Note: at night you still should try to keep your food away from your tent walls and zip the door closed at the bottom.
Friday, August 13, 2021
Your Food Vs. Alpine Animals
Picture this. You are on the second day of your trip up into
the mountains. It’s hot. You’re hungry. The bag of potato chips you have
stashed in your tent is sounding mouth-wateringly good right about now. You’re
just coming off the Deming Glacier, practically dragging your ice axe as you
stumble, mind in a haze, towards the alluring potato chips – your post summit
prize food. You unzip your tent, fingers trembling, and find to your horror a
pile of confetti in the corner next to a scraggily looking hole, sunshine
filtering through the tatters of your tent.
Do not, dear reader, become this sad climber.
Marmots, mice, and ravens are a real hazard when it comes to
food in the backcountry and I wager, have had years more experience thieving
than you have likely had in protecting your food from their greedy little
mouths. I myself woke up recently to not
one, but two mice in my tent having a nice little feast on my food bars, which I
had set aside for the summit the next day. One even had the audacity to run
over my face. This was not fun.
That being said, here are some things to do and some things not to do with
your food in the alpine.
-
Do not hang your food from rocks in an attempt
to mimic food protection from bears in lower country. This seems to be a common
recommendation on the Internet at the moment. However, I personally see a few
flaws in the system. Firstly, marmots can climb rocks and so a small boulder
simply wouldn’t do. This means you would need to hang your food over a cliff and
a) that sounds like a lot of effort/potentially sketchy and b) ravens, being
birds, can in fact fly and they will get it even if the rodents don’t. So, nix
the “marmot bag” option.
-
The best option I know of is to store your food
inside your tent. You might be wondering why I would suggest such a thing when
we have already learned about the confetti
threat but there are ways to store it properly and ways to store it
improperly. For starters don’t leave your food along the walls of your tent.
You would be significantly increasing the risk of an animal chewing its way
inside. What you can do though is put your food in your sleeping bag (which
reduces smells) and place the sleeping bag as centrally in the tent as
possible. So far, I have not had any issues while employing this technique and
it is one that seems popular among the crowds that frequent the mountain
slopes.
Note: at night you still should try to keep your food away from your tent walls and zip the door closed at the bottom.
Note: at night you still should try to keep your food away from your tent walls and zip the door closed at the bottom.
-
You can also dig a cash in the snow and burry
your food there if you are concerned with the possibility of animals chewing
into your tent. This is a perfectly reasonable option when there is snow at the
camp. However, if you employ this technique be sure that you dig down fairly
deep. A foot simply doesn’t cut it. Three feet would be a minimum depth for
proper storage, but even that might be too shallow. Four to six feet is best. Don’t forget to mark the location of your cash. Losing your
food would be just about as bad as it being eaten.
Good luck with the food ventures! Remember, don’t be the sad
climber with out his potato chips.
Yellow Bellied Marmot
Photo Credit: Alasdair Turner AAI Instructor and Guide
--Jess Lewis, Instructor and Guide
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1 comment:
Odorproof OPSak bags are worth considering if you're going to store food in a tent or sleeping bag, to help prevent those hard-to-wash items in turn from smelling like food.
A safer though burlier option is to buy some of those cheap plastic storage containers from a big box store, essentially a lighter/cheaper version of a BearVault. It wouldn't deter a bear, but put a rock or two on top and no small alpine animal is going to get in there. I used this method with success in Patagonia a couple years ago, employing two 6 qt tubs. If you buy multiples of the same size, they can stack together and will take up less pack volume.
But generally, for short trips into the Cascades I just stick to a rule of always carrying all of my food with me during the day. Overnight hasn't been a big deal on climbing trips because of limited time of exposure; I'm getting up at midnight or so.
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