What food do you keep on you while riding?

polarisrider1

New member
If at Tog. We make prime Rib sammiches from left over dinner the night before, scam some extra rolls and horseradish and toss in some snack bars for desert, wash down with power aid. I have no room on sled for a hot dogger so I must suffer with prime rib leftovers. Lol It's a tough world out there. Normally Snickers bars.
 
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DRanger024

New member
I usually suck the left over egg yoke and dry sour milk out of my mustache. Then I'll pull the crumbs and globs of syrup out of my beard for dessert. Wash it down with a hand full of snow cause whatever drink I had in the trunk of my sled either blew up or lost it's cap, and carry on down the old logging roads.
 

bobsledder

New member
food

A bud and I were saddlebagging in da Youp and we had a ziplock bag of pretzels and after 4 days they started tasting like 2 stroke. When we plan the munchies for our adventures we include 2 stroke pretzels and have a big laugh!
 
Haha

I usually suck the left over egg yoke and dry sour milk out of my mustache. Then I'll pull the crumbs and globs of syrup out of my beard for dessert. Wash it down with a hand full of snow cause whatever drink I had in the trunk of my sled either blew up or lost it's cap, and carry on down the old logging roads.

Best Answer ever!!!
 

booondocker

New member
Actually if you are going thru some wild areas of the U.P., it is wise to put in your backpack, stuff that keeps.

Swiss army knife, parachut cord, energy bars, half a candle, lighter, matches, candy bar (don't really need them, but only time I can rationalize buying them...funny...they usually are the first to get eaten too...) nuts, bubble gum, and safety blanket.

We also usually take some pops, and water, and peanut butter sandwiches...along with any other oddities that someone else brings along.

Not big on building fires, or roasting things when the act of gathering wood can over-heat a body with all the gear on.

Course we do a bunch of trail busting down two tracks, and not a single time out, don't I wish I had something I had back at camp, but didn't bring along.
 

DRanger024

New member
Actually if you are going thru some wild areas of the U.P., it is wise to put in your backpack, stuff that keeps.

Swiss army knife, parachut cord, energy bars, half a candle, lighter, matches, candy bar (don't really need them, but only time I can rationalize buying them...funny...they usually are the first to get eaten too...) nuts, bubble gum, and safety blanket.

We also usually take some pops, and water, and peanut butter sandwiches...along with any other oddities that someone else brings along.

Not big on building fires, or roasting things when the act of gathering wood can over-heat a body with all the gear on.

Course we do a bunch of trail busting down two tracks, and not a single time out, don't I wish I had something I had back at camp, but didn't bring along.

I'm pretty minimalist on what I carry with me when I ride but you bet I carry everything I need to survive. Not to mention your snowmobile can be your biggest survival tool even after it has broken down.
 

swanee

New member
Enough peanut M & M's to fill a Ziplock sandwich bag. Refill every morning from the Costco 3 or 4 pounder.
 

vx700xtc

Member
Food?, on a sled trip?, never even thought of food. Breakfast; 150 miles(gas around 100) lunch-(1-3pm.) 150 miles back to camp (gas around 200). pizza/ ham sandwich/can of soup: Bed. Rinse and repeat.
 
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