JATS Portable SolarPowerPAC

http://www.jatsgreenpower.com/devices.html

Alternative energy power systems, components and design assistance.
JATS Alternative Power Company
Advanced Energy Group authorized dealer

Portable Power

Maybe you're not ready to invest in a total-home solar powered system, or you only need a small amount of power, or you'd just like to get a little experience with this technology or maybe you just want to play with it a little.
An excellent power solution – and a great gift idea!!
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High-Quality, Low Cost Solar Power

The SolarPowerPAC

Portable or stationary AC/DC power when you need it.

Convenient solar powered AC/DC power source
for your home, in your office, vehicle, camper or boat.

An excellent introduction to solar power
High-tech, low-cost solar powered solution

Very affordable pricing at only $379
with 10w highest-quality solar panel

The SolarPowerPAC is a lightweight (less than 18lbs) portable or stationary, backup power unit that provides you with the type of electricity available from the wall outlets of your home (120 volts AC) and the type of power that is supplied by the battery of your car (12 volts DC).

The SolarPowerPAC is a new, first-of-its-kind, complete power solution offering you more features and benefits than any DC-only power sources or jump-start products available. It runs small appliances and equipment at home, in your office, vehicle, camper or boat. Use PowerPAC whenever or wherever you need 120VAC or 12VDC remote or emergency power.

Power DC or AC Appliances. Just plug into the 12-volt DC or 115-volt AC outlets and you've got instant, reliable power. The built-in inverter allows you to run appliances with a wattage draw of up to 300 watts and has a surge capability of 500 watts. The built-in battery has an 21 amp hour capacity and is charged using the supplied photovoltaic solar panel, your vehicle, the 12-volt battery charging outlet on your generator, or an existing AC wall outlet. You can even interconnect a larger battery or add another solar panel if you want more reserve power for remote uses.

A great gift idea – an excellent power solution!!
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Charge with the sun as you use the power unit or use the power unit separately
This solar unit comes with a solar panel and simple wire kit for the input jack on the PowerPac, 12v lighter charger cord, AC power charger cord, battery jumper cables and complete user manual. You can operate the power unit at the same time the unit is being re-charged by the solar panel, lighter plug or wall outlet plug. For remote uses you can put the solar panel in the sun to charge the battery while you're using the power unit to provide all day power for small loads, or use the power unit separately, and then re-charge it with the solar panel. Very flexible!

This is an excellent high-tech, low-cost solar powered solution that we are happy to offer to introduce you to modern solar power technology. SolarPowerPAC-portable or stationary power for recreation, emergencies or for work.

Solar panel comes pre-wired with 2.5mm barrel connector, which
plugs into Charger Input jack for convenient solar power.

Solar-PowerPAC
Use your VISA or Master Card PowerPac AC/DC Power Unit (12″H x 9″W x 6″D)
with accessory pack – no solar panel.
Good Deal!

$189
Cost with 10 watt Siemens solar panel (13″ x 17″)
Better Deal!

$379
Upgrade to 36 watt Siemens solar panel (20″ x 25″)
Best Deal!

$439
For other configurations please contact us.
Contact us today.
201-362-2001

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UPS Ground.
Express Service
available also

We use Siemens crystalline solar panels – the finest panels made – insuring
maximum performance in any region of the world.

More information…

Back up Power for 120 Volt AC Appliances and Equipment
Run hundreds of devices including: fluorescent and halogen lights,
laptop computers, small power tools, portable stereos, TVs and VCRs. Simply
turn PowerPAC's inverter on and plug in the appliance. PowerPAC powers most
120 volt AC appliances and equipment that use 300 watts or less just as they
would be run by utility power from your wall outlet. PowerPAC automatically
shuts off if an appliance is rated higher than 300 watts or if the battery is too
low. Recharge PowerPAC quickly and easily from either your wall outlet or the
cigarette lighter of your car, while driving.

Battery Power for 12 Volt DC Appliances and Equipment
Operate any device that is intended to run from a car or boat's cigarette
lighter outlet. The PowerPAC will run any 12 volt DC auto or marine appliance
that draws 12 amps or less. Just insert the plug on the appliance into the the
DC Power Socket on PowerPAC's display panel. PowerPAC automatically shuts
off if the battery is too low or if the device draws more than 12 amps.

Comes with this light that runs up to 29 hours
on just the power unit battery alone and much longer
with the solar panel attached.

Quick and Easy Recharging!
In addition to your solar panel, PowerPAC can be conveniently recharged
with its accessories to keep it ready for its next use. A
variety of additional charging options are provided.

…by using utility power from your wall outlet and PowerPAC's
“plug it in and forget it” AC Charger. PowerPAC regulates the
charge and will not overcharge. If utility power becomes interrupted,
the charging process will automatically start when the power returns.

