This post is a bit less emotional than the last one!
This is by no means a definitive list or the perfect set-up,
but it seemed to work for me this year.
I wouldn’t change very much, but some Windstopper gloves
might have been handy (excuse the pun)
I only
weigh 66 kg wet through so reducing weight is more critical to me than if I
weighed 85kg. This is the major reason for much of my kit choice and definitely
for my choice between tent & bivvy. Please remember, though, that kit
is very personal - for example, some will prefer a tent an be prepared to carry
a bit more weight.
Clothing
1. Shoes
a. Salomon Cross Spikes - I ran the first day in Cross Spikes expecting more ice, but by the end of the day could really feel where the studs were on my soles, so changed to ordinary Speedcross.
b. Salomon Speedcross 3 CS - Really comfortable and had minimal foot problems. Went from size 8 to 9 for the final stage.
2. Socks
a. Hilly X-Static, my usual sock
b. X-Socks Sky Run
3. Gaiters – Raidlight Mini-Running gaiters
4. Legs
a. 2XU compression shorts – always run in these
b. Marmot Power Stretch Pant – returning from 2012, really comfortable
c. Underarmour Coldwear legging – these are my usual cold weather (non-Spine) leggings. Wore these under the Marmots later in the race.
d. Montane Atomic DT 2.0 Pants – I love these shell pants. Incredibly warm when it got really cold and the wind got up. Easy to run in.
5. Upper body base layer
a. Helly Hansen Merino Wool Long Sleeve Ice Crew
b. Patagonia Mens Merino 2 Zip Neck Longsleeve
c. Helly Hansen Long Sleeve Merino Wool Blend "Freeze" Half Zip
d. Gore Air shortsleeve shirt – a nice, warm t-shirt
Started with HH Crew and Gore T-shirt, then added Patagonia top in-between, then added HH Freeze between the 2 LS layers. Worked for me – I feel the cold.
6. Upper body insulation layers
a. Montane Fireball Smock (Pertex - 240g) – Even the small size is big-ish on me, so plenty of room for layers underneath
b. First Ascent Downlight jacket (390 g) – for when it got really cold. Jenny bought me this In USA in 2011. Nice bit of kit
c. PHD Midwinter Minimus Vest – not used
7. Upper body shells
a. Marmot Essence jacket (170g)
b. Montane Slipstream jacket (65g)
c. OMM Kamleika Smock (290g)
8. Gloves
a. Outdoor Design silk liners
b. Mammut Thermostretch gloves
c. Extremities Tuff Bags – windproof, waterproof over-mitt – a last minute addition to my kit, these performed superbly and retained some use of hands
d. Marmot Expedition Mitt – exchanged Tuff bags for these when it got really cold. Brilliantly warm, but not much use of fingers when wearing!
9. Hats
a. Buff
b. Nike Dri-Fit running hat
c. Mammut Wind Stopper Beanie
d. Jacket hoods
10. Other
a. Kahtoohla microspikes – didn’t use much but superb when needed
b. Black Diamond Ultra Distance Trekking Poles - indispensible
1. Shoes
a. Salomon Cross Spikes - I ran the first day in Cross Spikes expecting more ice, but by the end of the day could really feel where the studs were on my soles, so changed to ordinary Speedcross.
b. Salomon Speedcross 3 CS - Really comfortable and had minimal foot problems. Went from size 8 to 9 for the final stage.
2. Socks
a. Hilly X-Static, my usual sock
b. X-Socks Sky Run
3. Gaiters – Raidlight Mini-Running gaiters
4. Legs
a. 2XU compression shorts – always run in these
b. Marmot Power Stretch Pant – returning from 2012, really comfortable
c. Underarmour Coldwear legging – these are my usual cold weather (non-Spine) leggings. Wore these under the Marmots later in the race.
d. Montane Atomic DT 2.0 Pants – I love these shell pants. Incredibly warm when it got really cold and the wind got up. Easy to run in.
5. Upper body base layer
a. Helly Hansen Merino Wool Long Sleeve Ice Crew
b. Patagonia Mens Merino 2 Zip Neck Longsleeve
c. Helly Hansen Long Sleeve Merino Wool Blend "Freeze" Half Zip
d. Gore Air shortsleeve shirt – a nice, warm t-shirt
Started with HH Crew and Gore T-shirt, then added Patagonia top in-between, then added HH Freeze between the 2 LS layers. Worked for me – I feel the cold.
