Re: Packing for the Weekend
Okay, so we have gotten off the original topic of what to bring for the weekend to improve one's authenticity to lambasting our side of the hobby for not being authentic enough because we are perceived to not portray campaigning soldiers.
Hmmm. To the original point: ditch the cooler and other comfort items and bring with you that which was carried by a soldier during the war. Read. A lot. Carry what they did and adjust your pack out to what they did. Once you leave your car, don't go back to it for the weekend until it is time to go home, emergencies and common sense not withstanding. I'll leave it up to you to define the latter.
If you can lug it, feel comfortable carrying it, and deem it necessary, well, it meets your requirements. Messing with a group of pards to distribute items and by default attendant duties is sage advice.
For all of it, at Bentonville when we left our camp on Sunday there was very little residual trash and no modern wrapper or other karma-blowing BS lying around like Bogangles paper and drink cups. 300 people camped authentically and carried in and out what they needed for the weekend. I had very little to clean up and it was actually impressive considering how many people were in that area.
We portrayed soldiers for a short period of time, however, so people either went heavy because they knew they would only be in the field for 48-54 hours and not marching 50 miles to fight a battle over three days, or went light and dealt with what that decision entailed.
To each their own. I agree that less is more in most cases, and further agree with Joe and Sy's points, but let's keep the main thing the main thing. Lots of options out there, and authentic ones at that, to help someone make the transition to our side of the hobby. Perhaps the current poll should not only ask what kind of event people want to attend, but also what they expect to get out of attending it, but that is for another discussion.
Okay, so we have gotten off the original topic of what to bring for the weekend to improve one's authenticity to lambasting our side of the hobby for not being authentic enough because we are perceived to not portray campaigning soldiers.
Hmmm. To the original point: ditch the cooler and other comfort items and bring with you that which was carried by a soldier during the war. Read. A lot. Carry what they did and adjust your pack out to what they did. Once you leave your car, don't go back to it for the weekend until it is time to go home, emergencies and common sense not withstanding. I'll leave it up to you to define the latter.
If you can lug it, feel comfortable carrying it, and deem it necessary, well, it meets your requirements. Messing with a group of pards to distribute items and by default attendant duties is sage advice.
For all of it, at Bentonville when we left our camp on Sunday there was very little residual trash and no modern wrapper or other karma-blowing BS lying around like Bogangles paper and drink cups. 300 people camped authentically and carried in and out what they needed for the weekend. I had very little to clean up and it was actually impressive considering how many people were in that area.
We portrayed soldiers for a short period of time, however, so people either went heavy because they knew they would only be in the field for 48-54 hours and not marching 50 miles to fight a battle over three days, or went light and dealt with what that decision entailed.
To each their own. I agree that less is more in most cases, and further agree with Joe and Sy's points, but let's keep the main thing the main thing. Lots of options out there, and authentic ones at that, to help someone make the transition to our side of the hobby. Perhaps the current poll should not only ask what kind of event people want to attend, but also what they expect to get out of attending it, but that is for another discussion.
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