…from your vehicle as you drive. By plugging the DC Charge
Cable into your vehicle's cigarette lighter socket, PowerPAC can
be recharged while you drive in only 1 to 3 hours. There is no
need to wait for available utility power. Vehicle voltage
regulators will ensure that PowerPAC is not overcharged.

…from a generator equipped with a 12 volt battery charging
outlet. Use PowerPAC's DC Charge Cable or the Jump-Start
Cables on the generator's auxiliary 12 volt DC output to recharge the unit in only 1 to 3 hours.
Using the Jump-Start Cables supplied with your purchase, you can also jump-start
a 12 volt vehicle battery with PowerPAC.

Extended Operating Time With an External Battery and More Solar Power!
You can achieve much longer run times for your appliances when you connect
PowerPAC to a larger, external battery. For example, a 60 amp-hour battery
will give you approximately 4 times the operating time of the PowerPAC's
internal battery alone, and you can add another solar panel with mini-controller
to increase the rate of solar power charging for the larger battery. Very flexible!

An excellent power solution – and a great gift idea!!
Use your Visa or Master Card

© JATS Alternative Power Company – All rights reserved

The Day I Became an Autodidact

http://www.billsbest.com/peautodi.html

An autodidact is, simply, a self-educated person.

Kendall Hailey is the author of an amazing book, entitled, The Day I Became an Autodidact. It's a journal of her decision to begin a life of self-education. It's amazing because it begins in her junior year of high school and traces her choice to finish high school early and her self-educational adventures. As her friends head off to college, it's obvious that they won't be getting a tenth of the education that Hailey is giving herself.

Hailey's father is a playwright and her mother a novelist, and you'll understand how heredity works when you read her clear, direct prose. It's like sunshine poured out onto the pages. She's a literary lioness who devours the Greeks, the Russians, and the Romantics with equal fervor. She expresses her views on writers, genres, and entire cultures with an authority all out of proportion to her years. This is one scary kid, but one that you will want to know better.

She has become the poster child for home-schooling. Advocates point to her book as though it explained or justified their decision to abandon the school system. Let's be clear here: Hailey is self-educated, not home-schooled. There's a world of difference.

Hailey began her quest for self-education in 1988. Today she's a writer and actress who has received some good reviews for her work in modern and classical plays. The only danger to reading The Day I Became an Autodidact is that you might compare your energy level to hers, your reading list to hers, and come away with the feeling that you've somehow wasted your life.

Comparative advantage for journalists

Peter Gallagher explains how to explain comparative advantage so that a journalist understands it.

I usually use…the story about the busy lawyer and her secretary. The $200/hour lawyer types faster and more accurately than her $25/hour secretary. When the pressure is on, she sometimes wonders if she should persist with her secretary or do the work herself.

In all my work with students, business people and even journalists in Australia and in my work for the UN in two dozen countries, I've never met anyone who didn't get the point of that story.

…The problem, I find, is that many people assume the idea doesn't scale. They are afraid to apply the same analysis to global exchange.

If you say: “Now, suppose we are talking about a deal between a rich country and a poor country; do you think that the same rule applies?”… they frequently get cold feet. Suddenly, imports become a threat and (bizzarely) exports become the purpose of trade.

Create Your Own Digital Library

I love books, but they take up a lot of room and aren't very portable. I'm thinking of digitally photographing the pages of my favorite books, storing them on a portable firewire drive, then selling most of them. There appear to be a number of copy stands intended for this purpose (among others), but I don't want to get something so specialized. Rather, what I would like to get is a tripod with an long arm that clamps to the tripod's center pole. At the end of the arm I'd attach a 360' ball joint, which in turn would be attached to the camera. Has anyone else done what I'm proposing? If so, what are your experiences?

[Edit:

Below is a ascii side view of what I have in mind:

    ||
    ||
    ||
    ||            (ball) (camera)
  ===================O===[  ]
    ||                    ==
    ||
    ||
    ||
    ||
    ||
    ||
    ||
   /||\                (book)
  / || \           /——\/——\
 /  ||  \          ================
====================================

Pauper kings

Arnold Kling compares the lifestyle of Frederick Douglass , a freed slave who later become a wealthy publisher and civil rights advocate, with the lifestyle of the current working class residents of his Anacostia Park (Washington, D.C.) neighborhood. Conclusion: the “poor” of today live lifestyle equivalent to the wealthy of a hundred years ago.

Flash crowds as tool of non-violent resistance.

