As a guide an hunter, I've spent thousands of days in the field. This show is about translating my hard won experiences into tips and tactics they'll get you closer to your ultimate goal success in the field. I'm Remy Warren. This is cutting the Distance. Welcome to pack Week on the podcast. Everyone. Really, one of the integral pieces of gear to any Western or mountain hunt is a pack. It's with you nearly every step of the way, whether
you're carrying gear in or packing out your meat. It's the one kind of piece of gear that tries to make something inherently uncomfortable just more comfortable. Throughout the year, I probably have a pack on more days than not. I actually just feel strange if I'm walking around in the woods without a pack on, and having spent so much time in various packs, I feel like there's a lot to learn and know when it comes to not
only picking a pack, but utilizing a pack. This week, I want to break down packs, the different types and how to properly use them. I'll discuss everything from sizing and features to the optimal ways to load whatever style of pack you choose think of. This is a deep dive on all things pack related, from the pack into the pack out. But first I want to share a story of an elk hunt and a pack out and
a case of FPS. This hunt takes place in western Montana and it was actually one that was filmed for the Meat Eater TV show quite a few years ago. I think most of people to listen to the podcasts are pretty familiar with that show, especially because this podcast is in the Meat Eater network. So maybe you've seen the episode, maybe you haven't, You could always go watch it. But I think the more fun story isn't necessarily the hunt story, but kind of the behind in the scenes
part that people really don't get to see. On this particular hunt, Steve and I both had elk tags. I've been guiding the whole season, packed out many bowls, seen many bowls get shot, and now is pretty much the last week of the season. We had some I was we're kind of actually hoping for It was one of those years where you really want really bad weather, and it was. It started to get bad but then kind of cleared up, so we're kind of hoping for more migration.
I wanted to hunt some areas that I'd hunted in the past where we got into some good bulls, and so the first day was kind of leading into that bad weather. But um, we ended up going into the spot that I like to hunt, and sure enough we spotted a couple of a group of bowls off in the distance. They're like, all right, let's make a move. We get down in there. We're watching, you know, we watched them disappear behind this ridge, and I know, okay, I've actually shot and I'll like in this dang near
same spot a year earlier, like almost. I mean, I would say within two were three hundred yards of where these elk were. So it's like, all right, cool. I was. I was looking for a particular bowl, but he wasn't there that day, and I wasn't gonna be picky. For those of you that know, it's like when it comes to the last week of the season, I just want to fill my freezer with some elk. So if it's got five or six points on its head and or less,
as the week goes on, my as uh. I'll my friend Mike likes to say, increase your success by lowering your standards. As the season progresses. I start with really wide expectations and as it gets down to that last day, it just starts to narrow into whatever is available. But I kind of like to say, okay, I like at least six points on one side. It's kind of like a personal goal of mine. But really, as it gets down to that last week, pretty much anything legal uh
tries to get a ride out in the backpack. So we see these bowls. Steve and I go down in there. Um there's like two ridges in between, and they disappeared behind one. We're hoping that they pop out within range, so we get set up. No elk, no elk, no elk. Like, okay, are they coming out? So I actually walked back to where I could see above to see if they're still there. Go back, look, Okay, they're still there. And then they disappeared. So now I hustle back to where they're all set up.
I'm like, okay, they're still here. They should pop over. We're set up the elk pop out. We're gonna try to get a double. But Steve's like, oh, you shoot first, So I line up shoot my bowl. It goes down the other bull. Steve just wasn't in a really good position.
You maybe had a shot, but then had to move up for a rest and spooked the other elk, especially with the gun shot and everything going on, got a little chaotic and he wasn't able to get a shot on that bol So it's like, well, whatever, we got one bull down, bird in hand, go down to the elk and it's a pretty steep hillside. He took a pretty good tumble and actually, I'm looking at the bull right here, I've yet to put his antlers back together. Like fell I've never seen this happen, and broke one
antler off at the pedicle, like right up against the base. Luckily, you know, the antler was just laying there and uh I probably threw the breaking process that slowed him down enough. He must have been on a pretty good tumble to not go all the way to the bottom, which he was about halfway to the bottom at this point. It's like, sweet, we get some parachord, tie him up to a tree, start processing him. I figured, oh, yeah, I'll be able to put these antlers back together when I get home.
