Backcountry Forum
Backpacking & Hiking Gear

Backcountry Forum
Our long-time Sponsor - the leading source for ultralite/lightweight outdoor gear
 
 
 

Amazon.com
Backpacking Forums
---- Our Gear Store ----
The Lightweight Gear Store
 
 WINTER CAMPING 

Shelters
Bivy Bags
Sleeping Bags
Sleeping Pads
Snow Sports
Winter Kitchen

 SNOWSPORTS 

Snowshoes
Avalanche Gear
Skins
Hats, Gloves, & Gaiters
Accessories

 ULTRA-LIGHT 

Ultralight Backpacks
Ultralight Bivy Sacks
Ultralight Shelters
Ultralight Tarps
Ultralight Tents
Ultralight Raingear
Ultralight Stoves & Cookware
Ultralight Down Sleeping Bags
Ultralight Synthetic Sleep Bags
Ultralight Apparel


the Titanium Page
WM Extremelite Sleeping Bags

 CAMPING & HIKING 

Backpacks
Tents
Sleeping Bags
Hydration
Kitchen
Accessories

 CLIMBING 

Ropes & Cordage
Protection & Hardware
Carabiners & Quickdraws
Climbing Packs & Bags
Big Wall
Rescue & Industrial

 MEN'S APPAREL 

Jackets
Shirts
Baselayer
Headwear
Gloves
Accessories

 WOMEN'S APPAREL 

Jackets
Shirts
Baselayer
Headwear
Gloves
Accessories

 FOOTWEAR 

Men's Footwear
Women's Footwear

 CLEARANCE 

Backpacks
Mens Apparel
Womens Apparel
Climbing
Footwear
Accessories

 BRANDS 

Black Diamond
Granite Gear
La Sportiva
Osprey
Smartwool

 WAYS TO SHOP 

Sale
Clearance
Top Brands
All Brands

 Backpacking Equipment 

Shelters
BackPacks
Sleeping Bags
Water Treatment
Kitchen
Hydration
Climbing


 Backcountry Gear Clearance

Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#137072 - 08/02/10 12:00 AM Mailing Gear
moonshiner Offline
newbie

Registered: 08/01/10
Posts: 5
Loc: Uvalde, TX
I am planning a trip to Banff and was hoping to mail some of my gear to myself and pick it up there. Has anyone had any experience with this, and if so, how is it done? I have to local post office address. Is this something a post office in such a popular destination is familiar with? I appreciate any suggestions.

Top
#137085 - 08/02/10 01:09 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: moonshiner]
OregonMouse Offline
member

Registered: 02/03/06
Posts: 6800
Loc: Gateway to Columbia Gorge
Your main problem, I suspect, will be Canadian customs, which will also cause quite a bit of delay. Hopefully Phat can answer your questions. Is there a reason you can't take the gear with you?


Edited by OregonMouse (08/02/10 01:09 PM)
_________________________
May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view--E. Abbey

Top
#137088 - 08/02/10 01:33 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: OregonMouse]
moonshiner Offline
newbie

Registered: 08/01/10
Posts: 5
Loc: Uvalde, TX
I was primarily thinking of my stove and empty fuel bottles. I know I can't check them on my flight, but thought if everything was drained and dry I could mail it. Do you know if this is a problem? I have a WhisperLite so I was planning on buying fuel once I arrived. Thanks for your input.

Top
#137094 - 08/02/10 04:17 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: moonshiner]
ringtail Offline
member

Registered: 08/22/02
Posts: 2296
Loc: Colorado Rockies
An alcohol stove in checked bags is not a problem.

I suspect a compressed gas stove also is not a problem - just the canisters can not be shipped.

Since you need the fuel anyhow can you rent a stove in Banff?

