Showing posts with label bivouac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bivouac. Show all posts

Monday, 10 July 2023

Bivouac Thoughts

With Larry Lake in the High Sierra on the Pacific Crest Trail

My last bivouac was seven years ago, Every camp since then - and there have been hundreds - I've slept in a tent or under a tarp.This isn't because I hate bivouacs. In fact I love them. Sleeping under the stars without a shelter is my favourite way to spend a night in the outdoors. That is, as long as it's dry and calm, there are no biting insects around, and it looks like staying that way. Otherwise I prefer the comfort and protection of a shelter. That means I rarely bivouac in the Scottish Highlands. In fact I can't remember the last time I did so.  I have great admiration for those like the amazing Hazel Strachan who bivi in the Highlands regularly and are adept at finding superb sheltered bivi sites. Maybe it's laziness but I just find it easier and simpler to use a shelter.

In the Superstition Mountains on the Arizona Trail

Over the years I've bivvied hundreds of time. On the Arizona Trail I did so all bar a few nights. Deserts are, I think, the perfect place for bivouacs along with dry mountain ranges with settled climates like the High Sierra in California.

I've been thinking about these bivouacs again due to a post by sidetrackedmag on Threads asking for people to  show their favourite bivi photos. Alex Roddie then posted some superb images - including one that showed why I don't bivi unless it's dry! I followed with some of mine and decided I'd put them on my blog with a few comments.

In the New Mexico desert on the Continental Divide Trail

Bivvying regularly night after night meant I developed a system for organising my gear so everything I needed was to hand while I was in my sleeping bag. I do that in a tent or tarp as well of course but stuff does tend to get scattered around sometimes as I know it can't stray far. Gear needs to be kept under more control when bivouacking!

In the Grand Canyon on the Arizona Trail

One advantage of a bivi is being able to use my pack as a backrest by propping it up with trekking poles. I love just sitting there watching the world fade into darkness and the stars come out. The bivi in the Grand Canyon pictured above is one of my very favourites. It was amazing to have the canyon to myself and to see it come to life as the sun rose.

San Lucas Canyon, Death Valley National Park

My last bivi was on the final night of a walk from Yosemite Valley to Death Valley. I'd descended from 11,050 foot (3368 metre) Telescope Peak to sleep on the edge of the vast flats of Death Valley, a superb spot and a tremendous place to wake for the last day of the walk. A perfect bivouac!

On the edge of Death Valley


Sunday, 21 August 2016

Thoughts on Bivouacking


In the Grand Canyon

My favourite way to spend a night in the wilds is under the stars – no tent, no tarp, and no bivi bag. I’ve been thinking about this following some recent discussions of bivouacking on social media in which the use of a bivi bag was assumed. I wonder why. In any circumstances where a bivouac will be pleasant a bivi bag shouldn’t be needed. And if bivvying won’t be pleasant I’m not going to do it unless there’s no other choice. If rain, snow, strong winds or biting insects are likely then I’ll use a shelter I can actually live in not a bag in which I can do nothing but sleep. That means I rarely bivi in Britain despite my love of it. I am planning on some forest bivis on calm nights this autumn once the midges are gone however. I’ll take a tarp as well though, just in case of rain.

In the Superstition Mountains on the Arizona Trail
 
Most of the bivouacking I’ve done has been in dry areas where rain was very unlikely. I first learnt how much I enjoyed this on the Pacific Crest Trail when I realised early on that I didn’t need my tent most nights. Only when the mosquitoes came out and in the rain and snow in the North Cascades did I use the tent often. I slept out many times on the Continental Divide Trail too and almost every night on the Arizona Trail and on a month-long walk in the High Sierra. 

In the High Sierra
 
On these trips I would lay down a groundsheet – over the years these have gone from silver Sportsman’s Blankets to much lighter weight silnylon ones – and then my mat and sleeping bag. My kitchen would be set up next to the groundsheet so I could cook and eat while in or on my sleeping bag. When using a pack with a frame I’d use my trekking poles to prop it up for use as a back rest. (This doesn’t work with frameless packs – at least not for me). With everything I might need to hand – notebook, reading matter, maps, headlamp, clothing – I could then spend a restful evening with the world I’d come to be part of all around me. I’d fall asleep staring up at the stars and the silhouettes of trees or mountains rather than a sheet of nylon.

Larry Lake at a bivouac in the Yosemite backcountry on the Pacific Crest Trail
 
The key to comfortable bivouacking like this is dryness. Cold doesn’t matter – I’ve had many pleasant bivouacs in sub- zero temperatures. Wind can be a problem but as long as it’s not too strong a tarp or groundsheet can be used as a windbreak.  This blocks off some of the view but still gives more freedom and contact with nature than a shelter with a roof.

Using my groundsheet as a windbreak at a chilly bivouac on the Arizona Trail

On none of these bivouacs did I need a bivi bag. Sometimes my sleeping bag has been dew or frost covered in the morning but this has always quickly dissipated in the sunshine. And on the few occasions when I have packed a slightly damp bag airing it during the day or at the next camp has dried it. 

When I’ve slept in bivi bags to try them out I’ve usually found a little dampness inside (sometimes more than a little). The only times I’ve chosen to use bivi bags have been in dripping bothies and tents (either from rain getting in or copious condensation – which can occur in badly ventilated concrete shelters as well as tents). A few times I’ve used a bivi bag for extra warmth when sleeping out in very cold temperatures in the winter in Norway and Sweden. Each time I’ve woken to a thick layer of frozen condensation inside the bivi bag. I’d have been better off with a warmer sleeping bag or clothing.

Just once I’ve slept in a bivi bag in heavy rain. This was the first night of a walk in the Pyrenees. Tired from the long train journey from the UK my companion and I had decided not to bother with our tents but just collapse into our sleeping bags on the ground. That night for the only time on the two-week trip it poured down. Woken by the first drops we quickly wriggled into our bivi bags, turning them over so the zipped opening were underneath to prevent leakage. We stayed dry but I was very relieved when dawn came with a clearing sky and I could escape from the restrictions of the bivi bag. I wouldn’t do that again by choice.

Almost a bivouac - a tarp pitched to ward off wind and light rain on the Arizona Trail

Rather than gear I expect to use I view a bivi bag as an emergency item, to be used if I get stuck out on a day walk or if my shelter fails in some way. Used like this a bivi bag lasts a very long time!