No big deal, just skull cap it. And it's been a project, one of those projects that I still haven't got too yet. But looking at it right now, thinking yeah, should probably get to that this year. Um. Anyways, so we pack it up and on this trip I was actually, uh, they had a new pack and they're like, hey, you want to try this pack as a pack that I wanted to try something sweet. Yeah, I love to try
a new pack. I've like, I've pretty much tried every pack ever, whether it's on some kind of hunt or even if it's not one that I had, I like to just like i'd be guiding, like, hey, let me trare your pack this week, just just to see, you know, know what's out there, know what I like? So I got this new pack, I'm just not real familiar with it. I've been using other packs that I'm really familiar with.
Packed out plenty of elk. Actually, the year before from this very spot, I packed out an entire bull same size as this bull by myself in one trip. Well I got it one trip from the semi downhill or slightly uphill parts. I ended up only being able to fit. What I did was front shoulders, all the loose meat head mantlers, all that in the pack, and then I actually drug each quarter or hair on um with the
hairside down. So I just drug it with paracord, one in each arm because there was snow, so I could like drag it up hill. It was a beast of a pack out, but I just did not it was like storm moving in. Did not feel like hiking all the way back to this spot from my camp, so I just thought I just pack it all out in one trip. So the year before I pretty much carried
a knolk out of there. I had carried a knolk out of there myself, so I thought, HS be easy, Like we've got a bunch of guys splitting up the weight perfect. So I load up the pack. Everybody's starting to hike up the hill and I am just like dragging. It's like kicking my butt, and I'm like, this is terrible. Everything's just like slopping around. I had a serious case
of what I call fps floppy pack syndrome. I'm watching everybody else just like hike up and I'm like, this is less weight than I normally take, and I am it is just I feel like I'm falling over what I was falling over everything slopping around. But it's like one of those things where you load up your pack and you go, yeah, I just don't want to take any time to figure this thing out, Like they kind of showed me how to work, like you do this,
you do this, Okay, cool. When I've got it and the antlers are like on the back, everything's the weight is like as far back as possible. Every time I walk, it's just constantly shifting whatever weights in there. I'm like, this is the worst. So I get about halfway up to the top and I just decided, like I can't do this. I sit down, like I'm gonna take fifteen minutes here and figure this dang thing out. So I adjust the pack, put it back on, start walking, night
and day difference, Like I can't even describe that. I was like, this is this should not be this hard. I've walked out of here and I'm thinking, you know when you put stuff in your pack, and you know, I just haven't really. I've always had my packs like figured because I've pretty familiar with them. And then you put on a pack, and it dawned on me how much just adjusting that pack made a difference. And then
I just like trotted up the hill. No problem, didn't feel like it was like I had taken a hundred pounds out of my pack. And just left it on the hill. But everything was still there, everything was in the pack. It was just adjusted right and felt completely different. And later on that Stone Glacier pack became one of my favorite packs. I was cursing at the first twenty minutes with it, and then once I realized, okay, how to use it, got rid of the flop, packed it right,
use it how it was supposed to be used. It actually became the pack that I still use to this day. I really think the moral to the pack story is even the best packs used wrong feel wrong. Like packs can be uncomfortable and make it feel like there's so much weight and this is the worst thing ever. But they don't have to be. It can be just a matter of how you use the pack, use it correctly, and the way that you pack things in the bag.
That floppy pack syndromes real and I see it happen so many times, like especially as a guide or even just like hiking around, running into hunters in the field and you just look at the way their packs are set up and you think, man, that's going to be a struggle for this guy. Like I ran into a guy on a trail once probably had a quarter in his pack. You know what, I wouldn't consider a lot of weight, and just he's just dying and I look,
it's like his pack is not adjusted for him. His waiste belt is essentially with that weight slid down and like he didn't even notice that it was wrapped around too low, and his legs and hip flexors are just working against this waste belt that's pressing against his legs, like almost holding his legs together. It was like, hey, let me help you out. Let me just adjust some things here at justice pack. He puts it on, like light bulb clicked on. Oh my gosh, this is so easy.
So a lot of pack problems, a lot of the strain, a lot of the stuff that just sucks about packs um is user error and can be easily fixed. But before we go into some of that, let's start real wide and let's just talk about packs in general and the three major types of packs. So, the first type of pack is going to be your external frame. That's your like standard metal backpacking frame that you see. It's probably the oldest version of just a heavy freighter pack.
Some examples Barneys of Alaska makes a great one of those. The Outdoorsman makes one that's um polycarbonate kind of frame, but I would still consider that external frame um kelty. You know, back in the day, they've had a freighter pack, Cabell has had like their old school outfitter pack. These packs have been used in around forever. They're really good. I would say, they're really strong, carrying a lot of weight.
