Author and photographer Ray Salisbury

February 2023

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February 2023

Ray Salisbury & his tramping gear.

Ray Salisbury began his tramping career in Auckland’s Waitakere Ranges when a child. Now, he calls Nelson home and is the author of Tableland: The history of Mt Arthur, Kahurangi National Park. He can often be found photographing Aotearoa’s natural landscape.

Pack

I carry a modern version of the older Macpac Torre, an 80l single-compartment sack that’s suited for the rugged conditions I haul it through. This features a crampon patch and ice-axe loop for the occasional alpine jaunt.

Clothing

Most of my clothing is from Macpac, including polypro, liner socks, raincoat, T-shirts, cap, shorts, over-mitts, polar fleece and a Halo down jacket.

Photography kit

I’ve replaced my heavy DSLR with a much lighter Sony A7iii mirrorless camera. A 28–200mm lens caters for wildlife and landscape shots. A hefty carbon-fibre Benro tripod ensures pin-sharp images and enables me to shoot at night and take selfies from a distance.

Electronics

An iPhone is useful to view topo-maps and for GPS navigation. I carry an Accusat pocket series 406 PLB for safety. A powerful Fenix HL60R 950-lumen headlamp is vital for returning from photo shoots in the dark, as well as illuminating huts for night-time images. An Adata 20000mAh power bank charges the phone, headlamp, Garmin watch and the camera.

Footwear

Asolo TPS full-grain leather boots are my favourites. They’re stiff enough to fit crampons. I wear liners inside thicker tramping socks and never suffer from blisters. Macpac’s Cascade gaiters keep my feet dry in shallow river crossings. A single trekking pole aids balance.

Cooking

For 27 years I have relied on the Kovea Backpacker stove with propane-butane gas canisters. Cheap, compact and idiot-proof. I heat dinner and an array of hot drinks in a simple saucepan kit from Kathmandu.

Sleeping gear

My Latitude 500 two-season sleeping bag from Macpac is lightweight and suitable for sleeping inside huts. If I’m forced to camp, then I wear lots of clothes to mitigate the cold and lie on a winter-weight inflatable down-filled mat from Exped. While cheap, my Mono one-person tent by Freedom Equipment weighs only 1300g. It’s small but light.

Ray Salisbury

About the author

Ray Salisbury

Ray Salisbury is an author and photographer living in Nelson with his wife and cat. He studied design and photography and has been contributing to Wilderness since 1997. His books include Tableland: The history behind Mt Arthur and EPIC: Adventures across Aotearoa. Ray began tramping with a camera more than 50 years ago and has visited over 500 backcountry huts.

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