Sunday, 27 August 2017

Christchurch 360 Trail: Travis Wetlands to Waimariri Beach

A visit to Travis Wetlands following the Christchurch 360 Trail

Over the weekend I completed another short section of the Christchurch 360 Trail. As I've previously said the Christchurch 360 is a series of urban trails that encircle Christchurch. It is approximately 130 km in length and encompasses urban tracks as well as the Port Hills, the beach and Waimakiriri River banks.

The section I walked on Saturday was from Burwood Road, through Travis Wetlands and then down to Waimairi Beach skirting Bottle Lake Forest Park.

The Port Hills from Travis Wetlands, near Marahau Road

Bower Avenue to Travis Wetland entrance, Travis Road

This section is approximately 6 km's long, about two fairly easy walking hours in total. Because the ends of the section are so far apart it makes sense to use the local bus services to get yourself down to the Travis Road entrance to Travis Wetlands. 


Map: Travis Wetlands to Bottle Lake Forest. Circles denote other entrances to wetlands
The start of this section is at Travis Wetlands so I jumped on the Orange Line bus at Bower Ave park and rode it to the intersection of Burwood Road and Travis Road. It is a short 5-10 minute walk east along Travis Road to get to the entrance to Travis Wetlands.






Orange line bus waiting at the Bower Avenue Park stop

Waking up Burwood Road to the entrance to Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail
I jumped off the bus early so I could walk past Newhaven Street. This is the first street I lived in when we came to New Zealand from the US back in 1974. The original house is long gone, destroyed by the 2010 Earthquake (like so many others on this eastern side of Christchurch).


The first street I lived in when I came to New Zealand

Passing Waitakiri School on the way to Travis Wetlands...my first primary school

 At the end of Burwood Road you take a left turn and walk down Travis Road for about a kilometre to the entrance to Travis Wetlands.

Start of Travis Road heading to the Travis Wetlands entrance
 

Jon walking down Travis Road to the start of the track

 To those non Kiwis amongst you, we have a national election being held in the last week of September so we are being bombarded with election hoardings from the various parties. I don't know why they bother really as 90% of people will have decided who they are voting for long before they are allowed to erect the signs.

Election hoardings along Travis Road

 Into Travis Wetlands

The first part of the trail is through Travis Wetlands, a regenerating Raupo/Kahikatea swamp on the eastern boundary of the city. There was a historic swamp forest in this area which was cut down in the mid 1880's to build houses in the Christchurch CBD.


Map: Travis Wetlands tracks and access points

 I decided to enter Travis Wetlands from the Travis Road entrance to the area. This is not the official Christchurch 360 track entrance but in fact gives a much nicer introduction to this wetland park.


Travis Wetlands entrance on Travis Road

Travis wetlands: I didn't see any machinery...must be working during the week

A small mire or swamp lake in Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

Private properties adjoining Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

Nice pebble track, Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail
 Travis Wetlands is a nature reserve and an area of native swamp regeneration. Christchurch originally consisted of a series of Raupo/Kahikatea swamps that reached from just behind the beach all the way to Riccarton Bush about 12 km's inland. As the city was built up the land was drained and used for residential housing and farms. 

Back in the late 1980's this old farmland was retired and a concerted effort made to return it to the type of swamp it would have been prior to European settlement. This is a long term programme which will take 50 odd years to complete. 

A view out over Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

One of the public parks incorporated into Travis Wetlands

Alternate entry point to Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

Native cabbage trees, flaxes and Miro trees, Travis Wetlands
 As you can see the City Council and the Travis Wetlands trust charged with this regeneration have been planting native trees in the area. Eventually this will constitute a three tier Kahikatea Forest with trees ranging from 30 metres high to swamp tussocks and sedges. As a mature Kahikatea tree needs 300-400 years to grow this process is only just starting. 

Fence to stop animals entering the wetlands, Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

The old willows that once clothed this swamp are slowly being removed as native trees mature enough to cope without their protective presence. Eventually this will be an all native swamp forest.

Old Willow trees being removed from Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

The viewing platform which overlooks Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

View from the top of the tower towards the Beach Road entrance point, Travis Wetlands
 It is difficult to see but there are a multitude of Kahikatea trees growing out on this old pasture land. Kahikatea are a type of swamp pine...they like wet,  sandy soil with regular inundation and will thrive in this area. 