Their downside would be super bulky, already heavy, but I mean they're just meant to carry lots of heavy stuff. Um and they still and they still do work. I would say The next type is probably what I would consider the now gold standard, the internal frame. The internal frame is similar to the external frame, but instead of that external where the bag is on the I guess say like where the bag is on the inside of
the frame. The bag attaches to the frame on the external frame obviously based on the name internal, so it still has stays of a frame, but the frames inside the structure of the pack bag. These are I mean, this is like your Stone Glacier. There's um Exo Mystery Ranch Toofaru. All those are pretty much internal frame type packs.
I have pretty much switched exclusively to the Stone Glacier bags after literally that trip that I told you about was the start of my I switched from external type frames to internal frame and that trip that I talked about in the story was that kind of catalyst that got me to switch because I realized, Wow, these are a lot lighter to start off. So and I'm going in it's a lot lighter, it's a little bit more streamline,
I can, I can sent you down more, it's more quiet. Uh, there's a lot of benefits to that internal frame pack. And so I've switched from previously doing a lot of external frame packs and a mixture of other internal frames to going fully on the internal frame bus. And I think that that's the way a lot of pack starre Now. The benefits of it are they start out lighter, you can still carry a lot of weight, and they're a little more streamlined for moving through timber stocking or just
using when there's nothing in it. Now. The third type of pack would be the no frame pack. This is your standard jan Sport just floppy bag. I mean you see these every once in a while, Companies come out with them and you're like, oh, this looks great or it's comfortable or whatever. I mean, these just their garbage. That's the way I see it, like if it's got
no kind of frame, it's probably no good. Now, one thing I should mention with the internal frame and external frame, they all pretty much have waist belts as well, so r hip belts, uh, that kind of help distribute the weight to your legs. And then I guess there's a bonus type of pack, which would be the Fannie pack, or as the Aussie friends call it, a bum bag. I would say, if it was between a no frame backpack or a Fannie packcent go with the Fannie pack,
go with the bum bag. It's like actually pretty good for day hunt type stuff because it just puts all the weight immediately on your hips and on your waist. Your legs are carrying it, not necessarily your shoulders, whereas the no frame bag is just straight on your shoulders. You're putting like a lot of pressure and weight on a very um I would say, not so strong portion of your body when you could just carry everything with
your legs. And the way you use that bum bag for the most time, like I've used that type of pack system and when it comes to packing out, then you just make a backpack out of whatever you shoot tie the legs together, sling it over your shoulder. Carry the Holy Animal out works really great on like day trips and flat country. Um yeah, it's not not so bad, but also gives you an extra place to store stuff. So I'd be the bonus bag. But I won't talk
too much about those. So now that we kind of understand the types of bags, you know, you can decide and I'm going to go into like a little bit of detail on the way to pack, both the internal and external frame. But before we like talk about packing it, one of the questions I could ask so much is like what pack size. Honestly, my my theory has always been the bigger the better, but I like something that collapses to be smaller you and you also have to
be realistic with yourself. What type of person are you? How much weight are you going to be carrying? If your guy that's like, hey, I'm not going to carry that much weight even on the pack out, I'd rather take four trips than one heavy trip. If that's you, then go with the smaller pack bag. It's gonna be lighter starting off. But I would say at a minimum, I like a thirty cubic type pack. And then for me Like, if somebody's like, what size pack bag do
you want? I would say, Um, it's pretty solid if it's light enough. As the pack bag gets bigger, it obviously gets heavier, it gets more bulky. A couple of my favorites. The Stone Glacier Sky Talas is pretty good, like for backcountry overnight trips. But even when I'm just day hunting, I'll just sench that thing down a little bit smaller, make it not so big, and it's not heavy enough to really be that big of a deal. Now, when I'm doing a lot of guiding, I know, okay, well,
if we get something, we're gonna come back with some people. Um, we might just make one trip out from there. A thirty two d's fine. You can fit an elk quarter in there. You can fit you know, all your gear. It's a lot lighter bag, maybe a little more streamlined, especially if you're gonna be like doing some sneak and bow hunting and you've got your pack on the whole time. It does make a difference to have a smaller pack
when you're stalking and moving around. So you want to kind of think about, Okay, what kind of hunting do I do? Am I doing a lot of long stay overnight stuff. How much room am I gonna need? That thirty is on the small side, but you can definitely put all your stuff in it, especially if the bag like extends from the frame where you can maybe slide some stuff in that freighter shelf like on the pack in food and other stuff. Stuff that's also going to
shrink as you go on. So like your food. If I've got the thirty, want to go kind of lightweight streamline as long as I can. There's places where I can put more bulky gear that's not super heavy, and I'll have enough room for it. But you know, if you're gonna like say, hey, I want one pack that does everything go bigger, go you know, a little bit bigger, It's like if you're if I was to build another garage, I don't think you could ever build a garage big enough.
