Iâ??ve just done a backpacking trip with tent and cooking gear, my first with the latter two for some years, and spent most of it noticing the weight of the otherwise comfortable pack (a nearly new Berghaus 65 Trailhead). A couple of days in I worked out the ratio of pack weight (initially 35lb, reduced quickly) to my body weight (initially 135lb, reduced less gradually), and was confirmed in my belief that at more than 26%, it was too high.
So what is the ideal pack to body weight ratio, and, with modern lightweight backpacking gear, how little capacity is it now reasonable to expect a pack to be capable of holding ?
On the first question, it has generally been assumed, and advice given accordingly, that the lighter a person is the less weight it is reasonable for them to be able to carry. A maximum comfortable pack to body weight ratio was thought to be around 20%, so that a person weighing 112lb or 8 stone would have difficulty carrying a pack weighing much more than 22lb, and someone (me) of 135lb (9.5 stone) shouldnâ??t tote more than 27lb. But a 2014 study* by Michael Oâ??Shea of Outward Bound, Kansas State University, proposed that, when factors such as muscle strength and body fat are taken into account, smaller [and lighter] hikers could carry heavier loads than their larger [and weightier] compatriots.
This, according to Oâ??Shea, is because hikers have to haul not only the weight of their pack but their own body weight, so that the heavier you are the more work you have to start doing even before you bend to pick up the rucksack. (As the size of an animal increases, says Oâ??Shea, strength increases more slowly than body weight, so that while ants can carry disproportionately heavy loads, elephants manage relatively small ones.) Using his â??pack plus body weightâ?? model, he calculated that while an 112lb (8 stone) person could cope with a whopping 50lb backpack (43% body weight), a bulky 243lb (17.3 stone) hiker might carry only 34lb or just 14% of their own weight. So, on this model anyway, Iâ??m a wimp, and Bridgetâ??s quite right to be looking at 70litre packs - but not for Hundreds.
On the second question, of decreasing gear weight per item vs pack capacity, it may now be true that a 70litre sack stuffed with lightweight chargers and other modern essentials (including, now, spare face masks) weighs the same or less than the smaller ones which we toted in the 70s, 80s or even 90s. This would need a historical perspective, or maybe fetch your old gear from the loft and try cramming it all into the new pack. But donâ??t forget to take account of your own body weight before you get on the scales with that 70s A-frame.
Iain
* â?ÂBackpack Weight and the Scaling of the Human Frame," by Michael O'Shea, The Physics Teacher, October 21, 2014.