Old pasture gradually regenerating into swamp, Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail


The effect they are trying to create...Kahikatea Swamp near Franz Josef, Westland




Nice board walks above Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail
 As well as the forest there are a lot of small lakes and ponds for waterfowl to use. At present there are Pukeko, Swans, Herons, Cormorrants, Mallard Ducks and Geese living in the reserve. Once the forest grows there will also be Fantails, Wood Pigeons, Bellbird and Tui as all these types of birds live in Kahikatea forest. 

Beach Road entrance and Information Centre in the distance, Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

More of the board walks in Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail
 Below is a juvenile Kahikatea tree, these are about five years old which shows you how slowly they grow. If it survives this tree will eventually be 2-4 metres around the trunk and 30-40 metres high or 100-140 feet tall!


What it is all about...a Kahaketea Tree, Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail




Close up of juvenile Kahaketea Tree

A mature Kahikatea Tree from the T.E.R.R.A.I.N website

There are wide expansive vistas over the Wetlands, eventually these will be constricted as the tree planting progresses further into the swamp. There are a number of connecting tracks through the swamp- more are planned but as this is a volunteer effort progress is slow.

Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail...the beach is about 5 kms in that direction!

Jon on trail in the centre of Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

 As you can see from this photo, the Port Hills dominate the Christchurch skyline...you can see them from as far as 60 kilometres inland. I know I'm home when I see that oh so familiar sight...
 
The Port Hills from the Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail


Exit onto Marahau Road, Travis Wetlands


Native Pukeko dwelling in Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail

Pukeko from behind...

...and Pukeko from the front!
I would never do so, but you can hunt Pukeko at certain times of the year. It is around the same time as duck hunting season. How do they taste? There is a well known recipe that goes in part...

"...catch your Pukeko, place this along with an old leather boot in a large pot of boiling water. Cook for 6-8 hours, remove Pukeko and eat boot..."

The Information Centre is right next to the trees centre left, Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail



Travis Wetland information board

The Christchurch 360 trail continues alongside Marahau road


Example of the grass-wetland margin at Travis Wetlands

Another Pukeko at Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail


Old willows protecting Kahikatea, Cabbage Trees, flaxes and sedges in Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail
f
View back towards the Travis Road entrance to Travis Wetlands, Christchurch 360 Trail


Travis Wetlands car park on Marahau Road


Near the end of the Travis Wetlands section of the Christchurch 360

At the end of this pathway you cross Marahau Road and start the walk up Putake Drive, Parklands. 

 Other access points to Travis Wetlands

There are entry points to Travis Wetlands on Travis Road, Beach Road and in two separate places along Marahau Road.

Marahau road entrance to Travis Wetlands



Nice appropriate planting around the car parks at Travis Wetlands

 Through Parklands to Bottle Lake Forest

The next part of the section is a walk up Putake Drive to the edge of Bottle Lake Forest Park. Once at Bottle Lake Forest the trail skirts the edge of the trees for about 2.5 kilometres to Bower Avenue Park near Waimairi Beach. This is both road walking and forest trails.

Waking along Marahau road to Putake Drive and Bottle Lake Forest


Turn right into Putake Drive for the Christchurch 360 Trail


Putake Drive, Parklands, on the Christchurch 360 Trail
There is not a lot of trail marking along this section, you see the odd Christchurch 360 symbol on the track maps and the occasional marker like the one below. This is on one of the lamp posts along Putake Drive.

Christchurch 360 trail maker on Putake Drive

Nice planting along the pathway, Putake Drive, Christchurch 360 Trail



Approaching Bottle Lake Forest, Christchurch 360 Trail
When you get to the end of Putake Drive you turn right and head along the walking/MTB track running along close to the houses. Just keep heading to the east and eventually you will reach the beach and Bower Avenue Park. 



Christchurch 360 marker at end of Putake Drive...


...and from the other side looking back along Putake Drive



Close up of the Christchurch 360 logo...arrows denote change of direction.

Christchurch 360 Trail, the pathway skirting Bottle Lake Forest

Along the edge of Bottle Lake Forest 

The land Bottle Lake Forest sits on is owned by the City of Christchurch. Unfortunately the trees belong to Matiriki, a Nga Tahui owned forestry company. The forest is in the process of being harvested which is a god-damn shame because it is a magnificent recreational resource...but who ever let that stand in the way of making some cold hard cash...sorry, I digress.

