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MLD SoloMid XL by the Allt Cam-ban in the Fionngleann
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In late May/early June I spent 19 days walking from Fort
William to Inchnadamph on the Cape Wrath Trail in the Scottish Highlands, as
described in
this
post. During the walk I had 14 wild camps, 2 nights on a campsite and 2
nights in a hotel. The weather was hot and sunny at the start, cold, wet and
windy at the finish. Overnight temperatures ranged from 1°C to 14°C (both in
the first five days) with most nights in the 7 - 10° range.
I took gear I felt would be suitable for the time of year –
not quite summer but no longer winter. Most was well-proven, some new. Here’s
how it performed and a fewt lessons I learned and a few I had confirmed. There’s
nothing I would change though in the unseasonally cold and stormy weather of
the last few days an extra warm layer would have been nice.
Pack: Atom Packs The Prospector EP60
This has become a favourite pack in the last few years,
under its original name of The Mo 60. It’s tough, lightweight (930g), and
carries loads up to 19kg comfortably. On this trip the weight didn’t go above
15kg (when I had 5 days food and most of my clothing inside). Sixty litres was
more than enough capacity. I could have got everything into a smaller pack, but
I like having plenty of room, especially when packing in the cold and wet.
I like the roll top, which gives easy access, and the big
stretch front pocket. I varied the contents of the latter depending on the
weather.
If it wasn’t raining it held my
waterproofs, whether wet or dry. If it was raining it sometimes held the tent,
if that was wet, but more often compressible water containers. When rain looked
unlikely my windshirt went in with the waterproofs. When wet the tent was
usually strapped on one side. The closed cell foam pad went on the side too
sometimes but more often on top where there’s a long strap for easier access –
I often used it as a seat during the day. Lower side pockets held solid water
bottles, snacks, and maps.
Bum Bag: Atom Packs The Roo – return to a useful
accessory
This little 1.5
litre bum bag held various items I wanted quick access to such as smartphone,
mini binoculars, reading glasses, sunglasses, insect repellent and more. These
are items I often carry in the top pocket of a pack, something The Prospector
doesn’t have. It’s more convenient to have them accessible in a bum bag though.
I wore it as a sling rather than a waist
pack as I found this more comfortable.
The Roo is made
from offcuts from pack manufacture and has a waterproof zip and a mesh pocket
on the front. I used the latter for my phone. There’s a key clip and a small
compartment inside the bag. The long strap is adjustable but not removable.
For both
backpacking and travelling (I used it for phone, keys and wallet in towns and
on trains) this is an excellent little bag. I used similar bum bags on all my
long walks in the 1980s and 1990s but didn’t take one on my Munros and Tops
walk in 1996, I guess to save weight, and then didn’t go back to using one
until recently. I don’t know why I stopped. I wouldn’t be without it now.
Tent: Mountain Laurel Designs SoloMid XL
I chose this over the Trailstar as it has a zipped door and
I wanted this in case of midges (a mosquito coil in a closed porch is quite
effective) and for privacy on campsites, which I only used on two nights in the
end. I’d thought it would be more.
I also need a new mesh inner for the Trailstar as my old one
is showing signs of wear and I didn’t trust it to last the whole trip. I wasn’t
going in midge season without one! Especially as this was mostly a low level
trip – I wouldn’t be camping in a breeze on a hilltop to escape them. For the
SoloMid I had MLD’s mesh Innernet. As it was midges were only a slight problem
a few times but I was glad of having the inner just in case.
The SoloMid plus Innernet is roomy with a large porch. This
latest version is made of silpoly rather than silnylon and as claimed this
doesn’t stretch when wet, which was good on the many rainy nights. The SoloMid
stands up well to strong winds and rain.I had guylines with mini carabiners attached so I could clip them on pullout points when required.
With the Innernet plus pegs the total weight was 1020 grams,
which is light for a tent so roomy and storm resistant. That doesn’t include a
pole as it pitches with a trekking pole.
