Against All Odds: One Hiker’s Sub-3-Pound Setup Attempt

In the summer of 2023, Sam “Shade” Carter set out on perhaps the boldest ultralight hiking experiment of recent times. His goal: attempt the Calendar Year Triple Crown (hiking the Appalachian Trail, the Pacific Crest Trail and the Continental Divide Trail in a single calendar year) with a gear setup weighing less than 3 pounds (≈1.36 kg).

The Setup

Shade carried nothing but a $19 Amazon daypack, an emergency bivvy, and some clothes. No tent. No sleeping bag or pad. He survived partly by his wits, partly by scrapping down gear to bare essentials, and partly through sheer resolve. By the time he hit the North Cascades, more than 3,000 miles in, he’d realized just how extreme his experiment was. Backpacker

The Melt of Reality

Despite his determination, the plan unraveled. Forest fires, extreme cold, family obligations and the inherent risks of such a lightweight setup forced him to bail from the CDT in Wyoming in October—more than 2,000 miles short of his goal. But his attempt remains powerful, provocative and deeply instructive. Backpacker

Why It Matters

  • Ultralight is more than gear: Shade’s story isn’t just about how little you can carry—it’s about understanding the trade-offs of pushing limits.
  • Gear matters—but so does balance: At 2.67 lbs base-weight, he achieved a level few attempt—but also exposed how minimal you can go before safety and comfort suffer. Backpacker
  • Community, caution and curiosity: His nickname “Shade” became shorthand in hiking circles for “how far can we really go?” It sparked debate, admiration, critique—and inspiration.

Key Lessons for Every Hiker

  1. Start with purpose, not purely minimalism. Gear reduction works because it feels freeing—not when it becomes a liability.
  2. Measure your base-weight balance. A typical ultralight base (≈8-12 lbs) is a proven sweet-spot. Going much lower often demands extreme trade-offs. Wikipedia
  3. Adapt as the trail evolves. Shade’s early weeks were strong—but the unexpected (weather, terrain, supplies, mental fatigue) forced change.
  4. Gear is tool, not target. He carried minimal gear—but still needed father’s jacket mid-trail. Sometimes support, backup, community matter. Backpacker

The Take-away

For the community of ultralight hikers, Shade’s experiment is more than a headline. It’s a mirror. It asks: How light can I go without compromising what matters most—my safety, my experience, my capacity to keep walking?
Whether you’re prepping for a weekend fast-pack or a thru-hike of your own, remember: the gear isn’t the goal. The trail is.

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