Bottle Lake Forest sign, Christchurch 360 Trail

Turn left to follow the Christchurch 360 Trail

Timber felling under-way in Bottle Lake Forest

We are not able to access the actual course of the Christchurch 360 trail while the timber felling is under-way. As you can see in the photo below the official track goes north past this block of forest and then follows 23rd Ave all the way out to the beach at Waimairi.

The Christchurch 360 Trail track goes that way...we cannot!
All of these forestry roads have military names: they are either named after WWII infantry battalions (18th/22nd/21st...all Canterbury units) or letters of the phonetic alphabet (Victor/Uniform/Juliet). At the end of WWII/Korean War most of the NZFS forest rangers who managed this forest were ex-servicemen. The rangers worked in the forest right up till the changes to the NZFS in the early 1980's. 

One of my uncles who served in the Korean War worked here for nearly 30 years.

Christchurch 360 Trail, keep skirting the Bottle Lake Forest all the way to the beach

Christchurch 360 Trail, easy to follow road along Bottle Lake forest
This empty swathe between the forest and houses is a fire break, it used to be about 20 meters wide but after several fires they made it 40-100 meters wide.

The suburb of Parklands as seen from the Christchurch 360 Trail near Bottle Lake forest

Better to just follow the walkway to the beach and not the Christchurch 360 Trail



Last part of Bottle Lake Forest before the end of the section at Bower Ave park

The beach is 10 minutes walk that direction...

The actual Christchurch 360 trail follows 22nd/23rd/29th Avenues through the forest, it crosses the road shown below about a kilometre north of this point. This then joins onto the Southern Pegasus Walkway which continues out to Brooklands.

The actual Christchurch 360 Trail route is down there somewhere...near Bower Ave park

I parked my car on the far side of Bower Ave park, there is a bus stop on the corner of Bower Avenue and Parklands Drive which can take you to Travis Road. Please note: they play club rugby at this park on Saturday morning...there is little to no parking from about 8am to 11am most Saturdays.


Bower Avenue, Parklands...end of this section of the Christchurch 360 Trail


Bower Ave park and the toilet block there...


The Port Hills from Bower Ave park..Mt Herbert just visible in centre of photo

Too be quite frank, I would just follow the gravel pathway all the way from Putake Drive to Bower Park, at least until they finish harvesting the forest. It is easier to walk on and takes you to almost exactly the same place without the need to dodge exclusion zones. 


Bottle Lake Forest Park sign/map
The map below is wrong...there is actually a road between 23rd Ave and 29th Ave so you don't have to go bush bashing.

The exclusion zones on these maps are where the earthquake debris from the Christchurch CBD are partially buried. When they are finished in 2020 or so there will be two massive hills about 200 metres high and 2 kilometres long. They plan to cover them with soil and plant trees on them. 

 Bottle Lake Forest, Christchurch 360 Trail..the actual 23rd-29th Ave connector track!


Close up of the Bottle Lake Forest Park sign/map


Orange Line bus waiting for custom...Bower Ave Park...that is Mt Herbert in the middle far distance


Bower Ave Park: Orange Line bus and start/end point of trip


Orange Line bus stop at Bower Ave park. 'Silver surfer' parked in the background to right

One more section knocked off the Christchurch 360 trail, I'm slowly getting closer to the finish line, then I'll need to think of something else to do for weekend fitness walks.


Access: Multiple access points to Travis Wetlands. This trip involved a bus ride from Bower Ave to Burwood Road, I walked up to and through Travis Wetland, along Putake Drive to Bottle Lake Forest. From there follow the trail east to Bower Ave park and Waimairi Beach.
Track Times: From Burwood Road to Bower Avenue park is about 2 hours walk, or approximately 6 kilometers.
Miscellaneous: No toilets and no potable water along this track section. Be careful around traffic as you cross several busy roads. The track is a all weather route.
Christchurch 360 Trail: Mt Pleasant to Travis Wetlands Section-Travis Wetland to Waimariri Beach-Waimariri Beach to Spencer Park
 

Wednesday, 19 July 2017

Tramping Equipment: What type of tramping stove?

