Yep, getting ready for elk camp with my fiancee and the horses. I am putting in some long days repairing tack and camping gear, making endless lists, preserving foods to pack in, shopping and sorting out supplies.
This will be my longest trip into the backcountry, we will be on the Oregon side of Hells Canyon (my avater pic was taken there last year). We set up the wall tent about 7 miles from the trailhead, which is about a 2-hour drive from Imnaha, Oregon up narrow gravel roads that hug steep hillsides..... Imnaha is not much of a town, has 1 building that is the store/post office/ tavern all in one.
I am taking Shelly, the little Haflinger I have been training all summer, and Peach my bombproof, tried-and-true Haflinger mare. My fiancee is bringing his gray horse, Thunder and his daughter's blue roan, Blue. Blue has a nasty attitude and is a bucker, I don't plan to ride her but I sure as heck will put a 180 pound pack load on her and see if she can buck that off! When Blue gets put to work she is a tough horse and her attitude improves. She's just one of "those" kind of horses (not my kind!).
So this year the plan is to use the truck and horse trailer as out 'general store' with extra food and supplies. I take on the role of head outfitter and will be running the horses back and forth to the trailhead to pack my fiancees hunting buddies in and out of camp while hubby hunts. The idea is to keep the loads lighter. My fiancees style was to overload the horses, trying to pack everything in at once. I have the loads broke up into categories: what we MUST have the first 2 days, and then subsequent loads like camp furniture and surplus cookware, groceries, horse feed, etc get packed in later. Same for packing out; break down as much of camp as possible a day or two ahead.
You think a weekend horse camping trip takes a lot of work, try 3 weeks! SO MUCH STUFF! It's going to be a blast, though. A lot of hard work and a lot of fun. Last year I published a photo journal in Adobe format and was able to post it on another forum as an attachment. I'll try to do the same this year.
A few more pics from last year, I had the Haflingers Sweet P and Peach, my fiancee had Thunder and a little pait mare, Roxy, who has been rehomed (she was too lightly built for what we do with horses)