I expect that members of the FSP will begin to come into conflict with the Feds. For example, if New Hampshire legalizes marijuana, I can see the Feds coming to arrest growers just as they arrested medicinal marijuana growers in California. Could flash crowds be a tool to resist such arrests? Suppose every FSP member carried a SMS device. If a member is accosted by Federal police, they could send out an SOS along with their location. If enough FSP members appeared quickly enough with camcorders, they might be able to dissuade the arrest? Or at least mitigate harm? What if FSP members were wearing cameras 24 hours/day? Perhaps once there, FSP members could take a page from the greens/civil rights acitivists and handcuff themselves to the person to be arrested?

The Ray Way

[Ray Jardine has climbed El Capitan, kayaked to the Antarctic, circumnavigated the globe by sailboat, invented the climber's "friend", and he and his wife Jenny just got back from rowboating across the Atlantic. A very interesting fellow.]

http://www.ray-way.com/bb/r-w-backpacker/199802-backpacker.shtml

THE RAY WAY
Backpacker, February 1998
by Peter Potterfield
————————————————————————

“Way” the options: Jardine holds a typical 28-ounce backpacking boot and a 10-ounce running shoe, which he favors for getting weight off his feet and slashing daily energy expenditure.

He rocked the world of climbing, challenged the accepted wisdom in sea kayaking, and has turned his renegade way of thinking to backpacking. Of course, Ray Jardine says we've been doing it all wrong.

[Note from Ray: I did not, nor would I ever say that any hiker or backpacker is doing it wrong. Anyone who enjoys the wilderness on foot, regardless of what kind of gear he or she carries, is doing it right. My philosophy of wilderness enjoyment is based on the premise that the equipment is a means to enjoy the end. For me, less equipment brings greater enjoyment. But for someone else the opposite might be true - and if so, then they are still doing it right.)

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The soft-spoken 50-year-old sitting in the pale sunshine outside his Pacific Northwest home seems an unlikely troublemaker. Feeding peanuts to a brazen blue-jay that hops and bobs for attention, Ray Jardine smiles wryly through a close-cropped salt-and-pepper beard. "They just didn't get what I was trying to do," he says finally, with a tone of frustration. "It was as if they were somehow...threatened."

[R.J.: With all due respect to my friend Peter, he seems to be exercising a bit of poetic license here. :) I neither care nor worry about what people think of my ideas, and I am certainly not frustrated by whether people adopt any of them. I develop my ideas exclusively for my own use in quite a variety of rigorous outdoor pursuits. The reason I described my hiking ideas in The PCT Hiker's Handbook was to stimulate other people's thinking, where applicable.]

It hardly matters whether Jardine is talking about the heated reaction to his original ideas about long-distance backpacking or to his innovative camming devices – called “Friends”-that ushered in a new era of rock climbing. The man has a way of standing the status quo on its ear and enraging a lot of hidebound thinkers in the process. It's not that he means to do it. Jardine is just careful, methodical, thorough, and unbound by conventional thinking. When he applies himself to a problem, the solutions that result fly in the face of accepted practice.

Hitting the trail near his present-day home in Oregon, wearing his homemade pack with 9 pounds of gear while a friend carries a typical 40-pound load.

When Jardine first published The Pacific Crest Trail Hiker's Handbook in 1992 and then came out with a substantially revised version in 1995, he challenged some long-held beliefs about the proper way to backpack. The book, a how-to manual for any long-distance hike and not just a guide to the Pacific Crest Trail, outlines a system of novel techniques for hiking as far as 30 miles a day or farther, day after day, with no more effort than most of us expend covering half that distance. “The Ray Way” amounts to an almost total repudiation of what Jardine terms “standard backpacking style.” It was as if he were saying to backcountry travelers, “Excuse me, but just about everything you've been doing up 'til now is wrong.”

In typical Jardine fashion, The Ray Way was developed through intense personal experience, starting with his first long-distance hike, a PCT trek, in 1989. “That first day…it was like we were going to the moon.” The outcome, he says, was always “in question.” Even so, he and his wife Jenny arrived at the Canadian border 4-1/2 months later. It had been a rewarding journey, but a physically rigorous one.

He went on to do the other two legs of the Triple Crown of American trails-the Appalachian and Continental Divide-and along the way watched far too many hikers suffer, often becoming exhausted, discouraged, and eventually quitting. There had to be a way to make long hikes more than grim ordeals.

In 1994 Ray and Jenny hiked the PCT a third time, covering the 2,700 miles in only three months and four days-almost 45 days quicker than the first time. They didn't walk any faster, they just spent more hours each day on the trail. “That hike was pure joy,” says Jardine. “With the focus no longer on whether or not we could finish, we could enjoy how much fun it was to spend months in the wilderness.” Never had he felt so in tune with the wild.