Trekking Poles: Pacerpole Dual Lock, Pacerpole Top with
other pole lower section – not a success at first
As I have done for many years I used Pacerpoles, which were
superb as always. However I did have one problem. The SoloMid XL pitches best
with poles of around 140cms or even a bit longer. Pacerpoles are significantly
shorter than this, just 133cm for my Carbon Dual Lock ones. Not wanting to use
any other pole handles (the handle is the key part of Pacerpoles, the shafts
are just ordinary ones) I decided to use a Pacerpole Top, which is just the
handle and top section, with the lower sections of a very old aluminium pole.
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Using the Pacerpole Top with the old pole shaft
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This setup did have a little wobble and wasn’t as stiff as s Dual Lock pole but
I reckoned it would do. In use I wasn’t so sure so if there was more than a
light breeze I used the DuoLock pole even though it restricted space in the
tent. I also didn't extend the Pacerpole Top/old pole as far as I'd have liked when I did use it as I didn't trust it.
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Using the Pacerpole Duo Lock on a windy site with all guylines attached
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Then one day I slipped on wet ground and the old pole bent under me with
alarming ease. The aluminium shaft was quite soft. Luckily, I was only a day
and a half away from a town stop where I could buy a replacement, a Black
Diamond Explorer pole (a pair actually – single ones not available). The
Pacerpole Top fitted well and the setup felt solid and secure. I should have
tested the Pacerpole Top/old pole setup more thoroughly before the trip.
Sleeping Bag: Rab Mythic Ultra 120 Modular
This is a new ultralight sleeping bag. It weighs just 330g
and is rated down to 0°C with air mats with a rating of R4 or above. The latter
is necessary because there is no insulation under the torso, just straps for
attaching it to the mat. As with other bags like this I didn’t actually use the
straps as I like to sit up with the bag wrapped round me when it’s chilly. As
the Mythic is quite wide this worked fine. The bag is filled with 120g of 900
fill power down, which easily kept me warm on the coldest nights. I used it
with two different R4.5 air mats and the basic Multimat Camper 8 closed cell
foam mat and it worked well with all three. I think it’s a superb bag for above
freezing temperatures.
Sleeping Mats: Rab Ultrasphere 4.5, Multimat Camper 8,
Therm-A-Rest NeoAir XLite – a problem (and solutions) I’ve encountered before
The Ultrasphere 4.5 is a new lightweight (370g) air bed
designed to go with the Mythic Ultra sleeping bag. I’d used it earlier in the
year with other sleeping bags – it was a bit cold then for the Mythic – and it
was warm and comfortable so I brought it on this trip. There is just one aspect
I dislike. It’s very hard to inflate by mouth as the valve is flush against the
mat rather than sticking out. A big pump sack is provided. This works but it
does take time. Despite that I was quite happy with the mat for the first nine
nights. Then it sprang a leak. Slow at first – I woke and pumped it up again
twice the first night – but instantly after a few more nights. Having had this
happen before (with seven different mats from three different companies in the
last fifteen years) I have taken to carrying a closed cell foam mat as well.
The Multimat Camper 8 weighs 180g and was warm enough, though not very
comfortable.
I didn’t have to manage without an inflatable mat for long
as three days after it sprang a leak I was meeting Tony Hobbs who lent me a
Therm-A-Rest NeoAir Xlite mat for the rest of the trip. This is the fourth
long-distance walk where a mat has failed shortly before I could arrange a
replacement! The XLite, which also
weighs 370g, was fine and has a protruding nozzle so it was much easier to blow
up by mouth.
Given my experience with other air mats I don’t think the
Ultrasphere mat is particularly at fault. I think it’s a problem with air mats
in general.
Stove & Pot: Soto
Windmaster 4Flex & Jetboil Stash – a great success
Having been using the 800ml Jetboil Stash heat exchanger pot
with the Stash stove and several other stoves over the last few years I expected
the fuel in the 230g canister I used to last well. It did. 15 days. Which
exceeded expectations. This was helped, though probably only a little, by the
Soto Windmaster stove which sits close to the base of the pot, helping keep off
breezes, and has a fuel regulator so the performance doesn’t decline as the
canister empties. At 140g for the pot and 88g for the stove this is a light
setup.
