
2.5 Weeks + 1000 Miles + 4 States + Countless Encounters. Follow Cindy Gilbert, program director for the Sustainable Design program at Minneapolis College of Art and Design, as she bikes from Montana to Minneapolis to raise awareness about sustainability challenges and opportunities in the region while raising need-based scholarship money for students.
Ever since my first dispatch from the road I have been mentioning (complaining?) about the weight of the stuff I've been hauling over mountain passes, through canyons and to places that are in the middle of nowhere. I decided I would throw a bone to the cyclists in the crowd as the question I most frequently asked to anyone I could catch on cycling tour before starting the Ride the Talk campaign was, "what item is the most valuable to you on your trip?"
It is amazing how after a few days of travel you discover what is important and what it just dead weight. As one cyclist put it, "whatever you discover in the bottom of you panniers at the end of the trip is what you didn't need." I decided not to wait until the end of the trip to tell you what's risen to the top.
Below are my top ten picks for (lightweight) "keepers" on a long bicycle tour. (This list doesn't include the "must-haves" such as bike shorts, helmet, sunscreen, water, multitool, extra tubes/patch kits, mobile phone, maps, etc., as they are a given.)
1. "Utter Butter" (10 oz): This item is by far the heaviest of all listed but seriously something you should not leave home without. It is oft overlooked in blogs about long-distance cycling but I refuse to keep the myth alive that people simply cycle for hundreds of miles on end in hot/wet weather without incurring serious chaffing, or possibly worse, callusing, in areas that should never, ever be chaffed or calloused. Use the stuff, whether it's "real" chamois butter or diaper cream. Use it. I repeat: use it. One cautionary note, it looks a lot like sunscreen; don't make the mistake. I did!2. Comprehensive bicycle maintenance knowledge (0 oz): I took a full day class to learn the ins and outs of maintaining and repairing my bike on the road. This knowledge is nearly priceless (although the class did run me $70 at REI). Having the confidence that I could fix my bicycle should something happen grossly out weighs the burden of worry of not knowing how to help myself.
3. Mirror (2 oz): I am quite certain that my cycling mirror has saved my life dozens of times. At about a dozen dollars, I'd say that it is more than worth its weight (in fact, at this point, the thing is priceless).
4. Backcountry Boiler (8 oz): If you are planning on making your own food or will be out of range of any kind of food service, I highly recommend this boiler made by The Boilerwerks. It is extremely lightweight, allows you to carry water within it, and boils water in just a few minutes with any locally-available fuel including twigs, grasses, sticks, etc, no traditional fuel necessary.5. Cleat screws (0.25 oz each): Speaking from experience, it only takes one situation where you're unable to release your foot from your clip-less pedals in traffic to decide to carry replacement cleat screws. The guys at Bike Doctor in Missoula, MT, taught me if one's gone, the other is surely gone or nearly there; always carry two.
6. Small MP3 player (2 oz): Load your iPod Shuffle or the like with motivational tunes and this tiny piece of electronics will get you up and over mountain passes that you didn't think possible. Personally, I find Lady Gaga unbelievably motivating (I guess it's out that I am a "little monster").
7. Handkerchief (1 oz): This item is the jack-of-all trades. It can serve a washcloth, sweatband, rope, bandage, pee rag (sorry, TMI?), small sack, chain rag, etc. Invaluable.
8. Earplugs (0.25 oz): How is it possible that two tiny pieces of foam could nearly guarantee the recommended daily does of sleep? I want to personally thank the inventor of earplugs, whoever s/he was. Thank you. They let you sleep anywhere, any time.
9. List of emergency numbers (0.25 oz): this could literally save your life. If you cell battery dies, you have no access to numbers and it is surprising what you won't remember when you absolutely have to remember it. If something happens to you on the road and you are unconscious in the middle of nowhere, people will know who to call. Put it in your first aid kit, wallet, or someplace people are likely to look through right away.
10. Master link (0.5 oz): This charmer is a tool-free gadget that stands in for a broken chain link. Because it snaps together with your fingers, it only takes a few minutes to install rather than the slippery, time-consuming process of replacing regular chain link(s) and pins. I'm carrying two, just in case.

More from Ride the Talk:
» Introduction: A Sustainability Roadtrip
» (s)Miles City, Montana
» Somewhere in Nowhere Alazada, Montana
» Reviewing the Backcountry Boiler
» Freedom from Stuff

Comments
I believe that biking while wearing earphones and listening to music is generally considered unsafe. Some municipalities have outlawed the practice. Even where I live, and it isn't illegal, I've had two friends pulled over by police for listening to music and biking.
On a dedicated bike path, this may be okay, but only if you aren't sharing that path with other cyclist or pedestrians.
Thanks for you comment, Bryan. This is true about headphones. I am very careful when using them. I only use one earphone (farthest from road; right side only) and only in areas where there is little traffic.
I recently did a bike tour through Spain and it was HOT! I had zeros problems with chafing and calluses though. So not everyone gets them :) HOWEVER, my fiance DID get calluses and he could have used this stuff because we had to take a couple of days off from riding so they could heal... We covered over 800 miles. So one yes and one no to utter butter.