_________________________
"In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not."
Yogi Berra

Top
#137106 - 08/02/10 06:03 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: ringtail]
OregonMouse Offline
member

Registered: 02/03/06
Posts: 6800
Loc: Gateway to Columbia Gorge
Switching to an isobutane canister stove (MSR Pocket Rocket, 3 oz., $40) or an alcohol stove (antigravitygear.com, 0.4 oz., $12, or make your own, free) will save you almost a pound of pack weight, a lot of time, a lot of pumping, international postage charges, delays and hassles from Canadian customs. (I am assuming you are from the US, although you didn't fill in your profile.) Fuel for either should be readily available up there.


Edited by OregonMouse (08/02/10 06:03 PM)
_________________________
May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view--E. Abbey

Top
#137112 - 08/02/10 07:37 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: OregonMouse]
moonshiner Offline
newbie

Registered: 08/01/10
Posts: 5
Loc: Uvalde, TX
I have considered using a canister stove and this thread has nudged me further in that direction. This may perhaps be the easiest route. My only hesitation lies in the fact that I have been using my current stove for over 10 years and am very familiar with it. As all of you probably agree, I think this is important in backcountry travel. I'm sure stoves such as the Pocket Rocket are quite reliable (and I know lighter), but it makes me a bit nervous taking equipment that I have never used before on an 8 day trip.

OregonMouse, I am indeed flying from The States and have updated my profile. Thanks for your comments. As you can see, I'm new to the forum.

Top
#137135 - 08/03/10 02:28 AM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: moonshiner]
OregonMouse Offline
member

Registered: 02/03/06
Posts: 6800
Loc: Gateway to Columbia Gorge
Thanks for updating your profile! It really helps us to help you if we know something about you. As you may have noticed, there are a number of Texas folk on here!

If Phat (one of the moderators) doesn't come on here, I suggest you PM him. He's from Edmonton and can help you with all things related to the Canadian Rockies. The main reason I know about mail and Canadian customs is that I sold him a tent two years ago. As I recall, it took almost 3 weeks to get to him! See the thread, "The Gear You Once Sold" in the Lightweight Gear section. I had the privilege of meeting Phat, Bigfoot, son_of_Bigfoot, Food, Jimshaw and Bennie (dog_of_Bigfoot) last fall when we had a "TLB Forum" hike in the Columbia River Gorge.


Edited by OregonMouse (08/03/10 02:36 AM)
_________________________
May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view--E. Abbey

Top
#137173 - 08/03/10 07:18 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: OregonMouse]
moonshiner Offline
newbie

Registered: 08/01/10
Posts: 5
Loc: Uvalde, TX
I know I'm the one who asked the question, but I came across this web page and thought it might be helpful for anyone else who searches for this topic.

Transportation Security Administration: Camping

The TSA rules allow stoves and fuel bottles in both cary-on and checked luggage as long as there are no vapors or residues present. I feel I can clean and dry my empty bottles well enough but not so sure about removing all residue from inside the stove itself. I'd hate to have it confiscated on my way up there.

Top
#137183 - 08/03/10 10:08 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: moonshiner]
phat Offline
Moderator

Registered: 06/24/07
Posts: 4107
Loc: Alberta, Canada

You can probably bring your empty, cleaned fuel bottles on the flight no problem, wash with dish soap and dry thoroughly, and you shouldn't get hassled.

I expect you will be flying into Calgary, you can buy white gas in Calgary, or in Banff itself, and fill your bottles.

Mailing the stove to yourself could definately end up with you getting delayed at customs - and them charging you GST (Government Sanctioned Theft - national sales tax) when you ship it up and all sorts of other nonsense - the kind of thing that delays you getting it for a week. probably not what you want.

If I were you I would be doing one of two things

1) cleaning your fuel bottles appropriately, and buying fuel in banff/calgary when you arrive
2) buying yourself a snow peak gigapower or pocket rocket stove and then getting isopro canisters in calgary or banff.


Personally I use all three types of stoves in the rockies, depending on what I am doing.

1) For shorter trips in above freezing weather, with not incredibly exposed campsites, (most of my trips) I use alcohol - a homemade "penny stove".