Tackling a hairy 5.12 route in Yosemite, 1977
And thus was born The Ray Way, a blend of philosophy and innovative techniques culled from the hard lessons learned while hiking more than 12,000 [20,000] total miles. At the heart of the system lies an unstinting reduction in packweight. In Jardine's eyes, packweight is the total weight of the pack, minus food and water. On his first PCT hike, Jardine's pack weighed about 25 pounds. On his third hike, it was less than 9 pounds.

To get such a light load Jardine makes his own gear (he calls it the gateway to the “inner sanctum”), which few of us would bother to do. Even so, his results are hard to argue with. His homemade pack weighs 13 ounces and cost him $10.40 and replaces an off-the-shelf model that weighed 6 pounds and retailed for about $275. He heads down the trail with a pack that's 13 percent of the weight and 4 percent of the cost of a mass-produced version, yet his words just as well. His self-made sleeping bag – a quilt, actually-sleeps two, weighs 1.8 pounds, and cost $15 to make.

All together, he figures his self-made gear saves him almost 17 pounds in pack weight and about $1,500 in actual retail costs. “The equipment is only the means to an end,” he says. “I've seen all kinds of gear travel the full length of these trails. The important thing is to go.” By way of example he points to his role model, Emma “Grandma” Gatewood, who hiked the Appalachian Trail for fun three times, once when she was 70 years old. She wore Keds, used a shower curtain for a shelter, and carried all her gear in a stuff sack-like bag she made and slung over her shoulder. “Most people are pantywaists,” she once told Jardine.

[R.J.: As much as I admire Grandma Gatewood, she is not my role model, nor did I have the privilege of speaking with her. She passed away in 1975, before I became interested in long-distance hiking. The quote is from an article in the ATC archives.]

The real and honest fact is, Grandma Gatewood could have hiked the Gore-Tex off most of us. She was into the experience and could have cared less about how she looked, an ideology that's shared by The Ray Way. Jardine says we should shift the focus from “back here” (the gear or the weight of it) to out there-to the environment, the wilderness, which is the reason for going in the first place. We're too attached to our cool gear, and Jardine just wants you to know you might be a better wilderness traveler if you left some of it home.

Is The Ray Way for everyone? Probably not because elements of The Ray Way can be risky without the skills to use them. For instance, you can't leave your sturdy boots home and hike in sneakers until you've strengthened your ankles and reduced your packweight. Similarly, you can't forsake the tent in favor of a lightweight tarp unless you've learned how to pick the proper campsite. Jardine is quite aware that his tarp won't protect him from nasty weather, [R.J.: I am aware of no such thing.] so he looks for low, sheltered places – he calls them stealth sites – until better weather comes along. Practice and style go hand in hand with Jardine's lightweight approach, as does a different frame of mind.

“When you're traveling light,” he explains, “not only are you more in tune with the weather, but you're able to take evasive action quickly, to find a more sheltered area. We had one snowstorm at 13,000 feet on the Continental Divide Trail. With our light gear, we couldn't tolerate that, so we had to go back down and bivy until the weather improved. But down low, our simple, well-ventilated tarp shelter kept us drier than a lot of tents would have. The system will work, if you work with it.”

[R.J.: We weathered the snowstorm at 13,000 feet on the Continental Divide Trail in a tent, without descending. The descent Peter refers to occurred on PCT hike #3.

Traveling light is only one component of The Ray Way, though. Good nutrition, safety, and an understanding of the psychological factors that come into play on a long hike are also part of the package. The key, Jardine stresses, is to choose what suits you. "The ideas in my book are like fruit on a produce stand. Even though each component fits into an overall system, people can take what they want from my ideas, and integrate that into their own style. Put what you want in your shopping basket, and leave the rest."

Despite his take-it-or-leave-it attitude, some of Jardine's suggestions were interpreted by others as radical, even dangerous. From more traditional backpackers came an angry backlash that frankly surprised him. Jardine recognized the landscape, though, because being in the crossfire of controversy was familiar ground. In some ways it was inevitable that he would end up there. When an intellect as big and unencumbered by conventional thinking as Jardine's is focused on a problem, the solution is going to be original, possibly even spectacular, and probably socially unacceptable.

In 1977 Jardine sent a shock wave through the climbing world by putting up the hardest climbing route ever done to that point in time. It was the culmination of nearly a decade spent in the Yosemite Valley climbing progressively harder routes, pushing the limits of what was technically possible. Those were years, remembered fondly now, spent in the company of a close circle of climbing buddies. "We'd meet each morning at the cafeteria to decide what we'd climb that day. It sure beat going to work."

Climbing Peru's Nevado Huascaran in 1969 on the trip that would eventually cause him to redirect his life.