And I think that packs are kind of similar in my mind that way. I was like, I like to have that extra room. There's people that are the opposite. They just want to be super efficient and don't need extra room. But for me, it's like, just rather have the extra room in case I need it. So that's that's the thought on the pack sizes. Now, when you're talking about pack, one thing you have to think about
is weight. So you want to think about not only the weight of the pack and the weight of the things that you're carrying, but also how much you're gonna pack out. That's another question I guess, like how much do you carry when you're packing out or when you're hiking around, Like I've weighed my pack even I don't know what it is like if I'm packing into the back country for a week or whatever, my packs snaring me like forty five pounds. If I'm day hunting, I
swear my packs like thirty pounds. And it's only because when I'm like going on a single day trip, I'm actually carrying different stuff, but heavier stuff. So I've got a bigger spotting scope. I've maybe got the heavier tripod, i maybe have an extra pair out like higher power optics, or I've got um more water and I'm not necessarily carrying a water filter, or I've got just random things that are like more creature comfort stuff but help an
aid in the hunt for like finding things. But it seems like, you know, most day packs are around that twenty pound mark. I don't know. It just depends what you've got, you know, the type of year, time of season. Sometimes my daypack is just barely anything in it. Water, lunch, maybe small very small first aid kit and you know, maybe a jacket or extra gloves and something to a knife and whatever, you know, like very minimal um. So
it just depends. I I kind of vary on the gear that I take, depending on the type of hunt, how long I'm going to be, how far I'm going, what time of year it is. Now. When it comes to packing out, I mean I would say your average packout weights. It just depends what you're hunting. Let's say we're hunting elk um on the light side, you know, you've got to be prepared to carry probably seventy five pounds.
I tend to pack more than I should. I mean, a hundred pounds is not I don't find that a lot, but I think that that's kind of like a gold standard if you want to pack that could at least handle a hundred pounds. Um. It depends how big you are and how many dead brain cells you have. If you're like me, I pretty sure there's like a part of my brain where the cells just died and keep me doing stupid stuff. Like when I was eighteen, I was just like, yeah, I'll carry that whole elk in
my pack, and it's great. As I weighed like a hundred and sixty pounds and I'd carry a hundred and seventy pounds and I just didn't even think about it because it's like, I gotta do this myself. I don't want to carry come back here, this would suck. I'll just do it in one trip. Uh. And then every year I tell myself, this is just me to talking about me. But every year I telling myself, I'm like, yeah, I'm not gonna do that. I'm just gonna be super sensible.
I'm gonna carry it just a quarter. And then I get there and I'm like, okay, I take a hind quarter in a front shoulder because that's just half of the trips, okay, or one less trip. But every year I keep trying to talk myself into carrying less and I end up not doing that. So I like to just know that I've got a pack that can handle heavy weight, but also you know, to handle that more weight,
you need more volume. One thing I would say is you know, if you don't want to put yourself in that position, which I started to do recently, is like, hey, I'll just take a smaller pack. Then I can't fit all that stuff in there. So my pack ends up being that seventy eight pound range um, you know, and and a good size bull elk. The quarters are about
hind quarters about seventy pounds or like average size. I've weighed, you know, quite a few when I've got back, just to know, and then I feel like two front shoulders kind of also hit that. They're about five to thirty pounds each um, you know. So if you can the back straps I think come out to like I can't remember, but probably like thirty pounds, So you kind of split
up the weight that way. Sometimes I'll take that front shoulder and a hind quarters, so that's about that hundred pound range, and then if you throw in a backstrap, you kind of start to hit that hundred and ten
hundred twenty pound with your gear kind of thing. I think most people kind of overestimate the weight of their pack, or a lot of people, so there's a lot of times where you're carrying pounds you're like, God, this is a hundred and fifty pounds, and then you put on a scale you're like that, Nope, not but I'll have to I've got a picture of just like the last super heavy pack. It's like sometimes you'll just overload it
and then be hand carrying stuff and stuff strapped all over. Um. But if you're realistic about the amount of weight that you want to carry, I would say, like, if you don't do this all the time, you don't have dead brain cells. You don't need to kill yourself off doing it. Pounds is pretty like standard, fairly easy, getting get out, move quick, not really hurt and destroy your body. So just something to think about. But the type of weights that you might be carrying or the type of packs.
