Vegan Meatloaf

 

It doesn’t really taste much like any meatloaf I remember from childhood, but I reckon it’s delicious in its own right. The key here is not to over blend the ingredients or you can end up with a bit of a mush. If you’ve got time, allow the loaf to stand for a while as this allows it to firm up a bit.


Ingredients:

Loaf:

  • 2 cans chickpeas
  • 2 medium carrots
  • 2 large celery sticks
  • 1 medium onion
  • 1 medium sweet potato (approx 150g)
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 2 cups breadcrumbs (can be fresh or dry)
  • 2 tablespoons flax seeds
  • 2 table spoons olive oil
  • 1-2 table spoons tamari
  • 3-4 tablespoons worcestershire sauce
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste

Maple glaze:

  • 1/4 cup tomato paste
  • 2 table spoons maple syrup
  • 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon tamari
  • 1 teaspoon paprika

Instructions:

  • Pre-heat the oven to 170ºC
  • Roughly chop up all the veggies
  • Place all the ingredients in a food processor and blend
  • You may need to do this in batches depending on the size of your food processor
  • Be very careful not to over blend; you’re aiming for a consistency that’s chunky not mushy
  • Place the mixture in a loaf pan lined with baking paper, and pack it down with a spoon or spatula
  • Bake the loaf in the oven for 30 minutes
  • Meanwhile, mix the ingredients for the maple glaze and combine thoroughly
  • After 30 minutes spread the maple glaze over the loaf and bake for another 25 mins
  • Serve with green veggies

 

Smoky Pea Soup

Tastes like Pea and Ham soup – but there’s no ham!


Ingredients:

  • 2  red or white onions – chopped
  • 2-3 celery stalks – chopped
  • 5 medium potatoes – chopped
  • 2 medium carrots – diced
  • 1 cup yellow (or green) split peas (washed)
  • 1 crushed garlic clove
  • Vegetable stock cube
  • 2 lapsang souchong tea bags
  • 3 whole cloves
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1-2 tbsp coconut or olive oil

Instructions:

  1. Add the tea bags to a cup and fill with boiling water. Leave to brew for 10-15 minutes while you prepare the rest of the soup
  2. In a deep pot or saucepan, sauté the chopped onions in the oil for several minutes on a low heat
  3. Stir frequently, be careful not to brown or burn the onions
  4. Then add the chopped celery, potatoes and carrots and sauté for another couple of minutes
  5. Now add the garlic, stir for a few seconds, and then add the tea brew (without the tea bags!)
  6. Top up with enough water to have all the vegetables floating
  7. Add the washed split peas, stock cube, cloves and bay leaf
  8.  Add more water if necessary
  9. Cook on low, stirring regularly to avoid catching on the bottom of the pan; more frequently as the soup begins to thicken
  10. Cook for at least 1 ½hrs – enough time for everything to become mushy and delicious

 

Masala Chai

Masala chai is a milky, spiced Indian tea. It’s delicious on a cold, rainy autumn or winter’s day, and also as a warming drink for your flask when out in the hills.

A variety of spices can be used and the ratios are really down to personal preference, but the mainstays are usually cinnamon, cloves, ginger, cardamom and fennel or star anise.


Ingredients:

Makes 4 cups

  • Almond/ rice/ soy milk – 2 cups
  • Water – 2 cups
  • 10 cardamom pods
  • 4 black peppercorns
  • 1 star anise
  • 1-2 cinnamon sticks
  • 2 cloves
  • 4 large slivers of fresh ginger
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 pinch of rose petals
  • 2 teabags
  • 1 teaspoon honey per serving – optional

Instructions:

  1. Add the milk, water and spices to a large saucepan
  2. Bring to a gentle simmer over a low heat
  3. Add the teabags and allow to infuse for a few minutes
  4. Strain the tea into mugs
  5. Add a small amount (teaspoon or less) of honey to sweeten
  6. If you use non-dairy milks such as almond or rice (which are naturally sweet) you don’t really need to add much, if any, sweetener

 

 

Pulled Mushrooms

Serves: 2

Ingredients:

  • Portobello mushrooms – 4
  • Medium onion – 1
  • Garlic clove – 1
  • Tamari – 1 tablespoon
  • Rice wine vinegar – 3 tablespoons
  • Fish sauce – 1/2 teaspoon
  • Sweet chilli sauce – 1 tablespoon
  • Honey – 1 teaspoon
  • Lemon/ lime juice – 2 teaspoons
  • Sesame oil
  • Smoked paprika – 1/2 teaspoon

Instructions:

  1. Pre-heat oven to 200°C
  2. Remove the stems from the mushrooms and set aside
  3. Gently remove the gills (underside) of the mushroom with a spoon (they contain too much liquid)
  4. Roast the mushroom caps (flat side down) for about 30 mins
  5. While the mushrooms are roasting, cut the onion in half and thinly slice into long, thin strips
  6. Fry the onion in a little oil until they start to caramelise
  7. Shred/ pull apart the mushroom stalks using 2 forks
  8. When the whole mushrooms are roasted, remove from the oven and shred them as well
  9. Add the shredded mushrooms to the caramelised onion and fry for a few minutes more
  10. Now add the rest of the ingredients to the pan, tossing together to combine
  11. Reduce down for a minute or two, until there is less liquid and the mixture is fairly thick, sticky and delicious
  12. Serve the pulled mushrooms on toast, or as a burger, with roasted veggies or a salad

Eating for the Planet

Image: www.eatforum.org

Are you confused by all the contradictory dietary advice out there?

Should you go low fat or low carb? Vegan or paleo? Ketogenic? Mediterranean? Pescatarian?

The truth is, it’s extremely difficult to prove that there’s one universal diet that’s superior to all others, certainly in terms of its effects on health and peak performance.

One thing is clear, we shouldn’t be eating the prevailing low quality Western diet, which is high in refined sugar, processed and red meat and saturated fat. This pattern of eating has resulted in 2 billion people being overweight or obese, and has fuelled the increasing prevalence of non-communicable diseases such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancer (1,2).

In reality, many people will derive significant health benefits if they stick to a few simple, evidence based food principles.

However, if we really want to answer the question of “what should we eat?” then we must also consider planetary health, as this is inextricably linked to our own health and survival.

And when we take the planet into consideration, the answer is very clear: we should eat a plant-based diet.

This is the conclusion of a number large-scale, mainstream scientific studies (3,4,5), including the recently published literature review by the EAT-Lancet Commission (1).

So why is a plant-based diet best for the planet?

To answer this we need to look at our current system of food production, which we now understand to be the single largest contributor to environmental degradation.

Food systems account for up to 30% of global greenhouse gas emissions(1,3,5). However, climate change is only part of the story. Food systems drive a range of serious environmental issues that now threaten human health and survival, including biodiversity loss, eutrophication and depletion of fresh water supplies.

Food production is the largest cause of global land-use change, with 40% of terrestrial land used for crops and grazing. This has resulted in massive biodiversity loss, to the extent that we are witnessing the Earth’s 6th Mass Extinction Event. Species are being lost 100-1000 times faster than the natural background rate. 80% of extinction threats to birds and mammals are due to agriculture (1).

The impact of humans and our agriculture is now so great that it has drastically altered the make-up of global biomass (the total weight of living matter in a given area).

Humans comprise just 0.01% of Earth’s total biomass, but our impact is disproportionately large; 96% of all mammals are either humans (36%) or our livestock (60%) – mainly cattle and pigs. Only 4% of mammals are wild. 70% of all birds on the planet are farmed poultry. Only 30% are wild (6).

Food production is responsible for 78% of eutrophication (1,5). This refers to the excessive application of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilisers, which are washed off into streams and rivers, causing algal blooms and hypoxic conditions in freshwater and marine ecosystems, which results in widespread coastal “dead zones,” devoid of aquatic life.

In areas where fish still exist, 60% of the world’s fish stocks are now fully fished, and 30% are overfished. Catches by global marine fisheries have been declining since 1996 (1).

The overall negative impacts of our food systems are very clear, but we still need to eat. So what we really want to know is: which food products are ecologically sustainable, and which are harmful.

To answer this, Joseph Poore and Thomas Nemecek performed the largest study to date of the impacts of agriculture on the environment, and their results were published in Science in 2018 (5).

They undertook a global analysis of data from 38,700 farms in 119 countries, looking at 40 food products, in terms of their effects on five key environmental indicators: greenhouse gas emissions, land use, acidification, eutrophication and freshwater withdrawals.

