Episodes

  • Episode 142 | The 72 Hour Backcountry Reset
    Jan 19 2026

    This episode explores why time in the backcountry can improve how we function beyond recreation. Ryan Jordan describes how modern life overloads attention through constant interruptions and unfinished obligations, then walks through staged benefits of nature exposure from minutes to months. He argues that 72 hours is the first reliable breakpoint where effects persist after returning, framing backcountry time as preventive maintenance rather than escape.

    To view the show notes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    40 mins
  • Episode 141 | Hiking at Night in a Blizzard
    Dec 15 2025

    What gear do you actually need to hike out safely through a winter blizzard at night, in sub-freezing temps and high winds, when stopping isn't an option? In this episode, Ryan breaks down a focused foul-weather kit: core layers, shells, handwear, footwear, lighting, and navigation that preserve function while on the move.

    To view the shownotes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    56 mins
  • Episode 140 | Winter Storm Decisions
    Dec 9 2025

    Ryan walks through a structured, six-question framework for deciding whether to stay put or move when a winter storm deteriorates around you, using real backcountry examples to show how terrain, weather, gear, consequences, people, and trends shape safer choices.

    To view the show notes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    30 mins
  • Episode 139 | Repair Kits
    Nov 20 2025

    In this Field Notes episode, Ryan breaks down ultralight repair kits using a simple framework: context, consequence, and capability. He compares short-term overnights to long-term expeditions, explains how to right-size your kit, and walks through real-world repair problems with shelters, fabrics, packs, footwear, lighting, and water treatment so you can carry less gear, solve higher-consequence failures, and avoid getting stranded by preventable equipment breakdowns on remote trips and routes.

    To view the shownotes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    34 mins
  • Episode 138 | Plan – Focus – Trust
    Nov 10 2025

    In this episode, Ryan introduces the Plan-Focus-Trust framework - a simple but powerful approach to managing hard, uncertain objectives in the wilderness and beyond. Drawing on lessons from our recent BPL community trip in the Colorado Rockies, he shows how successful expeditions aren't conquered through toughness, but through disciplined attention. Plan to remove fear and build readiness. Focus to stay present and move one step at a time. Trust to let small, verified wins accumulate into confidence. Together, these three disciplines transform big, intimidating goals into achievable progress - mile by mile, decision by decision.

    To view the shownotes for this epsidoe of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    44 mins
  • Episode 137 | The Risk Control Continuum
    Nov 3 2025

    In this episode, we introduce the Risk Control Continuum - a practical, evidence-based framework for managing risk in the backcountry. He explores how environmental, psychosocial, and operational hazards trigger physiological, functional, and cognitive drift, leading to cascades of failure. Listeners learn the HEAT and ECG checklists for detecting and reversing control loss, and how structured decision gates and route planning maintain safety, awareness, and performance in adverse environments.

    To view the shownotes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    33 mins
  • Episode 136 | Fringe Season Layering
    Oct 20 2025

    What is the difference in layering strategy from summertime to the fall-winter transition? In this episode, Ryan Jordan discusses how the environment of the fringe season (colder temperatures and stormier weather) demands different types of layers and a different approach to layering.

    To view the show notes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    30 mins
  • Episode 135 | Field Notes - The Metabolic Cost of Bushwhacking
    Oct 13 2025

    In the Field Notes episode, we explore why bushwhacking miles aren't just harder but metabolically different. The Metabolic Energy Mile (MEM) framework breaks this down into three types of work: brush work (muscle strain from pushing through vegetation), impedance work (lost efficiency from constant stops and detours), and hazard work (the stabilizing effort to avoid injury). Each inflates the Metabolic Difficulty Ratio (MDR) in unique ways, helping us better predict energy cost, travel time, and safety off-trail.

    To view the shownotes for this episode of the Backpacking Light Podcast, click here.

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    25 mins