I didn't really see a good place to put this, buy I feel like it's relevant to some in the group. I'm eating carnivore again, after cycling on and off for the last 5 or 6 years. I've had some good runs, and it's been extremely beneficial for me for so many reasons, but primarily performance. Well, I have some western mountain hunts coming up at the end of the month, and throughout fall and winter. I didn't want to break my diet, nor did I want to lose the benefits of eating carnivore.
Freeze drying your own food requires a significant initial expense, and when I looked at the loss for freeze dried meat, it is ghastly. A 1lb ribeye is $15 these days, and that will leave you with somewhere around 5-7oz of meat when dehydrated, plus the cost of packaging, time, etc. I've looked at other options for meat as well, but they are all ugly. I stumbled into a current mountain house sale. You can buy 10lb cans of dehydrated beef or chicken and it's cheap. I paid right at $90 delivered for a 10lb can of beef and a 10lb can of chicken. This is the hydrated equivalent of roughly 60-70lbs of food.
If you calculate 2lb of food per day on the mountain, that works out to $9/ day. If you buy 2 dehydrated (insert brand) pasta meals a day plus snacks, you're looking at $25-$30/ day or more for less than half of the protein and a bunch of gut bomb garbage.
Any other backcountry carnivores out there? How are you handling backpacking meals?
Freeze drying your own food requires a significant initial expense, and when I looked at the loss for freeze dried meat, it is ghastly. A 1lb ribeye is $15 these days, and that will leave you with somewhere around 5-7oz of meat when dehydrated, plus the cost of packaging, time, etc. I've looked at other options for meat as well, but they are all ugly. I stumbled into a current mountain house sale. You can buy 10lb cans of dehydrated beef or chicken and it's cheap. I paid right at $90 delivered for a 10lb can of beef and a 10lb can of chicken. This is the hydrated equivalent of roughly 60-70lbs of food.
If you calculate 2lb of food per day on the mountain, that works out to $9/ day. If you buy 2 dehydrated (insert brand) pasta meals a day plus snacks, you're looking at $25-$30/ day or more for less than half of the protein and a bunch of gut bomb garbage.
Any other backcountry carnivores out there? How are you handling backpacking meals?