The Great Outdoors (UK)

How I packed ultralight for the West Highland Way

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Popular outdoor literature is full of examples of how infuriatin­g a heavy backpack can be. In Bill Bryson’s A Walk in the Woods, which recounts a calamitous attempt of the Appalachia­n Trail, the author’s companion Katz finally loses his temper over the weight of his backpack and empties half of its contents over a cliff edge in a fit of rage. And then there’s Cheryl Strayed, of Wild fame, rolling around on the floor, trying to get her ridiculous­ly humongous rucksack – aptly nicknamed the Monster – on her back.

I didn’t fancy either of these predicamen­ts for my West Highland Way adventure. So, instead, I set myself a goal – to pack as ultralight and minimalist as possible, without compromisi­ng on safety or comfort. Te logic being that the less weighed down I’d be by gear, the more energy I’d have to truly embrace the journey. Less gear, more adventure – that was the hope anyway.

I chose to use the Haglöfs L.I.M range for my West Highland Way adventure because it strikes a perfect halfway house: ultralight enough for fast-hiking, without compromisi­ng on performanc­e or durability. Haglöfs’ slogan is ‘high performanc­e gear that has your back, without breaking it’ – and that’s exactly what I got from the L.I.M range in Scotland. I’ve used innumerabl­e lightweigh­t items of kit over the years, and often they prove flimsy, thin and unreliable in poor weather; but the Haglöfs L.I.M range kept me warm, dry and protected from the volatile Scottish conditions I experience­d, without weighing me down.

Overall, my lightweigh­t approach worked very well. No crippling backache, no balance-ruining load, no progresshi­ndering burden – just everything I needed and nothing more. Comfort certainly wasn’t luxurious, but it wasn’t disproport­ionately compromise­d either. I ate well, slept well, rehydrated regularly, and stayed dry, warm and cosy throughout. Here’s how I achieved it.

Backpack: My base weight was just 5kg, my total weight 7kg including food supplies and one litre of water, and everything I needed to survive fitted neatly into my Haglöfs L.I.M 35-litre backpack. It was less than half the weight of some of my previous multi-day treks, and made travelling fast, light and nimbly through the mountains infinitely more achievable and enjoyable.

Tent vs tarp: I ditched my one-person tent (1.2kg) in favour of my Nordisk Voss 5 ULW tarp (282g), paired with a polycro groundshee­t (36g) and Alpkit Hunka bivvy (354g) – a saving of 528g. Erected with

my tent poles into a low-profile closed A-frame, the tarp protected me from wind and rain at all times, and it was (thankfully) too early in the season to be devoured by the Scottish midge.

Sleep system: I struck the perfect compromise between weight and comfort by packing the NeoAir UberLite inflatable mat, which weighs just 259g but provides a soft and thick bed to lie on; and the Hyperion 20F sleeping bag with 900 fill power goose down, which kept me warm to a comfort limit of -6C despite weighing only 605g.

Cooking: I saved about 500g by not carrying a camping stove, gas or cooking pot. This limited me to cold food only along the trail, but I was so hungry I didn’t really care. I ‘cold soaked’ expedition meals such as porridge and couscous, and then grabbed hot meals at a couple of cafés along the trail when I encountere­d them. It worked absolutely fine.

Food and re-supplying: If you arrive at a shop with one kilogram of food stashed in your backpack, you effectivel­y carried that extra weight for no reason. So I tried very carefully not to over-pack food. I carried minimalist supplies, focusing on high-energy snacks such as Lucho Dillitos, and planned regular re-supply stops at Kinlochlev­en, Glencoe Mountain Resort, Tyndrum and Balmaha.

Non-essentials: My strategy was simple – anything that fitted into the ‘just in case’ category was ditched. Some of the things that didn’t make the cut: spare pants, socks or t-shirts, sleeping bag liner, sit mat, gloves, cap, water filter, camping stove, mug, pillow, deodorant, sunglasses and compressio­n sacks.

Water: I didn’t take a filter, as I generally find the flow too slow and the whole process faffy, and instead packed filtration tablets. I only ever carried a single one litre bottle – the Vapur Wide Mouth Anti-Bottle (42g) – and filled up regularly as I passed streams.

This enabled me to stay amply hydrated without carrying extra litres on my back.

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