They found that even the most sustainable animal products exceed the average impacts of plant protein. As a result, if we were to switch to a plant based diet, it would reduce land use by 76%, greenhouse gas emissions by 49%, acidification by 50%, eutrophication by 49% and freshwater use by 19%.

In countries such as the UK, Australia and the USA, where meat consumption is 3 times the global average, the effects would be even greater.

The authors concluded that moving from a meat-based to plant-based diet has “transformative potential” and that avoiding meat and dairy is the single biggest way we can reduce our ecological impact.

But what exactly should we eat? What does a diet that is both healthy and ecologically sustainable look like?

This key question was finally addressed by EAT-Lancet Commission (a joint project by the Norway based NGO EAT and the Lancet Medical Journal), which undertook an extensive literature review and published its results earlier this year (1).

They came up with a universal healthy reference diet, or Planetary Diet, which is predominantly plant-based, provides 2500 kcal per day, and consists largely of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts and unsaturated oils. It specifies a low to moderate amount of seafood and poultry, and no or low amounts of red meat, processed meat, added sugar, refined grains and starchy vegetables.

In practice, the Planetary Diet is similar to a Mediterranean or Okinawan Diet, which for many Europeans represents quite a shift in the way they eat. It would involve a 77% reduction in red meat consumption (by allowing only 1 beef burger per week), 15 times more intake of nuts and seeds, 2 servings of fish per week, 1-2 eggs per week, and 1 glass of milk per day (or 250g of full fat milk products).

So, having read this, are you now going to adopt the Planetary Diet, or perhaps go completely vegan? Maybe not…

Behavioural change is notoriously difficult. Even if there was widespread acceptance of the problems associated with our current level of consumption of animal products, awareness of an issue is no guarantee that people will adopt a more sensible path, as most health practitioners will attest.

This is certainly true for plant-based dietary change, probably because for many societies, eating animal products is the traditional, dominant eating pattern. A rejection of meat represents a rejection of social norms. It’s also important to appreciate that food confers much more than nutritional needs. It’s a source of pleasure, personal identity and economic status. In many developing countries eating meat is aspirational and symbolic of wealth. For some people, meat is associated with masculinity.

This is borne out by studies of public perceptions surrounding food impacts and dietary change, which suggest that there can be scepticism of the scientific evidence, resistance to the concept of reducing meat intake, and that non-food related behaviour change is deemed more acceptable (7).

However, eventually a threshold is usually reached, beyond which our resistance to change is overpowered by the realisation of the gravity of a situation, accompanied by a sense of urgency; such as when a patient receives a diagnosis of a life-threatening condition and finally feels compelled to make radical lifestyle changes. Perhaps as a society we are approaching that point with environmental degradation and non-communicable diseases.

Recently it feels as if the tide may be turning, with the global support for Greta Thunberg and the climate strikes, the Extinction Rebellion protests, and the increasing cultural acceptability of plant-based eating.

Make no mistake, we have very little time left to limit climate change to a survivable level and prevent further irreversible biodiversity loss. We urgently need to make transformative changes if we hope to do this, and there is no doubt that a global shift towards healthy, plant-based diets represents a very powerful tool.


If you still need some convincing, or are finding it difficult to make the leap to a more plant-based lifestyle, here are a few tips and suggestions:

First, watch the movie “Cowspiracy” (you can find it on Netflix).

Start experimenting with plant-based eating. There are now tonnes of resources out there (even confirmed omnivorous chefs such as Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and Jamie Oliver are jumping on the bandwagon). The key is to find a tribe that suits you.