You know, you want something that's super durable that can hold that kind of weight for a prolonged period of time. So so I think another thing to think about. It's just like pack features. I really you gotta know what kind of person you are. There's a lot of personal preference. Are you a pocket person or are you just kind of like you'd rather have it light and not necessarily
so much going on. I personally like fewer pockets. I like to organize my pack internally, so I do use like little I guess it's like parachute material bags, and I just separate things that way. So I've got one that's all processing stuff. It's got game bags, knife, knife, sharpener, and then maybe a multi tool in my pocket of my pants. Also, I like to pockets, so I like a lid or something where I can put things that
I need to get too quick. Then I like the main bag where I could put meat, all my gear, whatever, jacket, extra things. And then the only other pockets I would maybe like would be like something to hold a spotting scope and somewhere to strap a tripod and a water bottle to the outside, like ease of use, but not necessarily like a bunch of pockets inside. Now there's other Like my dad loves pockets. He loves to like open his pack and see seven hundred pockets in there, and
every pocket adds weight. But that's just like what he likes. I'm kind of trying to transition him into be a less pocket guy, but I don't even He just likes to lose stuff in his pack. But that's the kind of guy he is. Now I'm not I'm not trying to knock anybody that likes pockets, because hey, you know, it's like the straight verse angled spotting scope type thing. Everybody's got their own personal preference and different strokes for
different blokes, So whatever you like. But I like to kind of keep the pack a little bit lighter, fewer pockets, just enough, like where there's organization and I can get too certain things quick, but not so many that it gets distracting and I can't find things. Now, if we're talking about features of pack, this would be the only must have feature that I think, like, if your pack doesn't have this, it should. This is probably the most important.
And I've owned packs that don't have this feature and immediately got rid of them once I realized they didn't fit. The probably key feature is a torso adjustment. The key to a comfortable pack, the key to carrying a lot of weight, the key to day and day out it working for you is the freaking thing ask that fits you. It's like, imagine going on a hunt and you're a size small even though most people are not, but and you're gonna wear a triple XL size pants and jacket.
It's gonna be very, very uncomfortable. But people get packed and they just think like one size fits all, and it's probably the thing that needs to be most custom You'd be better off being a size small wearing triple X pants and having a pack that fits then the other way around. Um So, what I mean by a
torso adjustment, that's not actually the waist belt. We're just talking about being able to move the distance from where your waist belt is to where your shoulder straps are, so it's on the back like on the body of the pack itself, and those two things should be able to move together or move away and be set in a certain place. So we're talking about your torso height, like from your the top of your hips, your tailbone
up to your shoulders. Everybody's torso's a little bit different, and some people like me, I've got really really long legs and a fairly short torso for my like compared to everything else. I've got friends that are normal leg height, long torso or everything's the same, very standard normal leg length,
normal torso length. But that pack needs to fit that torso because the integrity of a pack, the reason that a framed pack works is what it's doing is it's actually putting that weight not on your shoulders but into your hips, so your legs carry the weight. I mean, your legs are designing to carry a lot more weight an you think. I mean, think about power lifters in
a gym. You can only curl so much, you can only pull down so much with your arms, but I mean you can lift multiple times your body weight with your legs. Is because they're just so strong. They're designed for that. They're moving all the time. It's a it's a muscle that even if you're fairly sedentary, as long as you walk around, you're using it, you're flexing it, you're getting it stronger um and on a hunt, you're especially It's it's your mode of transportation. So you want
that weight to be in your legs. You want to carry it with your legs. And that's the key to getting your pack set up is being able to distribute that weight. You want of that pack weight in your legs, strongest part of your body. So we're gonna talk about now how to fit the pack to you. And every time you put a pack on, new pack whatever, you're gonna first make those torso adjustments. So the top of
the shoulder strap and where that um waiste belt. That waite belt should run through the center of your hip bones. So if you kind of go from your belly buttons straight out to your that's your hip bone. You feel it like in there, you go, Okay, the pack should be the center of that band should be on the center of that hip bone. Um. And then I like that, you know, the waist belt clip to be kind of just below my belly button, but I want that weight
to be kind of centered over my hips. So when you kind of fit a pack, when you put it on, you're gonna work from the bottom up, so the waist belt up. So the first thing you're gonna do is you're gonna get that waist the torso right that once you set, that should be good forever, you know, unless I don't know, it just doesn't really change that much.