Jardine's stint in the 9-to-5 world had ended, and his odyssey through the various disciplines of the outdoor world had begun, in 1969. Fresh off a climbing vacation in South America, he returned to his cubicle at Southern California's Martin Marietta [Denver] where he was a space-flight mechanics systems analyst. He took one look at the piles of computer printouts and realized the life he wanted was to be found elsewhere.

“The whole world is out there,” he remembered thinking, “and here I am in my sterile cubicle. I'm going to have to do the unthinkable.” He knew he had no choice. To the enduring shock of his employer and family, he got up, followed his heart, and walked away from a secure and lucrative career.

He wandered around the Cascades and Rockies, working as an Outward Bound instructor for a while before winding up in Yosemite Valley, where he discovered rock climbing and started designing equipment for the sport (when he wasn't hang gliding off the local precipices or sea kayaking in Mexico). He'd been drawn to Yosemite, the crucible of climbing, by the long, smooth cracks the abound in its sheer walls. One route in particular caught his eye, a line above Cascade Falls no one had climbed. Jardine made dozens of attempts on the seemingly impossible crack and in 1977 finally succeeded. The Phoenix, as he dubbed it, was the world's first 5.13 climb, and what had made it possible was a radical new mechanical contraption of Jardine's own inventing.

An assortment of the controversial camming devices dubbed “friends”
During the Yosemite years, Jardine had experimented with various devices to protect a climber from falling, particularly out of cracks. Existing protection, such as pitons, bongs, and hexcentrics, had a nasty way of working free, leaving the climber dangerously exposed. After tedious trial-and-error he eventually perfected a spring-loaded cam design that could fit cracks of varying widths yet still withstand the force generated by a falling climber. He called the devices “Friends.”

Some climbers embraced Friends for what they could do-reliably protect a climber on the most difficult routes. Jim Bridwell, undisputed dean of Yosemite climbers and the man who just barely beat out Jardine for the first one-day ascent of The Nose on El Capitan, said Friends were the “greatest advance in climbing since nylon ropes.”

Others, however, considered them unethical and said using Friends was akin to cheating. Royal Robbins, grand master of the climbing world, wrote that the new cams made climbing “too easy.” Ray Jardine found himself in the middle of a raging controversy.

“Ray was advancing the sport more than any other person at the time,” said Bridwell. “When you do that, you're going to take some shots. Sure, it was controversial, but there's no turning back the clock. Everybody started using [Friends].”

By the time Friends became an indispensable item on every climber's rack, Jardine wasn't around to see it. With the realization that he'd done what he wanted to do at Yosemite, he knew it was time to move on to new adventure. Using proceeds from the licensing of Friends, Jardine bought a 50-foot sailboat [R.J.: 41'] suffering from a lot of what he called “deferred maintenance.” Months of repair were required to make it seaworthy, but eventually he and Jenny set off on a voyage around the world.

For more than three years they sailed through a “world without boundaries,” stopping for months at a time in South Africa, in the Caribbean, and in other ports of call that struck their fancy. It was, says Jardine, the freest he's ever felt. The couple survived hurricanes, typhoons, and one memorable electrical storm so intense the boat's rigging glowed with St. Elmo's fire and all the on-board electronics fried, including the radio. At that moment, utterly alone on the vast ocean, Jardine was surprised to find himself calm, almost relieved. “With the radio gone, the satellite navigation gone, everything gone, it was…simpler. Jenny and I were confident we could take care of ourselves, even under those circumstances. We had come a long way, and we had learned to work together.”

That partnership would soon be put to the full test as Jardine's focus began to shift once again. “after more than three years, the ocean can start to seem a sterile and austere place, ” says Jardine. “Jenny and I began to dream of spending a long time in the mountains. So we decided to head for California, sell the boat, and hike the full length of the Pacific Crest Trail.”

[The "test" was our global circumnavigation. Compared with that, the long trails - fun and highly rewarding though they were - were cakewalks.]

When Ray and Jenny finally hit the PCT after a full year of physical conditioning to make up for the years spent in the tight confines of a sailboat, their course was slow and erratic. They took frequent short cuts and “long cuts,” detours off the main trail for the sake of scenery or even whim. In 1991, they hiked the trail a second time, this time sticking strictly to the PCT itself.

The following summer, the pair hiked the Continental Divide Trail, a cobbled-together network of existing trails that runs from Mexico to Canada mostly along the crest of the Rocky Mountains. By then a long-distance veteran, Jardine had begun not just formulating his system for long hikes, but implementing it. Both Ray and Jenny felt that the next logical step was to head East and hike the Appalachian Trail.

When they set off from Georgia on June 7, 1993, Ray and Jenny were putting his go-light system to its first real test. Each of their packs weighed less than 15 pounds, including food, a feat achieved in part by starting late in the season to avoid carrying heavy winter clothing and gear. Hikers along the trail took one look at their homemade packs-little more than daypacks, actually-and couldn't believe the pair was thru-hiking the trail.