Personal favourites:

  • River Cottage Veg Everyday and Much More Veg
  • The Happy Pear
  • Thug Kitchen (Eat like you give a f*ck)

Get inspired and check out some incredible plant based athletes, for example:

  • Rich Roll
    • Ultra-endurance athlete
    • Author of Finding Ultra
    • Host of The Rich Roll Podcast
  • Scott Jurek
    • Elite US ultrarunner
    • Author of Eat and Run

References:

  1. Willett W, Rockström J, Loken B, Springmann M, Lang T, Vermeulen S, et al. Food in the Anthropocene: the EAT–Lancet Commission on healthy diets from sustainable food systems. The Lancet. 2019 2019/02/02/;393(10170):447-92.
  2. Afshin A, Sur PJ, Fay KA, Cornaby L, Ferrara G, Salama JS, et al. Health effects of dietary risks in 195 countries, 1990–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. The Lancet. 2019;393(10184):1958-72.
  3. Aleksandrowicz L, Green R, Joy EJM, Smith P, Haines A. The Impacts of Dietary Change on Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Land Use, Water Use, and Health: A Systematic Review. PLOS ONE. 2016;11(11):e0165797.
  4. Clark M, Tilman D. Comparative analysis of environmental impacts of agricultural production systems, agricultural input efficiency, and food choice. Environmental Research Letters. 2017 2017/06/01;12(6):064016.
  5. Poore J, Nemecek T. Reducing food’s environmental impacts through producers and consumers. Science. 2018;360(6392):987.
  6. Bar-On YM, Phillips R, Milo R. The biomass distribution on Earth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2018;115(25):6506.
  7. Macdiarmid JI, Douglas F, Campbell J. Eating like there’s no tomorrow: Public awareness of the environmental impact of food and reluctance to eat less meat as part of a sustainable diet. Appetite. 2016 2016/01/01/;96:487-93.

 

Buddha Bowl – roasted vegetables, chickpeas, satay sauce

I think I could eat a Buddha Bowl every night of the week. Endless variations on a simple theme: one third grains, one third veggies and one third protein. Then top it off with a delicious sauce.


Serves 4

Ingredients:

Carbs/ Grains

  • Brown rice – 1 cup
  • Quinoa – 1 cup

Veggies and protein

  • Medium broccoli – half
  • Medium cauliflower – half
  • Medium carrots – 2
  • Red capsicum – 1
  • Chickpeas – 1 tin (approx 230g)
  • Cumin – 2 teaspoons
  • Coriander – 1 teaspoon
  • Smoked paprika – 1 teaspoon
  • Cayenne pepper – 1/2 teaspoon
  • Tamari/ soy sauce – 1-2 tablespoons
  • Garlic – 2 cloves
  • Lime -1 squeezed
  • Avocado – 1 chopped

Satay sauce

  • Almond/ peanut butter – 1/2 cup
  • Warm water – 1/2 cup
  • Japanese rice vinegar – 1/4 cup
  • Tamari (or soy) sauce – 2 teaspoons
  • Sesame oil – 2 teaspoons
  • Honey – 1 teaspoon
  • Lime juice – 2 teaspoons

Instructions:

  1. Rinse the rice and quinoa and place in a saucepan
  2. Cover with water and bring to the boil
  3. Once boiling, reduce the heat to minimal, place a lid on the saucepan, allow to cook for approximately 20 minutes. Turn off the heat and allow the grains to absorb for another 10 minutes or so.
  4. Meanwhile, roughly chop up the brocolli, cauliflower, carrots and capsicum and place in a baking dish
  5. Add the drained chickpeas, spices and tamari to the veggies and mix together well
  6. Place in the oven (at 180°C) and cook for 20 minutes
  7. Meanwhile, make the satay sauce…
  8. Mix together the nut butter and warm water until it has a smooth consistency
  9. Then add the tamari, sesame oil, rice vinegar, honey and lime juice and mix together
  10. After 20 minutes in the oven remove the veggies, add the garlic and mix together
  11. Bake for another 10-15 minutes
  12. Remove the veggies and make your Buddha Bowl…
  13. Place the rice and quinoa mix at the bottom of the bowl and cover with plenty of the baked veggies
  14. Top with a few table spoons of the satay sauce and some chopped avocado
  15. Finally add a few teaspoons of lime juice

 

Avocado Chocolate Mousse


If the tofu based chocolate mousse doesn’t do it for you, try this avocado based version. Most people seem to credit Laura Coxeter as the inspiration for this recipe and I would certainly agree. I first saw her when she appeared on River Cottage a few years ago and made a raw chocolate ganache tart. This is just a simplified version.

