Thanks Gary. I was thinking along those lines but wasn't sure if that's what everyone was doing.
We've cooked a lot of things using a BakePacker. Sounds like a similar process, but on a larger scale.
Pete Swiggum
Troop 1173
Green Bay, WI
Philmont - July 2005
----- Original Message -----
From: Gary Boyd
To: Multiple recipients of list Philmont
Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 8:43 PM
Subject: Re: [Philmont]: Turkey Bags
Turkey bag cooking is pretty basic. You put about an inch of water in the pot then you put the meal-required water in the turkey bag, folding the bag around the top of the pot (I'm talking about the large Trail Chef pot here). Bring the water in the pot and the bag to a boil then add the food ingredient(s). Rehydrate/cook for the prescribed time and serve out of the bag. When empty (get everything you can out) then fold/tie the bag (making sure nothing gets on the outside of the bag) and compress trash.
Our 2003 crew used turkey bags throughout and our two 2005 crews will do the same (one Troop, one Crew). Its pretty much become a backpacking SOP for us.
Gary Boyd
Troop 151 ASM
Crew 151 CC
Georgetown, Texas
www.troop151.org
Pete Swiggum wrote:
Could someone elaborate on how turkey bags are used at Philmont? I've seen several posts referencing them, some saying they were happy with them, others saying they didn't like them.
How are they used and what determines their success on the trail?
Thanks in advance...
Pete Swiggum
Troop 1173
Green Bay, WI
Philmont - July 2005
----- Original Message -----
From: Joe Tavares
To: Multiple recipients of list Philmont
Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 7:50 PM
Subject: RE: [Philmont]: Back On Topic: Stoves
We used a Dragonfly, a Whisperlite and a Simmerlite. Between the two, the Dragonfly was faster to boil and used the fuel more efficiently, the Whisperlite was the most reliable (it would light anywhere) and the Simmerlite could have used a little improvement in both areas but was not bad either. The Dragonfly, other that being a blowtorch, was a very stable stove. We also used Turkey bags and were very happy with the results.
Joe Tavares
Troop 728
Richardson, TX
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: owner-Philmont@troop47.com [mailto:owner-Philmont@troop47.com] On Behalf Of Garrett, Russ
Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 6:11 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list Philmont
Subject: RE: [Philmont]: Back On Topic: Stoves
we used Dragonflys last summer. our crew took 2 stoves and 3 standard fuel bottles full. We didn't use all of the fuel. We used the turkey bag approach on shakedowns on and off. The crew voted for them at Philmont and the crew was very pleased with the decision.
The benefit of the Dragonfly stove could be that it has a wide base for setting the pots on. The larger the pot, but nicer it is that the base is wider. drawback is that it's a little more bulky but not bad when you consider only two for 12 people.
Russ Garrett
Bullivant|Houser|Bailey PC
805 Broadway Street, Suite 400
Vancouver, WA 98660-3310
mailto:russ.garrett@bullivant.com
direct dial: 360.737.3363 - fax: 360.695.8504
Seattle . Vancouver . Portland . Sacramento . San Francisco . Irvine . Las Vegas
-----Original Message-----
From: Troop 6 Scoutmaster [mailto:troop6scoutmaster@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 2:59 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list Philmont
Subject: RE: [Philmont]: Back On Topic: Stoves
We used MSR Whisperlites last year ... less expensive than the Simmerlite and you really don't do much simmering at Philmont ... its really all about boiling water ... period. Also, in anticipation of the next question - Had two crews of 12, each arrived at the ranch with 4 22oz fuel bottles, three stoves and a repair kit. Hit the trail with two stoves and three bottles, left a bottle, stove and repair kit in basecamp ... One stove was a spare as we only used one except for one night when we used both. Had plenty of fuel and it was cheap (.04 per oz) in base camp and on the trail. Tried the turkey bag thing with mixed results but I'll leave that to another thread.
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-Philmont@troop47.com [mailto:owner-Philmont@troop47.com]On Behalf Of Gbeaglegolf@aol.com
Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 5:01 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list Philmont
Subject: Re: [Philmont]: Back On Topic: Stoves
We used MSR Simmerlite last year and would recommend these. Light 8 oz. and boils a 6 qt. pot in less than 3 minutes. White gas is available at the trading posts on the ranch so you can refill your bottles and not have to carry a full trek supply from base.
Garry Black
Troop 718
Dallas, TX
"MMS <BHB>" made the following
annotations on 12/13/2004 04:15:53 PM
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Received on Mon Dec 13 23:04:44 2004
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