“Other hikers thought we were slack-packing or dayhiking,” remembers Jardine. “The ones who did believe we were going all the way said, 'You'll never make it.' It was strange. Our lightweight gear left us open to outright scorn.”

But Jardine had calculated the daily mileage he and Jenny could cover with their light loads. And the relatively short distance between resupply stations in the densely populated East made it possible for them to travel even lighter. Jardine cut the hipbelts off their packs because their light loads made them unnecessary. They hiked in running shores, taking most of the weight off their feet, where it really counted. Both had umbrellas, modified by Jardine, which enabled them to hike in light rain or drizzle, and do so in perfect comfort. They did, however, make one bold decision they would soon regret.

“Too bold,” laughs Jardine. They decided to hike the entire AT without a stove. They stayed healthy, but they'll never do it that way again. “The weight savings wasn't worth it,” he says. “We felt like we could have made the journey even more quickly if we had cooked food to eat for breakfast and dinner, which I now think is better and more appetizing. It was a good lesson.”

Ray crosses paths with hiker Bill Irwin (left) and his guide dog Orient on their respective thru-hikes of the Appalachian Trail, 1993. Both were on personal quests – Jardine to perfect his ultra-light concepts, Irwin to be the first sight-impaired person to thru-hike the AT – and each succeeded.
Speed wasn't the point of their trip, it was merely a by-product of The Ray Way. Jardine hates power hiking and thinks it's poor technique to “get the RPMs up,” as he puts it. Instead, the couple's rapid progress was the result of putting in more hours on the trail. Simply put, they could hike longer each day without getting tired because they weren't encumbered with heavy packs. That in turn enabled them to enjoy the experience more.

“We started behind virtually every thru-hiker on the trail that year,” says Jardine. “But by the time we reached Katahdin, we had passed all but a handful. The ting is, we never passed anyone on the trail. We move too slowly for that. We passed them while they were resting, or sleeping, or taking layover days because they were all so tired from lugging those huge packs.”

[R.J.: photo caption at right - Bill was not on his thru-hike when we met him, he was simply re-hiking that particular section of AT. Nor was I on a personal quest to perfect my ultra-light concepts. My quest was to connect with the landscape and with nature, while the lightweight gear and concepts were merely aids to that connection.)

The AT hike validated Jardine's new techniques, and a "cruise" of the PCT in the summer of 1994-Jenny and Ray's final long-distance hike-confirmed it once again. Jardine was deluged with mail as The Pacific Crest Trail Hiker's Handbook [now "Beyond Backpacking"] became more widely read. As he settled in as president of the trail group he founded, the American long Distance Hiker's Association (ALDHA), he tried to answer all the letters. He was pleased to see that as more and more hikers tried his ideas, the response to the book was shifting from outright ridicule to deep gratitude.

“I was hiking the AT the same year as you,” begins a typical letter, this one from Mark Welch, dated August 1996. “I had no idea who you were, but I was leaded down with about 60 pounds and you both had on what looked like daypacks. I thought to myself, 'Holy Cow, what a couple of yahoos!' After you passed me I started reading your entries and was awestruck at your daily mileage. After reading your book it just amuses the heck out of me that I was pretty much the idiot.”

Four years have passed since Ray Jardine last strapped on a pack for a long-distance hike. Given his history, it was predictable that he would drift away from long-distance hiking. With the noise and clamor of the hiking community sounding a lot like the sound and fury in Yosemite after his “Friends” appeared, his already waning interest in hiking was further diminished. Jardine soon distanced himself from the discussion generated by his book and from groups like ALDHA that he'd fostered.

Today he lives with Jenny, his partner in adventure, in a quiet, sparsely populated corner of the Northwest. His modest house and cavernous workshop stand on a few acres of lodgepole pine, not far from the mountains and forests he loves. It's an abode that fits his frugal and unpretentious style. Jardine, who's more comfortable outdoors than in, often sleeps in a tent in the backyard. He seems content at home, absolutely focused on the details of his next wilderness adventure, which will take him and Jenny through some of the most remote and unforgiving land in the world. But he won't be going there on foot. Shortly after leaving behind the backpacking world, Jardine turned the considerable wattage of his full attention to a new outdoor enthusiasm: Arctic kayaking.

