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Thread: Backpacking with little kids. Please help.

  1. #1

    Backpacking with little kids. Please help.

    I have a 2.5 year old and a six month old. I really want to do some backpacking with the family this summer but am not quite sure how to do it with both kids and carry the gear. My wife will be there to help but it is still a challenge. Any suggestions on how to make this work? I don;t want to only be a car camper for the next 10 years.

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  3. #2
    You have a few options.
    1. Leave the wife and kids.

    2. Do very short trips. Hopefully you have good gear that is light and packs up small. I've gone backpacking with 1 kid. We'll see about how 2 works. A friend has a jogging stroller that he piles high with stuff.

  4. #3
    diapers = car camping.

    Signed,

    Father of 4
    Life is Good

  5. #4
    With two kids that age, personally, I would probably just stick to car camping for a few years until the 2.5 year old can hike on his/her own. We only have one kid and even then we haven't done a lot of backpacking because it's a lot of work (so only did it when it was really worth it - like on vacation in the Wind River Range).

    Maybe you can find a campsite that is only a mile or so hike in from the parking area and you can make several trips if you need to for all the gear. Where do you live?

    And don't despair - it won't be that long before you older child can cover some miles on his/her own - certainly less than ten years! It'll go very quickly!

  6. Likes blueeyes liked this post
  7. #5
    Just do it.

    A 2.5 year old and a six month old is hardly a viable excuse not to go. We did many, many backpacks when our kids were that age. Be patient and don't listen to the (lazy) naysayers.

    Start them early and start them now.

    A few albums (ages 0-3):

    http://www.summitpost.org/kessler-s-...-0-to-2/286264

    http://www.summitpost.org/kessler-s-...m-age-3/286259

    http://www.summitpost.org/shaylee-s-...g-album/254709

    The last time I carried my son up a mountain was when he was 20 month old. We had to do 7250 feet elevation gain on day 1 and I let him know that it was the last mountain he would ever be carried up. Ever since then he walked. Our daughter was only slightly older when she walked up all mountains as well.

    After much practice, my three year old could do a 22 mile backpack in two days:

    http://www.summitpost.org/a-great-tr...-record/171487

    Our three year old daugher hiked to the bottom of the Grand Canyon and back:

    http://www.summitpost.org/grand-cany...as-2007/371515

    We were also attempting some of the highest mountains in the lower 48:

    http://www.summitpost.org/kessler-s-...attempt/170276

    By age 4, our son was tackling some of Colorado's hardest 14,000 foot peaks and some of the toughest trails in the Grand Canyon:

    http://www.summitpost.org/three-gene...-windom/208495

    http://www.summitpost.org/a-grand-an...-canyon/253033

    By age 5, my son was climbing the Andes and our daughter was climbing difficult mountains.

    Now at ages 7 & 9 each of them walked ~2000 miles last year. My son can often outclimb me now. Most parents that didn't have good luck either didn't have the patience and were lazy or didn't start early enough.

    Some of what we have done: when the kids were very young:

    http://www.summitpost.org/2008-trip-log/375607

    http://www.summitpost.org/2009-trip-log/477971

    http://www.summitpost.org/2010-trip-log/590857

    http://www.summitpost.org/2011-trip-log/690759

    http://www.summitpost.org/2012-trip-log/770043

    Go when weather conditions don't require that much gear. If you are in shape, it is possible to carry the gear for your family while your wife carries the youngest child. 2.5 years old (for a healthy child at least) is plenty old enough to walk for 4-6 miles after practice.

    One thing that helped us is an almost total ban from driving within city limits (of course if you live in a huge city, this would be hard). We try to do all our shopping, trips to church, park, etc. on foot. It really helps.
    Utah is a very special and unique place. There is no where else like it on earth. Please take care of it and keep the remaining wild areas in pristine condition. The world will be a better place if you do.

  8. #6
    You may also look into building a single wheel trailer to haul your entire groups gear with and carry the six month old let the wife carry/ walk with the 2.5 year old, limit your mileage and you are golden :)
    Tacoma Said - If Scott he asks you to go on a hike, ask careful questions like "Is it going to be on a trail?" "What are the chances it will kill me?" etc. Maybe "Will there be sack-biting ants along the way?"

  9. #7
    I read a book about a couple that took their toddler on the Continental Divide. They had detailed instructions on how they washed diapers in a bucket too. They did use a llama. So there's an idea!

    I cannot find the name right now.

    Maybe wait until the 2.5 year old can walk the trails himself? Then you have a spare back for the gear/food.

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