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Should weight be high or low in backpack?

Small items go in the side or top pockets. On rough terrain, where a low center of gravity is important, it might be wise to put heavy things on the bottom. For external-frame packs, heavy things go high and as close to your back as possible.



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Pack your backpack with the heaviest items closest to your back: Don't drop all your stuff in the main compartment. Use the side pockets to spread the weight out. If your pack is really heavy and you can't get around the number of books you need, take some of the books out of your pack and carry them in your hands.

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No matter how well-designed the backpack, less weight is always better. Use the bathroom scale to check that a pack isn't over 10% to 20% of your child's body weight. For example, a child who weighs 80 pounds shouldn't carry a backpack that weighs more than 8 to 16 pounds.

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The added bulk of a weighted backpack or vest increases the training effect of virtually any exercise. This is a result of your cardiovascular system and muscles having to work harder than usual.

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Effects of an overweight backpack The extra weight can distort the natural curve of the middle and lower back, causing muscle strain. Members of the UI Hospitals & Clinics Rehabilitation Services team recommend you carry no more than ten percent of your weight in a backpack.

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10 Ways to Lighten Your Backpacking Pack Weight
  1. Repackage food and personal care items. ...
  2. Sleep System: Maximize a minimal amount of insulation. ...
  3. Opt for a tent that pitches with trekking or ski poles. ...
  4. Plan ahead and ration your water carrying. ...
  5. Swap out heavy water bottles for a collapsible bottle. ...
  6. Eat out of your pot.


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Don't carry the weight of the world on your shoulders, put it on your hips! For a simple webbing waist belt, the bottom of the belt should rest on top of your hip sockets. For a padded belt, the contoured center of the waist belt should cup the pronounced part of your hips (the illiac crest). Tighten until snug.

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A loaded backpacking pack should not weigh more than about 20 percent of your body weight. (If you weigh 150 pounds, your pack should not exceed 30 pounds for backpacking.) A loaded day hiking pack should not weigh more than about 10 percent of your body weight.

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Pack the backpack so that most of its weight rests in the curve of your child's lower back. Pack the heaviest items like textbooks and computers closest to the body and place other items equally on the right and left sides. Pack items in the different compartments. This helps distribute heavy loads evenly.

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Choosing the Best Fit The hip belt of a well-fitting pack will be centered on top of your iliac crest. It won't be any higher or lower. If the hip belt slides below your iliac crest while you are trying on the pack, then it is too big. If it rests on your lower back, then it is too small.

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When you add an extremely heavy school bag, five days a week for over a decade, we're basically crushing those water-filled gaps, compressing the spine with all the extra weight. A backpack accelerates the rate at which we lose water in the lumbar disks, causing us to shrink a little bit more quickly.

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Continuous use of heavy backpacks, bags, suitcases, briefcases, and purses can cause muscle weakness and fatigue. This pushes the spine out of alignment. It also causes bad posture and other conditions that lead to scoliosis in children and teens (since the spine is still developing at these ages).

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Backpacks are designed to distribute weight onto our hips through the hip belt. Our hips have a lot of capacity to carry weight, so this isn't a bad thing, but with enough weight, time, and steps, our hips will still reach a limit. Another specific impact of our hips carrying our pack weight shows up in our IT bands.

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