Previous installments: Part #1: How to create maps & Part #2: How to plan for food
Now that we’ve created maps and bought food, we can begin to
package our food rations and get them ready to be shipped.
Step #1: Get boxes
First things first: We need boxes. Perhaps there’s a cheaper
way to do it than I did, but I chose to use Priority Mail boxes from the U.S.
Postal Service. The boxes, themselves, are free, and can easily be obtained.
You can pick them up at a local post office, but it would be wiser to have them
shipped to you because your post office may have a limited supply. (Online, you can order as many boxes as you’d like and have them shipped to you for free.)
I used two box sizes. I used “medium flat rate boxes” (11” x
8 ½” x 5 ½”), and “large flat rate boxes” (12” x 12” x 5 ½”).
The medium cost me
$12.35 to ship in the US (and about $35 to ship to Canada). I could easily fit
3-4 days' worth of food in the medium box, or tightly cram five days' worth of
food if I was lucky.
Medium flat rate box |
The large flat rate
box cost me $16.85 to ship in the US (and about $66 to ship to Canada). I
could easily fit 5-6 days' worth of food, and up to eight days' worth if I packed
it in tightly.
Large flat rate box |
Other packaging items
needed: black sharpie marker to write on boxes, priority mail address
stickers (that can be gotten for free at post offices), and one of those tape
rollers, as you’ll be using lots of tape.
Step #2: Make a list
of post offices on your route that you will ship to
To hike efficiently, you want to: 1. Carry as little weight
as necessary, and 2. Put yourself in a situation in which you don’t have to worry
about finding, buying, or picking up your food package every day or every
couple of days.
Ideally, I think it’s safe to plan to fill your boxes with
five days' worth of food. One day’s worth of food weighs about 2 lbs, and I
think 10 lbs for five days' worth of food is a manageable load to carry. If you mail yourself, say, three days' worth
of food, this will cost you much more in shipping fees since it will require
that you ship many more boxes. Plus, you’ll have to stop at post offices more
often, which will slow you down. This can be awfully inconvenient, especially since post
offices are closed during evenings, and many aren’t open at all on weekends.
This can create logistical headaches. So five days' worth of food is a nice
middle ground. The weight and shipping cost will be reasonable, and you won't be burdened with the inconvenience of having to go
to town every three days.
Since I planned on walking 20 miles a day, I tried to find
post offices about 100 miles apart. I was able to do this sometimes, but for remote areas I had to pack as many as 8 days' worth of food
when I was 159 miles between post offices. This means that many of my boxes
will differ in size, in weight, and in content. And because of this, figuring
out what goes in each box requires a bit of planning and simple math.
But before we get to that, look up the towns you’ll be
walking through and find out if they have a post office. You can do this using
basic searches on the US or Canadian postal service websites. If the town does
have a post office, write down basic information (address, directions, phone
number, hours, and how many miles till your next selected post office, and
carry this information with you).
Most post offices, once they receive your box, will hold the
box for between 15 and 30 days. After that many days, they will ship it back to
the return address. Because you may be delayed on your hike and may not make it to
the post office in time, you will want to take preemptive action before your hike to make sure post offices will
hold your box, even after their normal holding period. One way to do this is to
carry the post office's phone number and keep in touch with them. Most of the post offices I
dealt with were run by one postmaster or postmistress, and they were all very
nice and accommodating. I also think it would be helpful and courteous to send
each post office a letter before you take off on your trip, explaining what you’re
doing, that you’re on a big hike, and that the box they will receive will
contain much-needed food. Because of such a letter, they will be less puzzled
about the mysterious box, and they will feel like they’re a part of your
journey. Suddenly they won’t care about their 15-day holding policy.
I printed 20 of these out and sent them to all my post offices before I began my hike. |
Lastly, write on the box when the approximate pick up date
will be, which I had yet to do on the box pictured below.
Step #3: Plan out
every box
First things first: Make a list of what you need in every box. If you’ve gotten to this point, you already know what post offices you’re going to ship your food to, and thus how much distance you’ll have to walk between post offices (100 miles), and thus how many days you'll be walking (5 days), and thus how much food you'll need for every item in that box (5 oz of dehydrated milk).
I have 20 boxes to send, so that means I will have 20 bags
of, say, dehydrated milk, and 20 bags of chips, and 20 bags of a lot of other
stuff. To save time, you do not want to do one box at a time—bagging your milk,
your chips, you dinner meals, and stuffing it in one box. Rather, you should
take an assembly line approach. Make 20 bags of milk, then 20 bags of chips,
etc.—and then pack your boxes.