6. Upper body insulation layers
a. Montane Fireball Smock (Pertex - 240g) – Even the small size is big-ish on me, so plenty of room for layers underneath
b. First Ascent Downlight jacket (390 g) – for when it got really cold. Jenny bought me this In USA in 2011. Nice bit of kit
c. PHD Midwinter Minimus Vest – not used
7. Upper body shells
a. Marmot Essence jacket (170g)
b. Montane Slipstream jacket (65g)
c. OMM Kamleika Smock (290g)
Starting layers
|
Middle-race layers
|
Maximal layers
|
Helly Ice crew
|
HH Ice Crew
|
HH Ice Crew
|
Gore t-shirt
|
Patagonia LS merino
|
HH Freeze half zip
|
Marmot Essence jacket
|
Gore t-shirt
|
Patagonia LS merino
|
Montane Slipstream
|
Gore t-shirt
| |
Montane Fireball Smock
|
Montane Slipstream
| |
Marmot Essence jacket
|
Marmot Essence jacket
| |
First Ascent Down Jacket
| ||
Montane Fireball Smock
| ||
OMM Kamleika Smock
|
8. Gloves
a. Outdoor Design silk liners
b. Mammut Thermostretch gloves
c. Extremities Tuff Bags – windproof, waterproof over-mitt – a last minute addition to my kit, these performed superbly and retained some use of hands
d. Marmot Expedition Mitt – exchanged Tuff bags for these when it got really cold. Brilliantly warm, but not much use of fingers when wearing!
9. Hats
a. Buff
b. Nike Dri-Fit running hat
c. Mammut Wind Stopper Beanie
d. Jacket hoods
10. Other
a. Kahtoohla microspikes – didn’t use much but superb when needed
b. Black Diamond Ultra Distance Trekking Poles - indispensible
Compulsory Kit
1. Rucksack
a. INOV-8 Race Pac 32 (632g) –
used this last year, supremely comfortable
b. INOV-8 Race Pac 2 (110g) –
frontpack, indispensible addition to last year’s kit making food, GPS, phone
readily accessible
2. Sleeping system
a. PHD Minim 500 Down with Drishell Sleeping Bag (800g) in Pod Airstream Lite
compression stuff sac (75g)
b. Roll mat – in rucksack
c. Marmot Alpinist Bivy (397g)
3. Cooking system
a. MSR pocket rocket (86g)
b. Esbit 0.75L Titanium pot (106g)
c. Isopro fuel (110g)
d. Lighter
e. Titanium spork
4. Food
a. Peanut butter and jam sandwiches
b. Trail mix
c. Energy/cereal bars
d. Chocolate bars
e. Sweeties
5. Water
a. 2 x Camelbak Podium waterbottles
b. High5 Zero electrolyte tablets
6. Navigation
a. Garmin GPSMAP 62S (260g) – came
preloaded with 1:50000 OS mapping. Great bit of kit, easy to use.
b. Silva compass
c. Harvey Pennine Way maps
7. Head torch with spare batteries
a. Petzl Nao (187g) – lost my trusty headtorch
at the training day, perfect excuse to get one of these beauties. Programmable,
I had it on a custom setting ensuring it lasted at least 14 hours. It never ran
out on me. USB recharging.
b. Also carried a spare lightweight
Petzl headtorch for emergencies
8. Whistle – on
rucksack
9. Knife - Victorinox Classic SD
10. Medical kit
– as per kit list
11. iPhone
12. Other essential kit
a. Toilet paper
b. Cash and a card
c. Positivity crib sheet
Starting pack weight - just over
5kg, excluding water
1. Compulsory kit as above
2. Food inc. sandwiches
3. Montane Atomic overtrousers
4. Montane Fireball smock
5. OMM Kamleika
6. Marmot beanie
7. Spare socks
As the race went on, I wore more
kit, and carried more kit and food.
3 comments:
Hi Rich, great little article and I completely agree with Peanut Butter sandwiches, though water may be required afterwards!
I've noticed you have mentioned the OMM Smock, I have been looking at getting a OMM Kamleika Jacket like this http://www.aboveandbeyond.co.uk/.omm-kamleika-race-jacket-blue-various-sizes-_5060103821396.htm, but I am not sure if it is worth an extra £20+ just for a zip? Would you say your Smock works as a decent primary trail / fell running top?
Thanks
Hi Rich, I have no doubt this will prove invaluable to me, so thanks for sharing.
Totally agree that the key here is to be on the light side of minimal whilst managing the risk of dropping out due to a lack of kit. I notice you took a bivi and the debate I've been having (with myself) is whether it would stand up to seriously wet weather. Have you tried your marmot bivi in real rain or only in sub-zero temps?
I was thinking that a bothy+survival bag might be a better option in case I do need to sleep out. Of course I also need to verify how likely it is for me to sleep out rather than make it to each check point - emergency Vs planned nights out are a very different prospect. Would appreciate your thoughts on this.
Chris.
Hi Chris - sorry for the late reply.
I have never used my vivi for real! And I carry it purely for emergencies - no intention of ever planning to use it during the Spine!
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