So you know, you'll put your waist belt on, you'll sench that waist belt down, and that you want that fairly tight because that's where all the weight it's gonna be. I mean, you can almost when you put your pack on, those straps like you get in there, you sench that waist belt. You want to wear those pack, Like the shoulder straps aren't necessarily even really on your shoulders at this point, Like, yeah, okay, there's all the weight my um hips. Now I'm gonna just kind of distribute it
take into my shoulders. So now we're going to move up, so your your shoulder straps should be kind of fairly loose, and put the shoulder straps on and now cinch those down. You want them snug where it's like taking a little bit of the weight, but also you're still feeling that weight into the waist belt into your hips. And then the next adjustment is going to be the load lifter, So that's above the shoulder shraps. It's kind of like that top one above the shoulder strap that goes to
the pack. And what that does is that pulls the pack forward, so it's pulling it snugging it closer to your body. Depending on the type of pack you have, and we'll get a little more in depth here in a second, but external frame pack you can actually leave the load lifters a little further back on the internal I like to kind of bring those load lifters a little bit tighter. What I found is like once that
tops towards you. On an internal frame pack, it kind of sucks the pack towards your body, which is the best weight distribution for an internal frame, whereas on an external frame, it kind of if that weight falls back slightly, it actually pushes more weight into the hips and uh kind of tends to be a little less floppy, a little bit more weight distribution. But what you're doing with that load lift is just kind of killing that flop.
You don't want things moving around. If your pack sliding around, it's just working way too many muscles, wigh too fast and actually going to burn you out a lot quicker. So now let's get into loading your pack. So an external frame is really good for just like if you just want to haul a lot of weight. Um, it's really good because what it does is it takes that frame and it actually just drives that weight from that
pack right into your hips. But to work properly, an external frame is better loaded slightly top heavy, so not all the way up high where it's all the weights above your head. But it tends to um work better
when there's like weight higher in the pack. So what I see a lot of guys do is they got an external frame, they throw all the quarters like meat side down on the bottom, and that's great, But what it's doing is it's actually not pulling the pack slightly away from your body and pushing it into your hips. Is kind of actually just putting all the weight straight down, so it's it's like all in your hips, but not
balanced correctly. Uh, what I do when I've got an external frame and I'm carrying quite a bit of stuff, I would put maybe some more light gear on the bottom and then maybe one quarter down on that so it's slightly above the bottom, not not crazy. And then sometimes if I'm doing like two quarters let's say, dear or whatever, I'll flip like the front quarters up or one hind quarter up, like where it's the the bottom
part of the leg like the less meat side. It's like the ham is high like alter natum, so one's down, one's up. That kind of puts more weight up higher. I wouldn't say it's the opposite with an internal frame, but with an internal frame, you gotta think that frames in the back of the pack bag and then going straight down to the pack belt. So the best way to distribute weight in internal frame is actually keeping it
like closer to your body. So I think of packing an internal frame pack like if you were to lay the part that goes against your body on the ground, packing it from the ground up. So you don't want weight out on the internal frame. You want weight closer to your body. So that's why pulling those um load lifters like a little bit tighter on that will kind of help center that weight close to your body before
you're packing out any meat or anything. When I pack everything, I try to put the light stuff on the outside of the pack and then the heavier stuff closer to my body. So I kind of like lay it down pack the stuff in. I don't necessarily think of it packing like heavy stuff at the bottom, heavy stuff at the top. I think of packing heavy stuff closest to my body and then the lighter stuff further out. Um A lot of internal frame packs actually have a zip where you can kind of unzip and then pack it.