Equipment for back-country cookery: Tramping/Hiking stoves

 There are a variety of ways to heat water and cook food while pursuing your outdoor adventures. The most obvious is the use of an open fire but due to the environmental impact this is now a discredited method. While open fires are not illegal they should only be used to cook food in an emergency.

Camp-fire cooking...as old as humankind.
Instead there are a myriad variety of stoves specifically manufactured for back country use. I thought it might be useful to look at these various types and explain what I use and why.

  So many types of outdoor cooker...


To start let us look at the types of cookers available. Note that the terms stove and cooker are interchangeable, you call them stoves we call them cookers!

 Iso-butane or gas canister stoves

The most commonly used stoves are those using iso-butane canisters, these are often refereed to as 'gas stoves'.  A gas stove will consist of the gas 'bottle' and a screw on cooker unit which you attach to the bottle.  Please note that the older 'pierced' type of gas canister is very difficult to find in New Zealand, we all use screw on cookers.

Kovea Titanium Tramping Stove

There are two main types of gas cooker, those that attach to the top of the bottle and those that are free standing. Above is a Kovea Titanium stove, this is typical of the top attached cooker. As you can see it has a perforated burner head, with a mechanism on the side to control the gas flow. There are fold out pot supports above the burner head. The button next to the Kovea branding is the piezo spark actuator.


Using my top fitting Kovea gas canister stove at Packhorse Hut, 2016

Below is the MSR Whisperlite, this is one of the free standing variety of outdoor cookers. These are much more stable as they usually have wider legs/pot supports arms and have a lower centre of gravity. The downside is the extra weight, these are normally 100-200 gms heavier than a top fixing stove.


MSR Windpro free standing gas stove for tramping


Here is a different version of a canister stove, the Jetboil. A Jetboil is an integrated cooking system with stand, cook pot, burner and canister all in one.  You use a Jetboil to heat water...you cannot cook in these. These stoves are good for alpinists and mountaineers as they are fast (melting snow for water) and pack into quite a small package.

They are also expensive and heavy which is why more trampers, anglers and MTB riders don't use them.


The Jetboil outdoor 'cooking system'


Iso-butane gas canisters are pressurised so the canisters must be made of steel to contain the gas. This means the canisters are heavy. An empty 225ml canister weighs 145gms so that is a lot of wasted weight you have to lug around.

Disposing of empty canisters can be problematic. The empty canisters cannot be recycled in New Zealand unless they are punctured- they need a hole in them to allow residual gas to escape. If not completely empty they are liable to explode during the recycling process.


Various sizes of MSR iso-butane gas: 100gms, 225gms and 550gms canisters

Aside from the weight,  gas canisters can also be expensive- they currently cost from $15-$20 for a medium sized canister. They do not perform well in cold conditions, as the gas can freeze if it is very cold.  If using one in a cold alpine environment it needs to be kept warm in a sleeping bag overnight.

Pros:Easy to use, quick set up, fast heating ability, relatively cheap, moderate heat control, widely available, many different models/makes, three sizes of canister available in New Zealand

Cons:Fuel canisters are heavy, quite expensive, disposal of empty canisters is problematic, top fixing versions are unstable, not good at high altitude or in cold conditions


Multi-fuel stoves

As the name implies a multi-fuel stove can use a variety of different fuels, this ranges from gas canisters, stove specific fuel, kerosene and even gasoline at a pinch. Some makes will only use liquid fuels while others are able to use both liquid fuel and gas.

The MSR Whisperlite multi fuel hiking stove: Both fuel bottle and gas canister shown

You fill the fuel bottle with your fuel of choice, then turn this into a pressurised gas by pumping the pressure handle. The stove is lit with match, lighter or piezo spark actuator.

Multi-fuel stoves are excellent for alpine conditions as the fuel is not affected by altitude or cold. Their ability to use a multitude of fuels also makes them practical: gasoline is available everywhere in the world while gas canisters are sometimes difficult to locate.

Unfortunately, these stoves tend to be heavy, 300-800 gms as opposed to a gas canister stove at 70-250 gms. They can also be a cast iron bitch to light as the burner unit is prone to soot blockages and fuel impurities. You must use good quality fuel and carry a cleaning kit and use both for optimum performance.



A MSR multi-fuel cooker service kit


I have to say though, there is nothing like the sound of a multi fuel stove blasting away on a cold morning...to a lot of us older trampers it is the sound of tramping itself.