Serves 4


Ingredients:

Mousse:

  • 2 large ripe avocados
  • Coconut oil – 50g
  • Cacao (or cocoa) powder – 70g
  • Maple syrup (or honey) – 2 tablespoons

Optional base:

  • Pecans (or almonds or walnuts or just use a mixture!) – 1/2 cup
  • Dates – 1/2 cup

Instructions:

  1. If you’re making the biscuity base, place the nuts and dates in a blender and blend until finely chopped
  2. Scrape out the mixture and put aside
  3. Gently heat the coconut oil in a pan so it melts. Allow to cool.
  4. Now place the avocados, coconut oil, maple syrup and cocoa powder in the blender
  5. Blend until smooth. This may take a few minutes.
  6. Place a large spoonful of the base mixture at the bottom of a glass (or bowl) and press it down firmly
  7. Add a few spoonfuls of the mousse mixture on top
  8. If you wish, you can add a third layer of berry compote – just heat a few handfuls of frozen berries in a pan until soft and mushy
  9. Repeat steps 6-8 for the remaining 3 portions
  10. Place the 4 glasses in the fridge for an hour or two and then serve

 

 

 

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Avocado Chocolate Mousse
Servings
Servings

Chocolate Mousse

A rich, nutty, chocolate mousse. There are other takes on the plant-based chocolate mousse but this one is a favourite, and uses silken tofu as the secret ingredient. Don’t let this put you off! (but check out this recipe for avocado chocolate mousse as well)


Ingredients:

(Serves 4)

Mousse

  • Silken tofu – 300g (drained)
  • Smooth nut butter – 100g
  • Maple Syrup – 1 tablespoon (substitution – honey)
  • Dark Chocolate –  100g (melted)
  • Chia seeds – 1 tablespoon (optional)
  • Fine sea salt – pinch

Berry Compote

  • Mixed frozen berries – 1 cup
  • Honey – 1 tablespoon (optional)

Instructions:

  • Place the tofu, nut butter, maple syrup, melted dark chocolate, chia seeds and salt in a food processor and blend until smooth
  • Spoon the mousse into individual bowls, cups or glasses (spatula also required)
  • For the compote, heat the frozen berries (+/- honey) gently in a  saucepan
  • Stir gently to prevent sticking
  • Allow to cool
  • Place a few spoonfuls of compote on top of the mousse
  • Leave in the fridge for a couple of hours before eating

 

 

 

 

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Nutty Chocolate Mousse
Servings
Servings

Tofu and veggie scramble

This is a great plant-based alternative to the usual go-to option of eggs on toast for breakfast or lunch. Don’t get me wrong, I’m a big fan of scrambled or poached eggs, just not all the time. We also need to get over our preconceptions about tofu – it’s not everyone’s cup of tea, but it provides an extremely useful source of healthy protein, and is very tasty when cooked properly, especially with an asian style sauce.  Stir-frying tofu works well; marinading and baking it is even better.


Ingredients:

  • Olive oil – 1 tablespoon
  • 1 small red or brown onion -finely diced
  • 1 small cauliflower – chopped into small floret
  • 1 red capsicum – diced
  • 2 handfuls of kale – roughly chopped
  • 225g block of extra-firm tofu – roughly chopped into walnut size pieces
  • Garlic – 2 cloves
  • Fresh ginger – 1 inch block – grated
  • Tamari  or soy sauce- 1 tablespoon
  • 1 carrot – shredded
  • Fresh coriander – 1 handful – roughly chopped

Directions:

  1. First drain the tofu, wrap it in kitchen roll and place between two plates or small chopping boards. Now place a weight on top to help compress the water out. Allow 30 minutes for this if possible.
  2. Get a large frying pan or wok and cook the onion in the olive oil for a few minutes
  3. Now add the cauliflower, red capsicum and kale and stir fry for 5 minutes or so (try not to overcook the veggies)
  4. Then add the garlic, tofu, tamari and ginger, and cook for another few minutes
  5. Finally stir through the shredded carrot and coriander 
  6. Serve wrapped in flatbreads or on toast

 

 

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Tofu Scramble
Servings
Servings

Wild camping gear list

 

If you haven’t been wild camping before, knowing what to pack can be a bit daunting.

As a starting point, I’ve written down the kit I take for 1-3 night wild camping trips in spring, summer and autumn in the UK. I’ll save a discussion about winter camping for another time.

Everyone will give you slightly different advice, and it takes a few trips to establish your own personal system, likes and dislikes.