That way, you're going to get a lot better balance. Now it comes to packing out meat or whatever, you just want to you know, tight and close to your body. I tend to find that, you know, you could go a little bit lower with the like heavier weight when it comes to the pack up. I mean sometimes there's only one way it fits in. It's like, okay, all the weights down lower, but the internal frame tends to
distribute lower weight better than an external frame. So that's the two different ways that you would pack that external frame. You kind of pack from the bottom up where you want most of the weight slightly high of center, and like if it was vertical sitting on you, from light at the bottom, more weight in the center, and then a little bit of weight at the top. And then the opposite internal frame you want to pack horizontally with the weight close to the body and then go out
with the lighter weight. The last thing with a pack is when you're packing out meat. You know, there's a couple options you've got, like frame packouts or just putting it in the bag. I like to put all the meat in the bag. There's a lot of guys that like to just pack with the frame. You'r you save a lot of weight that way, But for me, I just like being everything really tight and secure. I just kind of actually used my bag like the bag of the pack to pack everything out in and then I
just find ways in places the stuff all the extra gear. Um, I've actually got where you can kind of pull away. You've got a load shell in there, I'll put like, that's great for a quarter and you don't have to take your um other gear out. So it just depends like what I'm packing and how I use it. That's a more simple way. If I'm just going in for a pack out some days and I know, hey, I've just got one quarter or two quarters or whatever. Sometimes
I'll just go in with just my frame itself. It's a really nice way to kind of go in lightweight, just bring what you need and not necessarily have to carry the extra weight of the pack bag itself. Um. That's just something to think about. And there's a lot of guys too that maybe hunt with a lighter daypack and then they've got more stout pack at the truck
that they get. I personally like to be able to just take a good load in, Like when I'm hunting, I shoot something, I'm definitely packing out right then and there. I like to minimize my trips, so I like to have kind of whatever I'm planning on packing out in is what I'm hunting in of the time. Now, the last thing we'll talk about would be accessories for a pack. I think these are just kind of up to each person. But there's a few things, a few items to go
with my pack that I kind of always have. One would be extra cordage or like webbing, anything to secure that load, because, like I said, the worst thing with the pack is just that floppy pack syndrome that where that pack is just wiggling around, burning out your muscles in a short amount of time. So I've got like kind of like what you'd see, you know, a little buckle on it. Um, I get him a like climbing stores. I don't know, there's you can pretty much Amazon wherever.
UM just like extra straps that look almost like pack buckle straps where you could wrap it around the pack, helps sinch the antlers down, anything like Paara cord or whatever. Sometimes the buckles work really good because you don't have to worry about having somewhere to tie it to. UM, it's just nice too, like you could wrap it around the pack or add it to a buckle or something
like that. Uh. Sometimes I'll buy extra buckles for my pack and then get extra links of cord or like webbing that fit those buckles so I could just readjust the way that the packs even designed just based on what I'm putting on it. Sometimes you gotta strap stuff to the outside. Sometimes the antlers are awkward, so that always helps. Another thing that I always have, I just a garbage bag in my like a contractor style bag,
because I like to keep my pack bag clean. I've talked about it, but if you're cooling your meat down, when you stop and you hang it and everything's right, it's fine to put in plastic. Your bag is not going to breathe any better. For the most part. You're just gonna get soaked in blood. All your gear is gonna get bloody, messy, smell bad, especially if it starts to rain and other things, and it's just gonna attract
the bears and stuff like that. So I just like to keep my pack clean, so I always have a little garbage bag in there. And then something to think about too. When you're one of the hard parts like killing that flop, getting everything that weight tight and centered. One thing that's hard is packing out antlers. The handlers are awkward. So there's a couple of ways, a couple of strategies that I do. I'll carry maybe an extra bag the first technique, um is good, but it can
be dangerous and kind of catch on things. Also, like other hunters, you know, some times you'll see like antlers up on smaller meals or whatever. If I'm in a place where it's like, hey, it's an archery season in the backcountry, heck yeah, I just put the antler's face up at the top of my pack and then strap my hood over the top of it. Keeps it nice and centered, doesn't bounce around, especially if they're like velvet or something like that. You don't early season archery meal here.
You don't want him rubbing on anything. So that's that's a good technique, um, but that doesn't work for everything. You know, maybe there's times where you're like, dude, this is the pumpkin patch out here. If I've got antlers above my head in a brown pack, I'm definitely getting shot. So those situations go antlers down. You just want to make sure that and however you're carrying them, the antlers if you fall or whatever, aren't gonna poke you in
any way. Another way that I'll do is I'll put like a garbage sack over the skull if I if I'm going to do a euro take the whole skull out. Otherwise I bring a saw in skull cap it. But I'll just put it kind of like over my shoulders forward, Especially with elk, where I'm like holding the antlers down in front of me. It puts a lot of extra weight on the shoulders. But it can be an okay
way where you can take on and off. But I'd say the best way is like if you can slash into your pack, but not having way too far back. A good way to deal with antlers is the same way that I would do if I'm packing horses. So think about like if you've got an elk rack on a horse, what you don't want is you need to keep it up so it doesn't slide down so it
doesn't hit the horse on the side. So what I'll do is I'll pack it on the top and then I'll run a stick between the antlers that lays across the saddle bags or something like that so it keeps the antlers up. I do the same thing on my pack. I'll either use my trekking pull or whatever. Use some cordage. So you gotta think you're running a bar a stick,
maybe cut a stick. I mean, I cut a stick a lot and you run it between the antlers and you put that on the outside the pack so the antlers can be faced down the skull part or whatever would be up. Strap that on and then it doesn't swing forward, but you've got it kind of like where it keeps those antlers from poking forward too much. It's
a really good way to kind of keep it centered. Um. And then you can kind of still sit down like that too, if you find the right sticker rock when you need to take a break, um, And it also kind of holds the pack up. One last thing I will say when it comes to getting up with a heavy pack on, here's here's the my patented philosophy. You put the pack on, you sit yourself, and I see like people trying to help other people up or whatever I mean, or like hold the pack, hold a heavy pack.
