Packable and Adaptable: Gearing up for Bikepacking in China
Some adventures demand gear as adaptable as we are. Trips to unknown locales, adventures with varying conditions, pursuits where space is at a premium, or physically demanding objectives tend to demand adaptability. In Alisa Geiser’s case, her trip bikepacking in China checked all these boxes.
In this edition of Therm-a-Rest Gearshed, contributor Alisa Geiser reminisces about her time bikepacking in China and the versatile gear she depended on.
Last fall, my best friend and I decided to bikepack the Tibetan Plateau. Our route took us from the muggy city of Chengdu with all it’s touristy restaurants and shopping malls, over a snow-covered 15,000-foot mountain pass, past hot springs, through Karaoke bars, along windy mountain roads and past many holy sites. We could only pack what we could carry on our bikes—and needed to leave room for the 4,000+ calories a day we’d be burning. One outfit for ten days and as many different environments—what to wear!?
Packing for a self-supported adventure is part puzzle, part math equation, and part self-reflection: do I have a true emotional need for the unabridged paperback Stephen King novel, or will reading love poems on my iPhone suffice? Can I really eat four meat bars a day for two weeks, or should I pack a little more variety? There is the personal item or two that you can’t live without - I always bring a leather-bound journal and many pens. My friend Robin brought both a golf ball and a bouncy ball for self-massage when we ran the 420-mile Oregon Coast, and I dare you to ask Aly Nicklas to leave behind her nice shampoo and conditioner.
Little creature comforts aside, bulk is perhaps the most important value when bikepacking: you can carry more weight on your frame than on your back, but you need somewhere to put it. Weight is the most discussed aspect of light & fast, but adaptability can override weight in selection when it leads you to a piece of gear that negates the need for another piece. For instance, Dr.Bronners, the proclaimed shampoo, dish soap, deodorant and toothpaste all-in-one. A Gore-Tex jacket can be windbreaker, raincoat, and winter jacket (when layered over your puffy). My trusty Corus quilt follows suit. More on that later. Of course, when a piece of gear is both light, packable, and adaptable, you’ve struck backcountry gold.
Material is a core component of adaptability. Take two equivalent tank tops, one made of wool, and one made of cotton. The wool one will provide warmth in dry and wet situations, will be breathable when it’s hot, and won’t stink when you sweat, meaning no washing & yes karaoke bar. It’s four season & wet/dry capable. The same tank made of cotton will only be useful in warm-to-cool dry situations, and must be washed. I barely took off my smartwool tank the entire two weeks we were in China, and only washed it once, after said karaoke bar, because the truth is—nothing is immune to that amount of second-hand smoke.
My top materials for adaptability:
- Wool: Light, warm, breathable, odor-resistant, quick-drying, natural, and often fashionable! Be smart - wear wool.
- Hydrophobic down: The lightest, warmest, most packable of insulation materials IS NOW WATER RESISTANT! Thank you Nikwax. Total gamechanger.
- Gore-Tex: lightweight, breathable, and waterproof. Boom. I don’t see any reason not to have a Gore-Tex jacket with you at all times. Just in case.
- Nylon: Nylon is not a four-letter word, homies. It’s classic, and it’s in everything. Tents, sleeping pads, backpacks, climbing ropes. Nylon is tough & keeps you dry, with proper treatment. Gotta give it a shout-out.