My 45lb Aussie/Border Collie mix carries about 5 pounds including her Palisades pack, reflectix sleeping pad, quilt, her bowl, and her tie out.
I carry her food and water and first aid items.
My 45lb Aussie/Border Collie mix carries about 5 pounds including her Palisades pack, reflectix sleeping pad, quilt, her bowl, and her tie out.
I carry her food and water and first aid items.
My dog @84lb. has never been over 7lb. If he needs more I carry it, if his blanket gets wet I carry it.P1010735.JPGP1010782.JPG
Axel uses a ruffware, its a great pack that fits him very well.P1010709.JPG
After my last summer my dog got raw sores from the pack rubbing just behind his front legs. I've since ditched his pack and just carry his gear. It's only about 1.5-2lbs including his grub for a 4 day trip. If we're doing 20+ mpd I'd rather carry it then weight him down as he's only 19lbs.
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Good for you man! looks well put together, I load ward up he is a 8 year old lab/ pit F1 and has walked about 1500 miles with aproxx 10-12 lbs in his pack. Dog freaks and softies will bicker but bottom line, dogs have been used for work as long as man has owned them. They enjoy it, my dog gets extremely excited when I pull his pack out, to the point that I have to hide it in the closet or he gets disappointed when he sees it , and we don't go hiking. He is 8 years old, and shows no signs of pain or joint issues, still runs like hell. The pack has tamed him on the trail, I thought (in the beginning) "if he has enough energy to run this trail 2-3 times what Im walking it, he can carry his own stuff. It has settled him down, and made him a great hiking buddy.
Trail Miles: 5,154.2
AT Map 1: ✔ | 13-21'
Sheltowee Trace: ✔ | 20-23'
Pinhoti Trail: ✔ | 23-24'
Foothills Trail: ✔ | 24'
GSMNP900: 134.7(17%)
AT Map 2: 279.4
CDT: 210.9
BMT: 52.7
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Here's a photo of my wife with our 90 pound Shepherd who loves the outdoors.
I actually ditched the pack after a section last August. He got rubbed raw under his arm pit. For our FHT thru a few weeks back I decided that it's really easier for me to carry all of his stuff as well. To be fair to the ruffwear pack he's almost to big for the xxs but doubt I'll shell out the $ for another as I've got plenty of capacity in my ula circuit. I really should switch out to the ohm 2.0. He likes to hike more than anything! I wouldn't bring him if he didn't enjoy and could easily carry him at 19lbs if need be.
great dogs for the outdoors them ankle nippers!
My son has a chocolate lab that loves to hang with us at the beach and leap in the waves....I took him on one of my long walks, about thirteen miles and he wiped out at about nine or ten miles, no pack, just wasn' t conditioned for it I guess...didn't want the water that I had carried for him or the snacks, just needed to lie down for twenty minutes or so.
conditioning is so important for dogs, not just us humans...
My Brokie pooch can handle all his own weight in his own granite gear ruff wear packs size medium.
That is for three days of food a small thing of mushers secret and two 20 ounce water bottles as well as snacks.
He weighs in A 53 pounds and is well under his comfortable load weight.
He is American Staffordshire Terrior(rednose).
I honestly only put dog food in my girl's pack, and only half of it (depending on how long we're out). She likes to have a pack and feel useful, but I don't want to put too much weight on her- goldens have high potential for hip problems, and she has no way to tell me that her load is too heavy. But we also haven't been out too much together yet, still need to perfect our system!
2010 AT NoBo Thru "attempt" (guess 1,700 miles didn't quite get me all the way through ;) )
Various adventures in Siberia 2016
Adventures past and present!
(and maybe 2018 PCT NoBo)