If you've got a real heavy pack on, don't be holding the pack for your buddy to get into. Just everybody do themselves. You've gotta be able to get up on your own or like in this way. And I found that this is the best way to get up with a heavy pack. You could be assisted or whatever. Have the pack on the ground. You get into the pack. You first, you know, you tighten your waist belt. You
kind of do everything. You go through the motions of putting the pack on, so waist belt first while on the ground, Uh, then pack straps, tighten your shoulder straps. And then what I like to do is if you need help, if you can help each other out, cool, But I think the best way is to roll over so you're like on all four's face in the ground, and then stand up from there, use your legs to stand up. I mean, I've seen people get injured just like trying to pull each other up, trying to whatever it.
Just help them get over into that position on your knees or whatever, and then power up and stand up from there one leg at a time. I mean, I can easily get my body weight or more off the ground by myself. With that way, you're using the correct muscles, you aren't straining, aren't hurting anybody else. I mean, most packout injuries are probably somebody helping someone else get up or getting into the pack of funny way, or trying to get up strange. So that's the best way to
do it. That's the best way that I've found another good option too, if you've got a heavy pack using hiking trekking poles, cutting a stick something. What that does is it just helps with your balance, It stops your like, helps your core out, it helps your footing, it helps everything and takes a lot of that felt weight off.
I mean, I've seen studies as much as of the felt weight can be distributed by kind of going what I would say, four wheel drive, having to dicks to help you, especially with a large pack and steep train.
So just something to think about. I hope that that kind of covered all a lot of the basics of packs, pack types, and packouts, how to load a pack, and um, there's just there's so many little things that a lot of people, especially those that aren't used to it, don't really think about, and then they get out there and then you're the guy on the trail that's got a heavy weight on and your pack belts holding your hip flix ers down and the pack is not fit and
you're just like floppy pack syndrome and you're just burning out. When something that is designed to make that task a heck of a lot easier, if used right, will make that task a heck of a lot easier. I hope you enjoyed that podcast. If you did, you know, feel free to share it with your friends, leave a comment or rating. Actually, last night was going through some of the comments and stuff, and I just thank you guys so much. Some of those comments, I mean, I do
read them. They mean a lot to me. It's just like kind of the fuel for me when I's got up this morning'm like, yes, I'm excited to record another podcast because people are enjoying them. So I really thank you guys so much for for that, for those comments, for those ratings, for sharing the podcast with your friends and hunting buddies and whatever. So thank you guys so much that it really does mean a lot to me. And next week is going to be all about listeners.
It's gonna be our Q and A. So make sure to shoot over those questions. I've been getting a lot. I've got a good list going already. Um some stuff that we've talked about, some spring stuff, all kinds of cool stuff. So thank you guys for shooting those over. As always, feel free to reach out via social media at Remy Warren on Instagram, primarily way that I try
to communicate with people. So you can always send me message there, tag me and stuff, um, you know, kind of keep up to keep up to date with whatever I'm doing there. Um, you know, kind of all social media things, YouTube, whatever, um. But those are the best ways to reach out. So shoot me a message if you've got questions, and also those questions if I don't
answer your specific question next week. It just helps me build out, like the kind of things that honestly, this podcast that I talked about today is like one of those things that I probably wouldn't have talked about, but there's so many questions on it, people like asking, hey, can you do a podcast on this? Hey, can you do that you talked about? Packs? Can you mention this? So I just I keep note to those things. I've
got a little uh in my phone. I've got a little memo sheet, and when I get things, I save them in there. I I mean, honestly, like, I try to build it out, and a lot of stuff is like wow, I didn't realize, you know. I mean, the stuff that I take for granted, It's just like stuff that I've over the years kind of in my mind has become common sense, and then I start talking about it. I'm like, yeah, most people wouldn't know this, and that's the kind of cool like discoveries that I like to find.
And that just comes from the questions that you guys send me, so keep those coming, uh. And I think that just packs up this week's podcast und