A GlampSpedition Invitation
Everything you need to know before we head into the wild together.
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The Philosophy
This isn't roughing it. It's the opposite — a fully-equipped expedition designed to put remarkable places within reach without sacrificing comfort, great food, or the joy of being present.
The logistics are handled. The gear is staged, the kitchen is stocked, and the menu is planned. Your job is to show up ready to explore, eat well, and be surprised by how good it feels to be outside.
Read through this page once. Then let go and enjoy the ride.
What We Bring
The vehicle is outfitted for groups up to six. A handful of personal items are yours to bring — they're called out clearly in the packing list below.
Rooftop tent plus two ground tents that sleep up to six. You have a roof — bring your own sleeping bag, sleeping pad, and pillow.
Snow Peak Takibi grill, Snow Peak butane stoves, full CampMate spice system, RV-quality Sea to Summit cookware, knives, utensils, and plates. Bistro quality in the field.
2,000W power station, solar panel, EcoFlow battery, Starlink satellite internet. Stay charged and connected — or don't. Your call.
38L powered fridge keeps proteins, produce, and drinks cold for the entire trip. No warm beer. No spoiled food.
Zutti propane fire pit, Takibi campfire, fire tools, starter blocks, and lighting. Evenings are taken care of.
Four REI camp chairs, two Wonderland tables, rugs, rope lights, lanterns, and a full awning system. It feels like a room outside. Bring your own chair if the crew is larger than four.
Camp shower shelter, portable shower pump, full toilet kit, biodegradable soaps. Cleaner than you'd expect.
Comprehensive first aid kit including tourniquet, wound care, blister treatment, Benadryl, Imodium, and more. Plus road emergency kit and InReach satellite communicator.
Your Packing List
The kitchen, shelter, power, and fire are handled. Three things you always own: your sleep system, your chair, and your clothing. Everything else is almost certainly covered.
Breakfast note: We provide group meals for lunch and dinner. Bring your own breakfast items or tell us your preferences — we're happy to include them in the plan.
How to Dress
Temperatures shift dramatically from midday to evening in the places we go. Don't pack outfits — pack layers. Everything below fits in one bag when done right.
Merino wool or synthetic T-shirts and long underwear. Merino is king: it regulates temperature, resists odor, and packs small. Bring 3–4 tops. Skip cotton.
A fleece or lightweight puffy. This is what you'll wear most evenings at camp. One is enough if it's a quality piece. Bring a sleeveless puffy if you run warm.
A packable waterproof jacket. It packs to the size of a water bottle and weighs nothing. Non-negotiable — weather changes fast. A poncho counts in a pinch.
Sun hoodie or sun shirt + sun sleeves. Elevation amplifies UV exposure. This layer replaces sunscreen on your arms for most of the day and keeps you cooler than you'd expect.
Two pairs of hiking pants or convertible shorts/pants, plus one pair of camp/lounge pants for evenings. Skip jeans — they're heavy, slow to dry, and cold when wet.
Wool socks Bandana Warm hat Sun hat Liner gloves — these small items make a disproportionate difference.
Meals & Food
Meals are planned before we leave. The menu is designed around the trip length, the crew, and the kitchen. Lunch and dinner are covered — see the breakfast note above.
Expect things like sirloin fajitas over a live fire, bistro-style paninis from a Snow Peak press, miso chicken stir fry, lamb lollipops with Romesco — real food, cooked well, in beautiful places.
The best meals we've ever had weren't in restaurants. They were eaten outside, hungry from a hike, with good people around a fire.
Tell us before you come: allergies, intolerances, strong dislikes, or dietary commitments. We build the menu around the crew. There are no dumb requests — only last-minute surprises we can't accommodate.
The System
Everything is organized and shared. Click through if you're curious or want to contribute to the plan.
Vehicle packing list, module checklists, meal planning calendar, kitchen inventory — the operational backbone.
The full recipe collection with ingredients, technique, and camp kitchen notes for every planned dish.
The live grocery list for this trip — organized by store section and shareable for group shopping runs.
Download OnX Hunt or Maps.me before you leave. Cell service may be limited. Offline maps are not optional.