[pct-l] Food/money

Ate Tuna atetuna at gmail.com
Sat Apr 2 18:18:58 CDT 2011


Flat rate is not the least expensive way to ship priority anymore. This is
another reason you should have Yogi's books.  Regional rate type A & B are
now less expensive.  Go to the USPS website and compare.  In my case it's
cheaper to any point on the trail by an average of over 30%.

That sampler is a horrendously expensive idea.  That's about 1 day of food
for the both of you.  At about $50 a day, you would be out of money in less
than a month.

On Sat, Apr 2, 2011 at 4:12 PM, Axel Roos <roosaxel at csu.fullerton.edu>wrote:

> Hello all! My friend and I are looking to complete the PCT on a budget this
> year (around $600-$700 each), starting the beginning of May.  We are both
> around the age of 20 (1977 Monte Dodge style, haha.)
>
> I was wondering if some of you veteran long-distance hikers could give me
> some advice. Would it be advisable to invest in bulk food, perhaps
> something
> like the High Attitude Sampler:
> http://shop.maryjanesfarm.org/store/c/78-Backpacking-Food-Samplers.aspx ,
> and to ship flat rate (USPS $10.95) boxes to resupply points? If so what
> bulk suppliers would you reccommend?
> Or to buy food along the way at trail towns (or a balance between the two)?
>
>
> In your experience, which would yield lower costs while keeping reasonable
> nutrition?
> Please keep in mind, I am not one to rip others off and take large amounts
> from hiker boxes or trail magic, so I hope you don't feel the need to put
> us
> down. We simply would like to have an epic quest while keeping our expenses
> reasonable.
> Thank you! HYOH
> -Axel
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