Plan all meals. Depending on how long you are going for, you may have to dehydrate most/all your food. (ground beef, textured vegetable protien, veg works the best) No cans or glassware is allowed so try not to pack any in.
My friends and I usually do 5-7 days hikes/portages and we'd bring in fresh stuff for the 1st day (steaks and stuff), but the rest of the trip will be rehydrated stuff.
Breakfasts: instant oatmeal, instant coffee/hot chocolate, bannock
Lunches (usually quicker on the trail stuff): kraft dinner with veg and some kind of meat, instant noodles, breads and spreads
Dinners: pasta and sauce, fajitas, rice and stews, steaks and mashed potatoes
Those are the easy meals that I'd recommend for people without much experience back country camping.
Always hang food in a bear bag and search for a good spot before it gets dark. Bring good rope and extra incase things get hung up and you lose some of it.
I back country camp in all seasons and have been all over Ontario, eastern US and a fun little trip up to Nunavut.
I'll check back if you have any other questions.
Allan
Water can be boiled & cooled but it is time consuming. You can use tablets to treat the water. I bought a purification pump. Simply drop the rubber suction tube into the water & pump the handle. It purifies pretty much any water. Check an Outdoors store for more info...MSR makes a good one. Freeze dried food is expensive. I purchased the freeze dried meals containing meat at about $12.00 each to feed two people & supplemented with 99cent noodles & sauce mix.
Make sure when you set up your camp you always follow these rules:
1. Never cook at the tent site. try to cook all foods 150 feet or more from the tent if possible.
2. Never keep food or snacks in the tent, it will attract nuisance critters like coons & chipmunks as well as heavy hitters like bears.
3. Always store food hung in a tree at night well away from the camp. Throw a rope over a high branch & hoist the packs up to foil bears.
4. Carry bear spray. You will find bears in meadows eating berries & they will find you where you cook. They will leave you alone if you leave them alone, search it and read up.
5. Are you canoeing or hiking? Have an extra map & compass.
Where are you going?
Are we?if you guys have done back country camping, could you please share your ideas/thoughts/suggestions? we are doing one in Algonquin park?
What did you guys take for food? how much? anything to lookout for? etc
Thanks in advance!
rain gear is not an option, same as good boots, (leave the sandasl for Cuba.