Pros: Able to utilise many different fuels, much hotter flame, better flame/heat control, work well at altitude and in cold conditions, sound awesome when fired up

Cons: Much heavier, more difficult to operate, fuel must be pre warmed and pressurised before use, can be hard to light, more prone to stove blockages

  Methylated - Spirit stoves

  Methyl alcohol or 'spirit stoves' have been around for a long time but have recently been undergoing a resurgence in popularity. Prior to the 1940's this type of stove used jellied fuel and was utilised in the Great War trenches: Luigi, Ivan, Tommy, Mustafah and Fritz all had them.

Reproduction of a World War One "Tommy cooker'


Alcohol stoves can be commercially produced or home-made and have a burner unit with a series of holes in the top and sides. They normally have a stand to hold your pot above the flame and sometimes a wind-shield. Once lit the heating flame will come out of the holes providing the means to cook/ heat water.

 
A Trangia brand outdoor alcohol stove in action

As you can see in the photo below they are quite effective but the do have a number of limitations. The heat put out by methylated spirits is low, so cooking times are much longer. Once lit the flame cannot really be controlled so these stoves are not ideal for simmering.

They are also easily extinguished by wind, you really need a wind shield if using a spirit cooker.


Home-made outdoor alcohol stoves made from aluminium cans

These stoves will use both methylated spirits and de-natured alcohol, which is the American name for a similar product. "Meth's" comes in 1 litre bottles in New Zealand and cost from $6-$10 NZ dollars. Methylated spirits can be found in most service stations, hardware stores and supermarkets.

 De natured alcohol is usually only found in the larger outdoor equipment shops. It costs approximately $10-$20 NZ dollars per 1 litre bottle.

Just use meths' bro....



Methylated Spirits aka Denatured Alcohol
 
Pros: Fuel is cheap and widely available, stoves tend to be quite light, fuel can be used for starting a fire (carefully...don't throw meth's on an existing fire), fuel weight is lower as no heavy gas canister to carry

Cons: Highly inflammable...the vapour only needs a spark to ignite. Not safe for use in huts, easily extinguished by the wind, often need a wind shield and stand for use negating weight savings, care needed when refilling, fuel only comes in 1 litre volumes so there is potential fuel wastage.

Solid fuel tablets- Esbit Stoves

  Solid fuel stoves have been a mainstay of worldwide military forces for most of the later part of the 20th century. There are many firms producing both stoves and fuel including Sea to Summit, Coleman, MSR, Coghlans and cheap 'no brand' versions from China.

The most renown brand of solid fuel stoves are made by the German company Esbit, so in Europe these cookers are called 'Esbit stoves'.

Classic Esbit stove from Germany

 The solid fuel tablets for an Esbit type stove are generally made of a compound called hexamide. Hexamide is highly flammable and hence relatively easy to light. It is basically a solid form of hydro carbon covered in wax to stop it evaporating. One if its downsides are the fumes it exudes: these are both poisonous and foul smelling. 



Classic Esbit fuel cubes- one cube = 12 minutes of burn time

The beauty of solid fuel is that you need no stove...when I was in the military we just used a couple of rocks or sticks to prop our mess tins above the burning fuel cubes.

Oh my god... the smell of a 'hexie' tablet cooking some 'Spag and Snarlers' 'Corned Beef Hash' or 'Meat and Vegetables' is something every ex service person will remember fondly...morning time means hexie time!


Esbit stove, fuel tablets and cookpot, from Esbit website

An Esbit stove is bullet proof: it has no moving parts, requires no servicing and can be stored forever. That's why the military used them for so long.


Esbit type stove in use, from Australian Hiker

Pros:No parts to break, can be stored till the end of time, need no cooker, slow steady heat, relatively light, can be lit when wet, fuel makes excellent fire starter so dual purpose, cheap (a stove and fuel is usually less that $10 NZ dollars.

Cons: Low heat output, noxious fumes, cannot be used indoors, not readily available except in outdoor stores, easily extinguished by wind

Portable wood stoves

One of the newer forms of stove in use are those that use wood as their fuel...much as our ancestors have done for the last 40 000 years. These are commonly aluminium or titanium and burn paper, sticks, leaves and small wood chips. 

