Matt, thanks for taking us along.

  • @timfarness9949
    @timfarness9949 Рік тому +2

    The view are spectacular! But those drop offs would make me nervous. They called me grace as a kid because I was clumsier than most.

  • @karensmith5116
    @karensmith5116 Рік тому +3

    I am now retired, but lived and worked for about a decade in the general area of NM you are currently hiking through. It is indeed beautiful and good for the soul. I always enjoy following your adventures, but watching this section has me pining for a good mesa hike! I would just hike the NM portion of the CDT just to see all that once more. Stay safe, enjoy, and keep that gorgeous footage coming! ( spoken whistfully and finished with a big sigh!)

  • @richardross7219
    @richardross7219 Рік тому +2

    Years ago, as an experiment, I heated a pint of water to boiling using my old Army canteen cup and stove with 4 tealight candles. It was slow but, worked. You could probably use your cup and 3 tealights to warm up a cup for coffee. I like tealights for many uses around camp(light, drying tinder and kindling, and hot poncho). The 1/2 hour visit with the couple was probably a rest your body needed. Happy Trails. Good Luck, Rick

  • @celestetaylor1751
    @celestetaylor1751 Рік тому +1

    I always love seeing Cabezon peak. You can look up the valley north and see more volcanic plugs.. it’s the same valley that leads to Chaco canyon. Very mystical to me

  • @seekingishwara737
    @seekingishwara737 Рік тому +1

    Last year I camped at about the same place looking out at Cabezon Peak. What a great campsite. Tomorrow you'll head up onto the Mount Taylor plateau...it is really long.

    • @MaxZomboni
      @MaxZomboni Рік тому

      That area is probably the most spectacular part of New Mexico.

  • @brandonwinstead7137
    @brandonwinstead7137 Рік тому +1

    Man that same thing happened to me last Sunday with the time change. I was able to squeeze a day hike in last minute and let's just say I'm glad I brought my headlamp 😅

  • @dwightsmith4641
    @dwightsmith4641 Рік тому +3

    The Optimus stove I bought in 2019 continues to work whereas others (5 in total) have failed. Maybe I just got a really well made stove and it will fail eventually but not so far.

  • @otway00
    @otway00 Рік тому +1

    More great views. Great idea for a hiker t shirt line...... Hiker in Trainer..... Red Line Hikers Rule

  • @hankremer6606
    @hankremer6606 Рік тому +1

    You’re super famous to us Matt. Ha!

  • @georgem7965
    @georgem7965 Рік тому +1

    Apparently, that trail maintainer has never met a rock cairn he didn't like. I can see them for route finding over unclear terrain or to mark an important place, e.g. the way down over rim rock, but every 40 feet seems a bit excessive, particularly when the trail is obvious. I'm looking forward to seeing that field of volcanic plugs up ahead.

    • @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes
      @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes  Рік тому

      They did look a little bit excessive at times but that section was actually very rough and winding. So in a lot of sections if they didn’t have them constantly, I would’ve ended up off track wandering across the desert floor.

  • @MaxZomboni
    @MaxZomboni Рік тому

    11:45 Two months later and that UA-camr is still milking her fake helicopter evacuation for everything it's worth, and there's no end in sight. It will be interesting to see how many more months she can go on with it. It's like a soap opera.

  • @Yafers
    @Yafers Рік тому +1

    Nice video Matt

  • @paulstevens4178
    @paulstevens4178 Рік тому +1

    With the rash issues, have you ever experimented with different fabrics, polyester versus nylon versus merino, wool, etc.?

    • @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes
      @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes  Рік тому +1

      You mean the pack rash? I have used a variety of different Sun hoodies, but I’ve never found that the material has much of an effect. I really think it’s the salt from excessive sweating and it drying out.

    • @paulstevens4178
      @paulstevens4178 Рік тому

      @@FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes yes, pack rash. As a long-distance cyclist, I had horrible lower rash problems until I discovered bike shorts with the chamois. I thought, given the way you are, you may be had tried a bunch of things, and it would be interesting to hear. I have never done anything close to what you’re doing so……

    • @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes
      @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes  Рік тому +1

      @@paulstevens4178 when I did bike centuries I used to use udder butter quite heavily. While hiking I think I collect dust and dirt a lot more which has some additional challenges as far as smearing cream around. The best thing I found is actually preventative, and that is when I’m doing my morning cat hole routine I try and wipe up down there with the wet wipes I use for toilet paper. Beyond that, I have tried a few products for when chafing crops up but I don’t really have something that has been a silver bullet

  • @eaglerare1273
    @eaglerare1273 Рік тому +2

    Ur rolling now

  • @harlanstockman5703
    @harlanstockman5703 Рік тому +1

    How do your tent zippers hold up in the dust?

    • @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes
      @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes  Рік тому

      The Nemo has a fairly durable zipper. Though I do think I might try and grease it after I get back in town. One side has been catching in one particular spot.

  • @raktoda707
    @raktoda707 Рік тому +1

  • @shephusted2714
    @shephusted2714 Рік тому +1

    looks like serious lion territory but no wonder they have vast ranges - not much to eat out there, you are in nuke testing territory too - pretty areas should get even nicer as you keep venturing south

  • @Beswicki
    @Beswicki Рік тому

    Greetings from across the pond, Manchester UK. (you must be famous?) Why not carry a spare BRS stove. It weighs about the same as a Bic lighter and i bet you always carry a spare one of those? Rock on bro' !

    • @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes
      @FirstChurchofTheMasochistHikes  Рік тому +1

      I might look into them, but I try and avoid carrying replacement gear since it adds up. Most of the time you are a few days away from the next town where you can always replace something.

  • @thomasmontoya7279
    @thomasmontoya7279 Рік тому +2

    youre youtube famous to me : )

  • @nathanielkatz6938
    @nathanielkatz6938 Рік тому +1

    Try snowpeak giga power stove maybe.

  • @harlanstockman5703
    @harlanstockman5703 Рік тому

    May be IT jobs at Los Alamos and Sandia National Labs