. . . or shall we say, ti vs. baa(make mtn. goat sound)
So is there a lightweight alternative to the titanium spork without going PLASTIC? There is:
Snowpeak titanium spork vs. To-Go Wear bamboo fork and spoon.
The ti spork comes in at .6 oz. The bamboo fork AND spoon combined come in at the same .6 oz. Advantage of two utensils over one? Those pointed prongs on the spork, when only eating a soup or stew, are annoying. You got soup, then just use the spoon.
Why bamboo?
Ecologically friendly, reuseable, natural. Virtually unbreakable (I tried.) And just a nice feel in your hand.
I got my bamboos as a set from To-Go Wear:
Neat little set in a holder made from recycled plastic bottles that has a lightweight carbiner attached. In the set are spoon, fork, knife and a pair of chopsticks (great for Ramen noodleheads.) Price is about $12, a little more than a titanium spork. But you can buy just the spoon/fork/knife for only $5 from To-Go Wear , and that's less than a ti spork.
The bamboo utentils are biodegradeable (but one might say a ti spork will NEVER end up in a landfill), and that beats the hell out of the plastic sporks.
I'm storing my knife,chopsticks & carbiner at home and taking the holder, fork & spoon. Weight is .8 oz vs. a ti's .6. But worth it.
The bamboo fork and spoon are 7" long, with the spoon 1 5/8" wide, the fork a little narrower. (About 5/8" longer than a snowpeak ti.) They're too thick for either to go in the slot on the lid of my ti pot . . . but hey, they fit great in the bamboo pot I just bought!
Yep, I have had a set of them for awhile. They are nice - but - I will admit I do prefer a Rehydrate spoon for bag eating. For pot or bowl eating the bamboo ones are great
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Freezer Bag Cooking, Trail Cooking, Recipes, Gear and Beyond: www.trailcooking.com
Registered: 02/05/03
Posts: 3293
Loc: Portland, OR
Don't knock bamboo pots. They work great. You just have to use the old Native American trick of heating up rocks, then putting the hot rocks into the pot to heat the water. It works like a charm in watertight woven baskets, too!
...putting the hot rocks into the pot to heat the water...
Yeah, but carrying around those hot rocks can be an ordeal.
Nobody does that anymore. Most of us have gone to carrying HLW (high level 'nuclear' waste) for heating our water. New, ultra-lite, lead lined bear bags and hot isotopes make carrying around heated rocks a thing of the past.
Most of us have gone to carrying HLW (high level 'nuclear' waste) for heating our water.
You've got to stop buying your hiking stuff from that online place peddling the old Soviet army surplus gear manufactured in Pripyat, Ukraine in the late 1980s.
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