I think this stove or the MSR Pocket Rocket Deluxe, which
also has a regulator, and the Stash pot are ideal for long-distance walks and
I’ll be using the combination again. However the Stash pot only comes with the
Stash stove, which doesn’t have regulator and isn’t as powerful as the Soto and
MSR stoves. It’s expensive too. Almost as good are two Fire Maple heat
exchanger pots – the 1 litre FMC-XK6, which weighs 195g, and the 600ml Petrel,
which weighs 166g – and these each cost about a sixth the price of the Stash.
I wrote much
more about HX pots and stoves earlier in the year. I’ve also written about the
food I ate on the Cape Wrath Trail.
Trail Shoes: Altra Lone Peak 8 – latest version of an old
favourite.
I first used Lone Peak shoes, the 2.0, on the TGO Challenge
in 2016. In my
review I said “I’m impressed enough with the Lone Peaks that they are now
my first choice for long distance walks”. After using four more versions I
haven’t changed my mind and I think the Lone Peak 8 is the best yet. It’s more
durable than earlier versions and the tread lasts a bit longer. I love the wide
toebox, which is ideal for my feet, and I’m now very used to the zero-drop
sole. They were comfortable throughout the walk despite being soaked much of
the time. I can’t really fault them.
Waterproof Jacket & Overtrousers: Outdoor Research
Helium Ascentshell & Montane Minimus
At 330g this jacket is a good compromise between an
ultralight one suitable for summer showers and warm weather and a heavy one
suitable for winter blizzards. It performed excellently, as expected, in wet
and windy weather. It has had a fair amount of use and the outer was wetting
out quickly by the end of the walk so I do need to restore the DWR. I should
have done it before the walk.
The ultralight 157g Minimus overtrousers worked well as
usual but the DWR also needs restoring.
Insulated Jacket:
Berghaus MTN Arete LB Synthetic Hoody – an old favourite returns with a new name
For many years my favourite warmwear on long walks has been
the Berghaus VapourLight HyperTherm jacket, which is astonishingly warm for its
weight of just 224g. I was disappointed when Berghaus discontinued this several
years ago but now they’ve brought out a virtually identical jacket with a
different but equally long name. On my scales this weighs just 3g more than the
HyperTherm. It’s just as warm and just as compressible and has the same 40g
Hydroloft fill. I love it!
Other Clothing:
The first five days were hot and sunny. All I wore during
the day were
Slazenger woven shorts (165g) and a
BAM T-shirt (175g).
When the weather changed these disappeared into the pack and never came out
again. For the rest of the trip I wore
Montane Terra trousers (345g),
and the Craghoppers
NosiLife Adventure Shirt (295g). In the evening and
under the shirt on the coldest days I wore the
Rab MeCo merino
wool/polyester long sleeve base layer (150g, long discontinued). When it was
windy but dry I wore the
Patagonia Houdini (105g). If it started to rain
I wore the Ascentshell jacket over the Houdini. I also had a
Tentrees
Altitude Juniper Hat (85g and basically a mostly mesh baseball cap) and a
Smartwool
beanie (56g). I also had 2 pairs of
SAXX boxer briefs and 1 pair
each of
Bridgedale and
Darn Tough ankle socks (models unknown,
they weren’t new).
Accessories:
This always seems a long list but didn’t add that much
weight and didn’t take up much space.
Terra Nova Moonlite bivi bag,
Petzl Iko Core
headlamp,
Silva Ranger compass,
Harvey Cape Wrath Trail maps, First
Aid Kit,
Garmin InReach Mini,
Fox 40 Classic whistle,
Oppo X5 smartphone,
2
Nitecore NB 10000 Gen 2 energy bricks, repair kit, sunscreen,
Julbo
sunglasses, midge repellent, mosquito coils, wash kit, toilet paper, reading
glasses x 2, notebook & pens
, Kindle,
Kestrel Weather Station,
wall plug & charging cable.
Camera Gear
Sony a6700 camera with Sony 11mm, 10-20mm &
18-135mm lenses. Velbon V-Pod tripod. Billingham Hadley Digital
Camera Bag. ShutterGrip 2 (for phone).
All photos taken on the Cape Wrath Trail.