In early January the sun goes down by 5:30 pm, by the time I park my truck at the bottom
of the canyon it’s already getting dark. Snow
is lightly falling. After clipping into my snowshoes my small day pack goes on loaded with the few supplies I’m taking with me for my camp. No blanket, no sleeping bag and of course no tent, no stove. Food is simple with sourdough rolls and chili for dinner, grits and eggs for breakfast, some jerky to snack on, the ever present sunflower seeds and plenty of Mocha mix for drinking. I’m taking my own made gear for shelter, my Polartech Fleece Poncho Liner goes on next, followed by an HD Poncho in snow camo. For my hands, finger-less mittens, 100% wool, crocheted by my wife, Shauna, with yarn we bought a couple years ago on a visit to the Woodward’s in North Carolina. The last item, essential now, my Fenix headlamp with wide angle flood light to penetrate the dark woods that lie ahead.
Arriving at last I search around for the best spot for my shelter, seeing a large pine and a small Juniper about twelve feet apart it looks perfect. For this camp I’m using my Ultralite silnylon poncho as a tarp for a lean to shelter, over that I’m throwing a very thin painters plastic to form a clear window for the Super Shelter that will result. Very light, and very warm.
The Super Shelter is nine feet long, four feet wide and a little over four feet tall. The invention an idea of Mors Kochanski a now elderly Canadian survival guru, it is a merging of modern materials and Inuit (Eskimo) ways. In effect it makes a greenhouse to capture radiant heat from a fire.
A few arm loads of soft pine boughs make for a pleasant aromatic mattress on the snow. With my poncho off, my Fleece liner will be like a sheet on the boughs.
I don’t know what it is, but it doesn’t bother me. I have plenty to do, whether just camp chores or something I want to make or do. There are times when it would be nice to say something to someone, like talk about a beautiful sunset. Probably the hardest time is around the campfire at night, that’s the time when folks like to talk, but I keep busy cooking, or experimenting or making something and the time passes nicely. Mostly I miss someone to share the beauty I find in the outdoors, it seems there is not much use raving about it to myself, I suppose that gives a reason to come back, for the enjoyment of telling about the time in the wilderness.
Morning finally breaks and the early light exposes my camp and the area around it allowing me to really see it for the first time, having come in during the dark evening and only my head lamp to illuminate things. I find the view at first light simply stunning, fresh snow everywhere, the pines fully flocked, my tracks coming in nearly covered. I see a couple sets of rabbit tracks in the soft snow. I bring my head back inside, closing the plastic again. The warmth from the glowing fire is so inviting while inside my shelter I scarcely can muster the desire to go out in the frigid morning air until I have to. I lay back down to ponder my situation. Sleep catches me and I doze for an hour, till a little chill awakens me and alerts me that the fire needs another charge of wood.
Hi Perry: This was a good article. I watched your Youtube video on this topic as well. I really enjoy your videos and blog posts. That’s why I’m replying to this. I often hike and camp by myself as well. You mentioned that you sometimes wish someone was there to share that sunset with or talk to around the evening campfire. Well, that’s what you’re actually doing here with the videos and blog posts. I guess that’s why we “loners” do blogs and Youtube. Anyway, I just wanted to encourage you to keep it up. Folks are watching and reading even if they don’t always give feedback. Keep up the good work and blessings!
Hi Perry, Lauri here. I got married and now my name is Lauri Madsen. I’m curious if you have started manufacturing your lightweight snowshoes. I am interested in getting a couple pair. If possible could you recommend a brand that is on the market?
Lauri, We did not get into making those yet, too many other things to do for now, perhaps next year. For snowshoes it just depends on how much you will be using them and where. For trail use most any will do. I’d recommend getting the largest you can since we do get lot of snow around here and you want to have enough flotation. 30 – 36″ is likely what you will find on the large size.
Perry, I just now read one of your blogs for the first time. As a wannabe writer, I appreciate good writing, and yours is excellent. Since I’ve watched most, if not all, of your videos at least once, I have now discovered another way to get a Perry fix.
I started reading this today, and realized that I had read it once before. However, it is excellent writing, and I enjoyed it anew, especially since we are in late winter and cold weather camping is in mind. I relate so much to your love of solitude outdoors, with the only regret, as you say, the lack of someone to share a sunset or some other spectacular sight.