[Cdt-l] Electronics & Age

Doug-Sue doug-sue71 at comcast.net
Tue Feb 9 18:37:54 CST 2010


Tumbleweed adds another twist to this electronics thread- sounds to me like he must be around 60 years of age.  I turned 61 in December.  I understand the need to keep in touch and I confess, if I do make it back on the long trail, I may have to think more seriously abut keeping in contact with my dear wife.  I sure scared her this year with the cancer thingy so I owe her now.  

Anyway, I was wondering what ages are represented on the cdt-l.  Just curious.  

I go by RedDoug, but I will be using the trail name Trew when I get out again, and I am, as I said, 61.  


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jack Richardson 
  To: Brian Dickson 
  Cc:  
  Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 4:44 PM
  Subject: Re: [Cdt-l] Electronics


  Brian,


  Thanks for your input. 


  I was soliciting opinions and thoughts. And got them.


  My final tally for electronics is GPS, Spot, Pocketmail, cell phone and camera. No mp3 nor satellite phone, so I guess I am roughing it ha ha ha. 


  All my early years hiking (40 years ago) were made without any electronics. Ok, I did have a homemade headlamp. But seriously, I am finding intense pressure from wife, kids and friends to know how I am doing and where I am. I guess they think an elderly guy needs all the help he can get.


  This has been a great discussion and as you and Jim point out it comes down to personal needs. HYOH, eh?


  Do you live near Kinlochard in the Trossachs National Park? I have a friend who moved there last year. As he says, "I moved closer to where god lives".
  I have been to Scotland and admit it is a beautiful place when it isn't raining. Great rainbows, yes!


  Thanks again,


  tumbleweed


  On Feb 9, 2010, at 4:22 PM, Brian Dickson wrote:


    I guess its a personal thing, but I enjoyed being away from gadgets on the trail. I had a digital camera and the smallest gps for emergencies. we both took tiny mp3 players and kept them for occasional dirt road travel - I probably used mine for about 3 hours over the summer. PCs and email are available in almost all towns now.
    I think the camera was close to vital for me as it greatly enhanced my enjoyment, particularly now 5 months later- but the mp3 and gps (and cellphone) can easily be 'ditched'. We did both carry at least one book for reading in the tent though, and binnoculers- they were our luxuries.

    Brian (and Martina) Black Isle, Scotland
    www.pbase.com/briansolar1

     



----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    From: Doug-Sue <doug-sue71 at comcast.net>
    To: Cdt-l at backcountry.net
    Sent: Tue, 9 February, 2010 16:18:34
    Subject: Re: [Cdt-l] Electronics


    I love natural sounds. In the north country the sound of the wind going through the treetops is my favorite symphony.  My wife has asked me, what if the world blows up while you're away, someone dies, etc?  My answer is I will find out in time, no need to rush bad news.  For me, absolutely no radio or music player of any kind..  I spend the entire time I am hiking with my eyes glued to the landscape, watching and listening to everything. 

    One luxury- I like to pack along some cryptogram puzzles for evening when I am in the tent but not quite overcome by sleep.  3 or 4 pages of cryptograms will last me weeks! 

    -RedDoug (stuck in Battle Creek, MI) 
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: cicelyb250 at aol.com
      To: doug-sue71 at comcast.net ;
      Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 10:20 AM
      Subject: Re: [Cdt-l] Electronics


      I second the thought of leaving the gadgets behind.  Almost every town has a computer somewhere if you need to send/receive news of the world.  As far as a radio plugged into your ears - in the south I was listening for the buzz of rattlesnakes, in the north I was listening for the woof of the bears.  Dangerous sounds aside, why miss the call of sand hill cranes, wild horse snorts,  and the sounds of the numerous other wildlife that line the path. A Phone card with a ton of minutes can be carried - a lot lighter than any cell phone which will rarely work until you are in a town anyway.   Take a gps and camera that work on the same size batteries.    I bought AA's at costco and send them in my maildrops - about $8.00 for the whole trip..


      -----Original Message-----
      From: Doug-Sue <doug-sue71 at comcast.net>
      To: Cdt-l at backcountry.net
      Sent: Tue, Feb 9, 2010 10:00 am
      Subject: Re: [Cdt-l] Electronics


For me one of the joys of a long hike is leaving all this stuff behind.  I 
do not want a cell phone with me.  My only gadgets are a GPS and a simple 
camera.  Consider, one of the reasons for hiking is to go cold turkey and 
break the on-line addiction.

Just my thoughts.

-RedDoug



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jack Richardson" <jackrichardson at roadrunner.com>
To: <>
Sent: Tuesday, February 09, 2010 9:21 AM
Subject: [Cdt-l] Electronics


> Electronics??
>
> On my AT thru in 2001 I had a TM20 Pocketmail device and digital
> camera. That was it! During my PCT 2007 hike I had a cell phone,
> satellite phone, Pocketmail composer, digital camera and a MP3 player.
>
> So for this years CDT hike I will have Email device, cell phone,
> satellite phone, GPS, Spot Tracker, iPod Touch, digital camera, a
> solar battery charger and specific device rechargers (3X)!
>
> It seems that each hike has brought on more necessary (??) electronic
> gear. I may have to hire a sherpa to carry my electronics this year!!!
>
> All kidding aside, I see there is a new email device available called
> the "Peek". Research shows it to be lighter then Pocketmail Composer,
> able to handle my current email accounts, text messaging, view
> attachments, smaller size, wireless and high techie. Unfortunately it
> does not use AA batteries like the Composer.
>
> Any thoughts on Peek versus Pocketmail???
>
> Any thoughts on Electronics on the CDT???
>
> Thanks
>
> tumbleweed
> _______________________________________________
> Cdt-l mailing list
> Cdt-l at backcountry.net
> http://mailman.backcountry.net/mailman/listinfo/cdt-l


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