I would suggest trying to stick to a few key principles:

Go light to go fast:

Take enough gear to be safe and warm, but otherwise focus on going as light as possible – you’ll be thankful when you’re still looking for your elusive camp spot after 8 hours on the hill.

Approach with the right mindset:

Part of the adventure of wild camping is to rough it a bit; you’ll get a lot more out of the experience if you accept that you’re going to have a couple of nights of suboptimal sleep, no hot showers and too many dehydrated noodles and cereal bars.

If you approach the trip with this mindset, you’ll be less likely to pack unnecessary gear which will only weigh you down.  I can assure you that when you get back your evening meal will taste fantastic, and you’ll sleep like a log!

Allow yourself a luxury item:

Admittedly, if you start to do a lot of wild camping, then the fully spartan, minimalist approach can wear a bit thin. Yes, it’s supposed to be an adventure, but it’s also supposed to be enjoyable, so there’s nothing wrong with taking a luxury item or two to keep morale up. For example, freshly ground coffee, a small cake to share in the evening, hipflask with whisky etc.

So, here’s the basic list:

  • Rucksack:
    • 40 litres
    • this is plenty of space for a 2 night camping trip. If you take something bigger you’ll likely fill it with stuff you don’t need. Going for a smaller pack forces you to think about what’s really essential. If absolutely necessary, some items can be covered and strapped to the outside (eg. a rolled up sleeping mat)
    • in winter or on longer trips you’ll need more gear, so a 60-70 litre pack is more useful
  • Sleeping:
    • Lightweight 1 man tent
      • Ideally this should weigh less than 1.5kg. You can shave some weight by buying ultralightweight tent pegs. Aim for a model with a decent vestibule (porch area for storing your rucksack and cooking in if it’s raining), a robust groundsheet and enough height so you can sit up
    • Full length sleeping mat
    • Stuff sack – fill with your spare clothes, cover with a fleece and use as a pillow
    • 2-3 season sleeping bag
  • Cooking:
    • Lightweight stove and pan – I use a Jetboil all in one system, so there’s no need for a pan
    • Enough fuel
    • Matches – if the stove lighter fails
    • Mug
    • Large bowl
    • Spoon/ spork
    • Pocket knife
    • Food – dehydrated meals for the number of nights you’re away, oats for breakfast, wraps/ bagels for lunches, plenty of trail mix and cereal bars for snacks (preferably home-made – see here, here and here)
    • Teas/ coffee/ hot chocolate/ soup – I allow for at least 4 hot drinks per day plus water
    • Water bottle – for collecting and storing water at camp
    • Water filtration system – if you’re going wild camping then the assumption is you’re going to have access to water supplies along the way. I always boil my water when at camp, and use a filter to make water safe when en route, unless I’m sure it’s clean
  • Clothing:
    • Waterproof jacket and trousers
    • Primaloft or down jacket for warmth at lunch stops and camp (synthetic insulation is more useful than down in the damp UK climate)
    • Base layer
    • Microfleece
    • Walking trousers
    • Spare base layer and pants/ thermals for camp
    • Walking socks plus  1 spare pair
    • Boots
    • 2 plastic bags
      • Depending on the conditions and terrain, it’s possible your boots and socks will be wet when you get to camp. Take a spare pair of socks to change into and line your boots with plastic bags. You can then walk around camp in your boots without getting your fresh socks wet. Generally your boots will have mostly dried off by the next day. Wring out your wet socks and dry them in your sleeping bag overnight.
    • Gaiters – invaluable for helping to keep your feet dry
    • Beanie
    • Gloves (consider also taking mitts)
    • Buff
    • Midge net – essential if camping in the West of Scotland
    • Multiple dry bags of various sizes for storing spare clothing and your sleeping bag
  • Miscellaneous items:
    • Map and compass
    • Phone
    • Headtorch (plus spare batteries or back up headtorch)
    • Sunscreen, sunglasses and sun hat – if appropriate
    • Alcohol hand sanitiser gel/ toilet paper/ plastic trowel
    • Toothbrush and toothpaste
    • Bin bag – you need to pack out all your waste
    • Basic first aid kit – dressings, tick remover tool, analgesia etc
    • Paracord and duct tape for emergency repairs