Each person, depending on their level of fitness and training can hike some number of miles in a day with no load on their back. This figure establishes a base value for each person than be be used to estimate distances covered carrying various loads. Roman (who is a wilderness racer) says he can cover 70 miles in a day. This is hiking for 17.5 hours at 4 miles per hour. A more reasonable value for a typical in-shape backpacker might be 40 miles (10 hours at 4 miles per hour). Each pound carried then reduces the number of miles per day travelled. Roman Dial estimates a penalty of 1 mile per day for every pound carried. I argue below that a penalty of 0.5 mile per day is more accurate for people not operating at elite levels with light loads (i.e. most of us).
On page 23 of Ray Jardine's book "Trail Life" (2009) is a graph of pack weight versus miles per day travelled. He says that this data was obtained by analyzing records of his and Jennies PCT hikes. I used a ruler to scale several points from this graph, and then fit a line to the points I scaled:
This fit crosses the Y axis at approximately 37 miles per day, which is a believable number for the number of miles hiked in a day by an individual in excellent shape carrying no load. The fit line drops 0.52 miles per pound of load, in other words for every 2 pounds on a persons back, he can cover 1 mile less each day. (Note that Ray's data was originally shown as a smooth parabolic curve). Note also that Ray Jardine says his typical hiking rate is 2.75 miles per hour.
Roman Dial is an interesting fellow to pull data from.
He is an adventure racer, and the fact that he even mentions going
distances like 60 miles in a day makes someone like me wonder if any
information extracted from his experiences would be relevant to what I do.
But I think his experiences are very relevant.
First off he says that weight kills both speed and distance.
Some figures he quotes:
I used a ruler to scale data from Roman Dials article. Then I fit a parabola of the form y = a + b / x to this data (which fit his data very nicely) and plotted it along with Ray's data. For pack loads of 20 pounds and up, the data is almost identical.
I show two reference lines in the plot above, one with a slope of -0.5 miles per pound added (the blue line), the other with a slope of -1.0 miles per pound added (the purple line).
Given that Romans curve is a parabola, quoting a linear relationship like a 1 mile per pound penaly can only be correct over some range of the curve. Perhaps the most important conclusion to draw from a curve like this is that the greatest benefits of dropping pack weight are with light packs. If you are already carrying a 50 pound pack, an extra pound is not going to slow you down as much as if you are carrying a 20 pound pack and add an extra pound. So if you are ever thinking along the lines of "my pack is so light, it won't matter if I toss in something extra", you are completely wrong.
Clearly, carrying a lighter load allows a person to either hike faster, or for more hours per day, or both.
Roman Dial mentions in his article that food can substitute for sleep and vice-versa. He makes a number of calculations based on 3 pounds of food per day, but says that 2 pounds per day is a good target for trips of an intermediate length. He carries less on shorter trips, more on longer trips. He hopes to manage 500 miles in 3 weeks by training himself to a 75 mile per day unloaded base level, carrying a 10 pound base weight and 2 pounds of food per day. Well, well, a different realm than mine.
Mt Lemmon - June, 2009. Covered 11.9 miles with 2000 feet of elevation gain (and loss) at an average elevation of 8000 feet in perhaps 7 hours or so (somewhat less than 2 miles per hour).
Mt Wrightson - July 13, 2009. Covered 12.1 miles with 4000 feet of elevation gain (and loss) at an average elevation of 7500 feet in exactly 6 hours. Almost exactly 2 miles per hour on the average. It took 3.5 hours to reach the summit (attempting to run the whole way), and 2.5 hours to get down. Beat my joints up big time, probably won't try this again.
These hikes were done with little or no pack weight on good, albeit steep, trails. They seem to bear out a hiking speed of 2 miles per hour, and a daily base distance of 12 miles. A greater pack load, off-country travel, or higher elevation would be expected to change this. On the other hand some of my previous days with 40+ pound packs have covered only 5 miles or so, so if I can consistently cover 10 miles per day, I won't be unhappy and can strive for more.
Tom's hiking pages / tom@mmto.org