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Our taxonomy is based on the very solid military taxonomy of first line, second line, and third line. Since our focus isn't combat operations, we have made a couple of modifications. First, we've added a couple of sub-levels (.5 and 1.5) that represent very real distinctions in the gear we carry, as well as some commonly recognized activity types. Second, our taxonomy isn't universally additive - in the military system it is understood that if you are carrying 3rd line, you are by default also carrying 1st and 2nd line. For our uses, the higher "lines" or levels often replace one or more of the lower lines. For example, a backpacking trip consists of 0.5, 1.0, and 3.0.
Backcountry travel gear is the interface between you the individual and the environment in which you are traveling. As such, there are an inevitable series of trade-offs in any equipage plan:
All of these trade-offs, plus the arbitrary nature of any taxonomy, means that the HPG equipage taxonomy is subject to much variation between environments and individuals. Regardless, it is a useful heuristic for understanding how to think about integrating with your environment, and how to evaluate the gear we produce in the context of how it will be a useful part of your backcountry equipage. The taxonomy itself is below.
This is the minimum stuff you carry in your pockets. Chances are that it's the same list either in the front country or the backcountry.
On Body