Partners in adventure: Ray and Jenny (above) test his latest sea kayak design before heading to the Arctic, summer 1997.
The fall he and Jenny returned from their third year in the Arctic, having paddled from Washington State, through Alaska, to the Mackenzie Delta. With 6,000 miles under their spray skirts so far, they're halfway through a treacherous retracing of the Northwest Passage. Each day in the Arctic, Ray and Jenny would don survival suits and paddle through what is literally ice water. Their only company might be beluga whales or grizzlies on shore. It's a deadly environment with no margin for error. Roll your boat trying to get through the surf to camp and, if you can't start a fire quickly, you die of hypothermia.

[R.J.: If you can't start a fire quickly, you shed the wet clothing and crawl into the tent. A sturdy tent and a thick, dry quilt is more warming than a fire in gale conditions, which is when the surf is most likely to capsize a boat.]

Before each voyage Jardine heads to his workshop to build a new, improved kayak, but only after redrafting it with a computer program he wrote in his previous life as an aerospace engineer. [R.J.: Actually, I wrote the program only a few years previous to building the kayaks.] His latest design is shaped by lessons learned from the preceding summer's trip. It's classic Jardine” imagination and application, honed by experience. Describing the tedious task of designing his kayak, his eyes burn with the same enthusiasm they show when he remembers the process of developing “Friends” coming protection or recalls figuring out how to get by on a long hike with less in his pack or on his feet than other of us can possibly imagine.

When asked what drives this outrageous immersion in adventure, his response is quick and unequivocal: It's just a plain, bottom-level love of nature. I think that's a primal instinct we all have, maybe I just have more of it. I've lived it. I know how much being in the wilderness can enrich my life.”

It's clear, too, that Jardine thrives on challenge, on the process of taking on a completely new set of problems and applying his irresistible logic to solving them. When he left Yosemite, he had done the hardest climb in the world and invented a device that would change the sport forever. He never again could do anything truly new in climbing, only repeat what he already had done. And after hiking the longest trails in America, some of them three times, he had reduced packweight to less than most people thought was possible. He had developed a system of interlocking techniques that virtually guaranteed not just success, but success with pleasure.

Was Jardine's departure from the worlds of climbing and hiking hastened by the controversy that accompanied both exits? Maybe, although Jardine won't admit to it. By the same token, he's not unmindful of the impact crater he's left on the modern outdoor world as he's followed an irresistible internal urge toward new and ever-changing challenges. “The thing I can't understand,” he says finally, “is why people get so upset at my ideas.”

“My philosophy is to think for myself. My goal is my own enjoyment in the wilderness, and that's based on reality as I find it. No one else can live my life for me, or for you. In the end, you can't worry about what other people think, you've just got to do what you feel is right.”

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Putting the Ray Way to the Test
You Can Leave Home Without It
Peter Potterfield

Ray Jardine shakes his head at the things hikers do to reduce packweight. He's seen them cut off toothbrush handles and trim the margins off maps, then proceed to heft a 60-pound pack on a weekend trip. Hikers, he says, grow attached to their gear after using it, seeing others use, or seeing it advertised. “Marketeers' hype,” he thinks, saps a person's objectivity about the weight of a given piece of equipment versus its utility. There is a better way.

Start with the smallest, lightest, best-made backpack you can find, rather than opting for a backpack designed to shoulder heavy loads. When you're limited in what you can carry, says Jardine, you're forced to think long and hard about any gear you bring.

Next, scrutinize the heaviest items you carry. While you may not be inclined to go all the way Ray and sleep beneath a tarp instead of a tent, at least choose the lightest pack, tent, and sleeping bag your budget allows. The weight savings on these big items can really add up. For instance, an ensemble consisting of a 3-pound pack, a 31⁄2-pound tent, and a 21⁄2-pound sleeping bag would spare the average backpacker about 10 pounds.

Forget the home-style amenities, too, like candle lanterns and self-inflating pads, to realize further weight savings. “Adjust your mindset to accommodate the wilderness environment. That way you won't miss the things you left behind and can instead enjoy the hiking,” says Jardine. For him that amounts to a pack that weighs under 9 pounds, excluding food and water.

To see what The Ray Way is really about, I put it to the test. Into a formerly retired daypack I stuffed a bivy bag (I don't have any tarps), a lightweight down sleeping bag (11⁄2 pounds), a butane stove with one half-full canister of gas and a titanium pot, a fleece sweater, synthetic long johns, and an uncoated nylon anorak and wind pants. Onto the outside I strapped a three-quarter length foam pad (ok, I cheated on that one). For an overnight in high summer, my pack weighed 11 pounds, until I added Ramen noodles, oatmeal and a couple of lunches, bringing it to almost 14 pounds.

That was it. The Ray Way is merciless.

At the Colchuck Lake trailhead outside of Seattle, I laced up a pair of running shoes and started up the well-trodden trail. The rig was probably 10 to 15 pounds lighter than my regular weekend pack, and when I reached the lake 4 hours later the difference was pleasantly obvious. What really struck me was the way my feet felt. I use lightweight fabric hiking boots most of the time anyway, but the weight savings of going with running sneakers made a dramatic difference in energy expended. I felt light on my feet but sure-footed. Real food for thought here.