Trail mix to the upper left, granola in the center, and bags of chips on the bottom. |
Here’s a photo of a section of my packing list. You’ll see that the
amount I pack per box depends entirely on how many days I expect that box to
last me.
Step #4: Package your
food in Ziplocks
So now that you know you need 4 oz of milk for Box #4, 5 oz
of milk for Box #5, and so on, we should create 20 bags of milk, writing what
box number they are to be placed in onto the plastic Ziploc bag.
"2" is for "Box #2." Crushed chips inside. |
Do everything you can to lessen your workload. For instance,
mix up your trail mix ingredients in a big bin or box. I used the same box to
crush and mix my chips. (Crushed chips take up less space.)
Mixing trail mix. |
Now that you’ve made bags of everything, you can begin to place
everything in their designated box.
One box's contents: food, sunscreen, maps, trash bag, etc. |
You’ll also want to consider including
other non-food items to save weight. Instead of carrying a big clunky bottle of
sunscreen lotion for the entirety of your trip, send yourself a series of small travel-sized bottles. Other non-food items
I included:
- Aluminum foil windscreens (10). These will last several weeks before the need to be replaced. I shipped myself one for about every 10 days.
- Cat food canister stove (6).
- Mini sunscreen bottle (6)
- Lithium batteries for my for my iPad Bluetooth keyboard
- A trashbag for every box. The trash bags were inserted into my backpack so that my contents inside were waterproof. (Be sure to get tall trash bags!)
- Select maps for the area you’re about to travel through.
- Book of matches
- Water treatment drops
Small bottles like this sunscreen bottle save weight.
Water treatment drops.
Step #5: Recruit a
trusty friend/family member to ship your stuff
You will need someone to ship your items for you.
Unfortunately, you cannot ship them all at once because post offices will not
hold your boxes for months on end. Plus, your plans are likely to change while
on your hike, and you might need your friend to include an extra item, or you
might even decide that your route will not be taking you to this or that post
office anymore.
So you need a friend to do this work for you. Try to make it
as easy for them as possible. Have the packages all packed up. Have the address
written on the packages. Give them all the money they’ll need for sending them
out.
Priority mail boxes are shipped to their destinations
rapidly (2-3 days). You will need to constantly be in touch with your friend,
so that he or she can mail the boxes to the select post offices at the right
times. I asked Josh, typically, to send about three boxes at a time, so that he
didn’t have to be going to the post office every single week, or several times
a week.
Extra notes:
-Document everything in Word files and carry those papers with you. Give a set
to your friend.
-Don't get the Ziplocks with the crappy zippers. These fell apart or broke more times than I can count. Also, be sure to get varying sizes (freezer bag, sandwich bag, etc.).
These zippered ziplocks cannot handle wear and tear well. |
These are my dinner meals for box #2. Potatoes mixed with butter and bacon on the right. Southwestern polenta with bacon in the middle. Parmesan cheese on the left. |
Dinner meals for box #4. Angel hair pasta, Ramen, and basil with parmesan cheese. I also shipped myself olive oil in boxes that contained noodle dinners. |
I bought this box, as well as a box of Tropicana bottles at Sam's Club. Obviously the juice had to be drank beforehand. |
Total: $1,754
Other installments
Part 1. How to map
Part 2. How to organize food
Part 4. How to outfit yourself with gear
9 comments:
Is that a dead dear in the photo?
Great stuff. Another cross country hiker suggested you put a drawing or stamp on the outside of each box. Many times she would tell the postal worker, 'it's the box with the Red Sox logo on it.' They'd find it everytime.
read about Boston and Cubby here:
http://www.trailjournals.com/entry.cfm?id=366132
Tim--That is in fact my dear, but a far from dead one.
Pat--The stamp sounds like a fantastic idea. I was dealing with such small post offices that they had no problem identifying the creepy box that had been sitting there for two weeks, but I can see how that would come in handy in more active post offices.
Fantastic information Ken.
Hey Ken, Did you mail containers of fuel(HEET)with your supplies? just wondering. Love following your adventures. Pre-ordered your book. looking forward to the next!
Wow, the planning that went in this expedition is extensive. Thanks for sharing the process!
How many books do you have sell to pay back your advance ? Do you think you be getting anymore money ?
I use a free Post Office account online from www.usps.gov to buy postage (with tracking thrown in for free). You save some money and can have all of the postage printed to tape to the boxes. My brother is a diplomat and I find that this is a great way to send stuff.
I always, always, always put my jars inside either a quart-sized (pints) or gallon (quarts) Ziplock bag. Again, I’ve never had a jar break or lose a seal, but it’s better to be safe than sorry. If a seal should break, the bag will hopefully keep it contained and not damage the rest of the box’s contents. I also try to push as much air out the bag before closing.
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