There are many commercial versions but these can also be made by the outdoor hobbyist at home.
 These are most often used by survivalists, long trail hikers and in areas where other stove types are banned. I see very few people using them in New Zealand- it is wet here so little dry wood and there are often fire bans in place over summer.

Typical lightweight outdoor wood stove in action


 The beauty of these stoves is that fuel for them is all around you, all the time. They can burn paper, card, wood, coal, dry grasses, dry leaves....basically anything that burns and is dry.

Pros: No need to carry fuel, relatively lightweight, inexpensive if home-made, can be used in most outdoor situations, fold down versions take up little space, environmental impact slight


Cons: They require dry wood,  can get very sooty on the outside, fire risk- cannot be used if there is a fire ban, cannot be used in huts, bulky unless fold down design, commercial versions are expensive

Flameless Ration Heaters or FRH's

Flame less Ration Heaters (or FRH's) are a by-product of military style Meals Ready To Eat (MRE's). MRE's first came into use with the US Army in the late 1980's to replace heavy canned rations.

 

US military FRH from a Meals Ready to Eat (MRE)

An MRE (jokingly called, with usual soldierly humour: Meals Rarely Eaten) is a thermo stabilised retort pouch of food, with the addition of various drink powders, snacks, side dishes and accessories.


Flameless Ration Heater: the chemical heater pad in a FRH

 They are a one meal item i.e. you would need to eat three a day to get your recommended calories. The FRH they contain uses a thermo-chemical reaction to warm the main meals and any hot drinks. Most of the military forces of the world are now using these.


A US military MRE: Beef Pasta with Tomato Sauce

FRH's were specific to military circles until about 10 years ago when a number of outdoor companies started to produce them for hikers and campers. Back Country Cuisine are the only indigenous manufacturer of FRH's. You have to be careful with an FRH, these can get really hot to the touch- don't leave them on an unprotected tent floor!



 

A Back Country Cuisine Flameless Ration Heater

In New Zealand the commercial food ranges these FRH's can be used with are Kaweka Meals (also used by the NZ Defence Forces), Sun Rice meals and the MTR range of Indian meals. All of these come in thermo stabilised pouches. Freeze dried meals can also be heated if the contents are re hydrated with cold water first. 

Pros: Very lightweight (less than 20gms each), easy to use, you require no stove/fuel or pot if not heating water, can be used in a well ventilated tent, not affected by cold/wet/windy conditions

Cons:Horrible environmental impact, very slow heating, expensive, limited uses- only good with thermo stabilised retort pouches, hard to source in New Zealand, need salt and a cup of clean water to work.


 No heat/no cook tramping 

One way to deal with cooking while tramping is to simply go without. I have meet a number of people practising no cook (or stoveless) tramping. Instead of your traditional hot meal they only utilise cold foods that require no cooking.

Typical 'no cook' foods might include: cold meats, canned fish, cheese, jerky, wraps/tortillas/bread/crackers, various spreads, energy bars, cereals, dried fruit or it could be dehydrated meals reconstituted with cold water.

Basically the sort of stuff you eat for lunch!


Some no-cook menu items: cereals, scroggin, energy bars, tuna, salami, drink powders, dried fruit etc.

I've tried this on an multi night tramp and decided it is not for me.  I like a hot drink in the morning with breakfast and soup and a hot meal at night. In extremis I would go stove-less but not out of choice. That's just my personal opinion by the way...you need to decide what works for you.

I meet a guy on the St James a couple of years ago who had scroggin, whiskey and 24 peanut butter sandwiches for food- he had six sarnies per day- two per meal. Hey...it would keep you going, but....

Do you fancy this at every meal for four days....

Pros: Lightweight (no stove/pot/fuel/cutlery), cheaper option as not buying fuel, stove or cook-pot, easy to sustain yourself for short periods this way

Cons: 24 peanut butter sandwiches......who wants to eat that for 4 days in a row! Will not sustain you properly for more than a couple of weeks, could be unsafe if tramping in adverse weather conditions (hot drinks save hypo-thermic trampers as they used to say...), packaging...there would be a lot of it!

 

My personal choice of tramping stove


I've used all of these various cooker types before but my primary cook stove is a relatively new titanium Firemaple screw on canister stove. This stove is very light....it weighs under 90gms including the hard plastic case it came in. This compares to older Kovea stove at 120gms without the case.


My newish Firemaple Brand iso-butane stove...

