How Much Food Should I Pack
Dear PaddlingLight,
As I canoe more, leaving the river of home and enter the BWCA, I must portage. I do not want to carry needless weight. So, I am planning a 6 day trip with lots of portaging, some are 340 rods, some only 8. However, as a soloist, I have determined to double portage, thus a 340-rod portage is really 1020 rods. So it is like this, I get by on minimal food on a timber trek. Although I climb serious hills, I am not carrying a 60-pound pack or a canoe. I am assuming the physical exertion even on a small mile trip is demanding. I am wondering how many pounds of food to pack. I am very used to dry goods like steel cut oats, parched corn and parched rice, etc. Perhaps I may pack brick cheese and summer sausage. I may make some bannock and fish along the way. I figure close to one pound of gorp a day.
I guess I am asking, how much food does a guy usually take? I will have a powdered drink like tang or something. I do not need fancy stuff and the dehydrated foods do not really appeal to me right now. Any suggestions you have would be great.
Sincerely,
Grams of Gorp
Dear Grams of Gorp,
I like to live by a rule of thumb on canoe trips: Pack 1.5 to 1.75 pounds of food per day per person.
That’s a pretty simple answer, but let’s look closer at the issue. First, head over to Kristen’s Guide Weight Loss Calculator and enter all your relevant data . I managed to come up with 470 calories per hour burned when walking at 3 mph. And for paddling, I’m in a 286 calories for leisurely and 386 for moderately paddling. That looks like I burn a heck of a lot more calories walking around than I do paddling, but I still don’t know how many I burn while backpacking.
So, I have to figure that out. First, I head over to to download a copy of Josh Madison’s sweet Convert software, because I’m going to need to convert my weight to kilograms for the next part of this answer. Downloaded. Enter pounds. Done. I’m 90 kg. Next, I’m going to head over to Fitnesslogs.com to look at their Calorie Coefficient table:
- General Backpacking: 0.117
- Canoeing on Camping Trip: 0.066
- Canoeing Moderate Effort: 0.117
- Kayaking: 0.083
- General Backpacking: 631/hour
- Canoeing on Camping Trip: 356/hour
- Canoeing Moderate Effort: 631/hour
- Kayaking: 448/hour
- General Backpacking: 5048/day
- Canoeing on Camping Trip: 2848/day
- Canoeing Moderate Effort: 5048/day
- Kayaking: 3584/day
- General Backpacking: 210/mile
- Canoeing on Camping Trip: 119/mile
- Canoeing Moderate Effort: 210/mile
- Kayaking: 112/mile
Download
Below is a Calories From Packed Food Worksheet based off of Phil Heffington’s work. It could use some improvement, like a checkbox system next to each item of food that is coming along on one page and those are transferred to another. Or a look up pivot chart or something. If someone wants to make those changes, please, do and send a copy.More Calories Burned
P.S. But wait, there’s more. You’ll also burn calories in camp, cooking, and sleeping. For example, the coefficient for cooking is: 0.042. So, during an hour of cooking, I’d burn about 200 calories. So, when menu planning, you may want to boost your calories per pound or eat a really big Juicy Lucy Burger at My Sister’s Place when you get out of the BWCA. Also, check out this article: Ration Planning NOLS Style.We may earn commissions if you shop through the links in this article.
Or if you use a RSS Feed Reader subscribe via our RSS Feed.



3 Comments
Real Fortin
The amount of good detail in this post reminds me of someone that is procrastinating for something else that needs to be done.
Great answers.