Another 10 pounds or so would have made little difference on an overnight hike such as mine: Any reasonably fit person could have handled the load with no problem. But as I flew back down the trail feeling outrageously unencumbered in running shoes and a daypack, I couldn't help but think about attempting something like the Pacific Crest Trail. Jardine's techniques are all oriented for the long haul. This liberating feeling of weightlessness on the trail, day after day, might make a journey like that something else entirely. It might make it a lot more fun.

Lightweight living

Lightweight living

By Larry McDuff
Fairhope, Alabama
November 1999

It happens every time.

When Ann and I return from a long hike, we immediately start getting rid of stuff. Since completing our hike of the Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada, we've given away a 14-foot aluminum jon boat with trailer, a slalom ski, a windsurfer, two North Face down sleeping bags, a toboggan, a 35 mm camera with telephoto lens, an artist's set of oil paints, a set of weights with bench, and four old tires. We've hauled two loads of clothing and miscellaneous junk to thrift shops.

I've even come close to giving away my 1983 Dodge Power Ram 50 four-wheel drive pick-up truck. Our son doesn't need another vehicle, but he said he would take it. He couldn't bear to see the truck leave the family after all these years.

After living perfectly well out of our backpacks for the past four and a half months, we get home and wonder, “Why do we need all this stuff?” The 10 pounds of gear in Ann's pack along with 12 pounds in my pack was all we needed to live in desert heat or mountain cold, accompanied at times by rain, wind, snow, sleet, hail, and mosquitoes. Why should we need tons of stuff to live in the comfort of our own house?

Based on past experience, we have about 60 days before the urge to simplify our lives goes away. Then we'll be stuck with whatever is left, at least until the next hike. You may have heard the saying, “You don't own your possessions, your possessions own you.”

This is easy to see on the trail. Too many possessions, which translates to too much pack weight, weigh down your hike and cause injury, discomfort, and inability to hike the necessary mileage to finish the trail before winter.

Five years ago we started the Appalachian Trail with nearly three times our starting pack weight this year. Two weeks into that hike we met Keith, trail name Wolf, a legendary long-distance hiker.

On the trail, the most respected hikers are the ones with the fewest possessions. Wolf was carrying a super-small pack which weighed 14 pounds including food and water. When asked how he got his pack weight so low, Wolf would reply, “All you need to know is that it's possible.”

Like everyone else, hikers become attached to their possessions. But the successful hiker will quickly give up a cherished possession as soon as he learns of a better way. For example, before this hike Wolf taught us how to make a one-ounce stove from a pineapple can which burned alcohol or solid fuel tablets. This replaced our 15-ounce $59 MSR Whisperlight stove which had served us well for over 4000 miles of hiking. The cooking times were slower with the new stove, but there was a big gain in simplicity.

This principle is not easy to see in our modern culture, where success is generally viewed as proportional to the value and quantity of one's possessions. Society percieves the owner of a big house which can hold more possessions as more successful, when in fact he may be held in bondage by high house payments, taxes, utilities, repair costs, and a general lack of freedom. In an ever-increasing need for protection he acquires security lights, burglar alarms, double locks, fences, and moves into a subdivision with a locked gate. He pays large insurance premiums so he can afford to replace everything in case all his protection doesn't work.

Today we took our biggest step. We canceled the insurance on our house and its contents. It's not that we could easily afford to rebuild a house this big and replace all its contents. It's just that we wouldn't need to. We feel we could live, even in our modern culture, in a much smaller house with drastically fewer possessions.

As Wolf says, “All we need to know is that it's possible.”

Back

Strangers at Safeway

What do you do when you're in a grocery store and see an attractive person that you would like to meet? I'm often tempted to introduce myself. However, most of the time I chicken out because a) what am I going to say? “I see you're buying ham. I like ham myself. So you wanna go out?” b) I imagine it's anxiety inducing for the woman–after all, a strange man walks up to her in a grocery store and starts talking with her. Is he a weirdo? (Well, yes, but only in the best sense.) Stalker? Rapist? c) fear of rejection.

Do you flirt in the grocery store? If so, what do you do? If you've been flirted with, how did you react?

Wooden letter-size boxes?

* I'd like to find a source of wooden boxes, the same dimensions as those letter-size storage boxes (also known as “bankers boxes”). Ideally, they would have either dado, or finger joints, and be made of hardwood. Does anyone know where I can find such things? BookCrates has something similar, but the wood they use is quite rough, and I'd like boxes without openings and an even surface.