It’s a fact: tramping needs gear, and that gear needs a home when it’s not being used, and that home depends on the space available. Keeping things neat and orderly makes it easy to find your gear so that you don’t make expensive duplicate purchases, for example. How many gas cookers do you need, after all?
Dawn, from Christchurch, has a hanging shelf for her gear: “The room has a high ceiling, so we set up a shelf and pulley system a couple of years ago,” she says. The shelf is around 2.5m long by 1.5m wide, and holds most of the things Dawn and her three children need for tramping trips. “We keep some equipment in the shed, like our camp cooker, chairs and the big family tent, but we had mice out there for a while, so we keep the everyday stuff in the house. It’s simple to access: I just lower the shelf, take everything I need, lift it up again and away we go.”
Aucklander Jénifer Silva uses the garage – almost all of it. She was an outdoor instructor 30 years ago and has recently returned to tramping with her partner and her 10-year-old son. In the last six months they’ve bought a load of new gear.
”I didn’t want to shove it in the storage area under the house, and I’m playing around with trying to get things right for everyone,” she says. “I moved everything into our garage, which has lots of space and a huge bench.”
It’s perfect, she says: “It’s all in one place, so when I pack I can see where everything is and get it together easily. If I’m stressed, I’ll go there and relax and potter. I love it.”
Plant pots got moved in favour of kit boxes, shelves, containers and pack hooks. “I spend a lot of time down there, listening to the radio while fiddling and playing with our gear to make it lighter, better and more efficient.”


My gear through the decades