2) For longer trips in warm weather, or really exposed campsites (planning on tenting it on top of a mountain, in a pass, foot of glacier, etc.) I take a canister stove (snow peak gigapower) with a windscreen.

3) For any trips where I expect significant time below freezing, and/or melting snow for water, I take a white gas stove.

All of them will work ok - yes white gas is significantly heavier.
_________________________
Any fool can be uncomfortable...
My 3 season gear list
Winter list.
Browse my pictures


Top
#137231 - 08/04/10 07:42 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: phat]
moonshiner Offline
newbie

Registered: 08/01/10
Posts: 5
Loc: Uvalde, TX
Thanks for your input.
Heading to the Sawback Range.

Top
#137528 - 08/11/10 01:32 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: moonshiner]
Cstolworthy Offline
member

Registered: 12/30/07
Posts: 74
Loc: American Fork, Utah
Originally Posted By moonshiner
I know I'm the one who asked the question, but I came across this web page and thought it might be helpful for anyone else who searches for this topic.

Transportation Security Administration: Camping

The TSA rules allow stoves and fuel bottles in both cary-on and checked luggage as long as there are no vapors or residues present. I feel I can clean and dry my empty bottles well enough but not so sure about removing all residue from inside the stove itself. I'd hate to have it confiscated on my way up there.


I am not sure how this would work with a stove, but to get gasoline fumes out of clothing you just wash with another oil base. Baby oil works fairly well, olive oil, sometimes canola oil, etc. Get very hot water and soap, let it soak, rinse, and then place into a warm bath of water + another oil. Pull out and rinse again in extremely hot water. I am 99% certain this would remove any oil fumes from your stove. However I am not sure how it would affect the stove overall, someone else will have to chime in on that.
_________________________
A tent is a bad place for an argument, because when you are angry you walk out and slam the flap. How are you supposed to express your anger in this situation? Zip it up really quick? ~Mitch Hedberg

Top
#137685 - 08/15/10 08:00 PM Re: Mailing Gear [Re: OregonMouse]
GDeadphans Offline
member

Registered: 12/26/08
Posts: 382
Loc: Maine/New Jersey
Originally Posted By OregonMouse
I had the privilege of meeting Phat, Bigfoot, son_of_Bigfoot, Food, Jimshaw and Bennie (dog_of_Bigfoot) last fall when we had a "TLB Forum" hike in the Columbia River Gorge.


Thats awesome, what a great idea that was!
_________________________
"To me, hammocking is relaxing, laying, swaying. A steady slow morphine drip without the risk of renal failure." - Dale Gribbel

Top

Shout Box

Highest Quality Lightweight Down Sleeping Bags
 
Western Mountaineering Sleeping Bags
 
Lite Gear Talk - Featured Topics
Backcountry Discussion - Featured Topics
Yosemite Winter Rangers
by balzaccom
12/21/23 09:35 AM
Make Your Own Gear - Featured Topics
Featured Photos
Spiderco Chaparral Pocketknife
David & Goliath
Also Testing
Trip Report with Photos
Seven Devils, Idaho
Oat Hill Mine Trail 2012
Dark Canyon - Utah
Who's Online
1 registered (), 202 Guests and 0 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Newest Members
StarryOwl, Noodles, McCrary, DanyBacky, Rashy Willia
13241 Registered Users
Forum Links
Disclaimer
Policies
Site Links
Backpacking.net
Lightweight Gear Store
Backpacking Book Store
Lightweight Zone
Hiking Essentials

Our long-time Sponsor, BackcountryGear.com - The leading source for ultralite/lightweight outdoor gear:

Backcountry Forum
 

Affiliate Disclaimer: This forum is an affiliate of BackcountryGear.com, Amazon.com, R.E.I. and others. The product links herein are linked to their sites. If you follow these links to make a purchase, we may get a small commission. This is our only source of support for these forums. Thanks.!
 
 

Since 1996 - the Original Backcountry Forum
Copyright © The Lightweight Backpacker & BackcountryForum