I brought this stove from Complete Outdoors a local online gear shop, it cost about $60 NZD. The cooker has quite a large burner head and expandable pot support arms that fit my titanium pot very well.

 Firemaple is a Chinese company..the Chinese are starting to make real inroads into the outdoor gear market I can see a time when all of the best outdoor brands will come from there.

Burner head and foldable arms on my Firemaple stove

I also own a Kovea Backpacker gas canister stove. I have been using this stove since 1993 with great success and it is still going strong. I like this stove but it is hard to argue with the weight savings of using the titanium Firemaple.


The Kovea Backpacker stove...this is the 2016 version

I usually couple my stove's with a medium size MSR gas canister, this combination allows me to boil water for both breakfast and dinner for 4-6 days. Both stoves cool fast and both have larger diameter burner heads which I find advantageous when heating speed is of the essence.


My Kovea Backpacker stove in use at Nina Hut in 2016

 Why gas....? I just find it more convenient to use a canister stove. You can have it out and going in less than one minute. A good breakfast is a fast breakfast if you know what I mean...! Any other type of cooker involves too much buggering around to get it operational.


Fixing dinner with my Kovea tramping stove at Mid Robinson Hut, 2015

If you are going to be using a canister stove you need a Crunchit. A Crunchit is basically a big can opener which allows you to safely puncture canisters to vent residual gas. The 'empties' can then be recycled. I leave mine at home and take to my empties after the trip.


The Jetboil Crunchit recycling tool

I also carry two Esbit cubes with me on every trip as an emergency backup. As I said earlier these can be used without a stove and because they only weigh 5 gms each are a useful survival tool. It is not without precedent to run out of gas for your cooker on the last day of a longer trip, so...two meals worth of hot water.


My Esbit cubes: fire starter and emergency cook tool

I have not had cause to use them for about 2 years now.

A gallery of other tramping stoves I own...

I have an Esbit methylated spirits cooker which I will be using when I do some of my longer Te Araroa Trail sections because it is ideal for that kind of tramping. The fuel is cheaper and more readily available in out of the way places.



My Esbit cooker looks like this...

 I inherited a Kovea Hiker stove from one of my brothers who moved to the US, it is an older design but still works well. She is a bit hefty for tramping but folds up into a nifty hard plastic container.I would use this stove if car camping or as a base camp stove.


Kovea Hiker stove, mine does not have a piezo

I also have an Outer Limits Huntsman stove, which I brought when I got back into tramping in 2010. I really like this stove but I just have a sentimental attachment to my Kovea Backpacker so this one doesn't get used very often.



An Outer Limits Huntsman stand alone stove


I hope that gives you some ideas to consider when choosing a new tramping stove.

Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Tramping Literature: A bunk for the night: A guide to New Zealands best backcountry huts

More good tramping reading!

I recently brought myself a new book: A Bunk for the Night: A Guide to New Zealand's Best Backcountry Huts. In a way this is a companion piece for an earlier work by the same authors, Shelter from the Storm also about our back country hut network.

A bunk for the night, new tramping literature
Some people are into cook books, some like books on photography, sports or gardening. I like outdoor books...I don't care what the subject is so long as it features the outdoors. I currently have 60+ books on tramping, climbing, hunting, outdoor cookery, trail skills, the Te Araroa Trail etc. etc.

A Bunk for the night...



A Bunk for the Night is a photographic essay on the authors favourite huts, it explains what makes them special and includes historical information and trail notes. It is excellent and features many of those classic huts your average Kiwi tramper visits. There are huts here from the top of the North Island right down to Stewart Island in the deep south.

Pinnacles Hut, Coromandel Peninsula is in the book...

...so is John Tait Hut, Nelson Lakes NP...


...and also Nina Hut, Lewis Pass Scenic Reserve.

If you know someone who tramps, this would be an excellent birthday or Christmas gift. Or buy it as a memento of your visit to our fair isles. I brought mine from Paper Plus a local book store chain, it cost me $39.50 NZD which I think is a reasonable price. I have seen copies in most of the larger book stores, it is also available direct from the publishers.

East Ruggedy Hut,  Kaikuria National Park is one of the huts mentioned

The photos and general production values are great and the three authors are informative and knowledgeable. They are all well known for their involvement in Kiwi tramping/climbing circles.

 Highly recommended!