Nothing like an ice cold gin and tonic on day 14 or 15 of a trip...!
We've been using dry ice regularly for years. We get the 10"x10"x2" tiles and lay them in the bottom of the Igloo MaxCold ($70) cooler. As mentioned, dry ice can sometimes be found at grocery stores, and often at welding supply stores. A layer of thick cardboard, like posterboard or cereal boxes, goes on top of the dry ice. Then 2 blocks of ice on top of the cardboard with a cavity between them. The the frozen food goes in, preferably layered so that the first meal's ingredients are closest to the top, and the last meal is deepest down. Everything is pre-frozen before it goes in. Then chip ice fills in the corners. Duct tape the seam between lid and cooler body. Drive 2 days to the putin. Open cooler 1 sometime in the afternoon before first camp. Remove anything that will take awhile to thaw, like your first night's steaks and stick them under a strap of a drybag in the sun to thaw out as you paddle. Replace with a few beers. By the time you get to camp your beers are cold but not frozen, your steaks are on the way to thawing, and you should have quite a bit of chip ice on top of the cooler for the first couple nights' cocktails. Keep the lid SHUT! Good discipline in cooler management is essential. Get beers or make new cocktails for everyone in one shot, don't let each person dilly dally over an open cooler. Cooler 1 can last 5 or 6 days pretty easily, and by then you'll have eaten enough food out of it that you can easily chip ice off the blocks for your drinks. (Don't poke a hole in your cooler.)
Don't open the next cooler until you need to. We have opened cooler 2 on day 7 or 8 and had only a very little bit of melt water in the bottom. Once both are open, consolidate coolers as soon as possible. Coolers work best when they are full. Like a canoe's floatation displaces water and keeps you afloat, the cold food and ice keeps warm air out when open. The more outside air you introduce to the space, the sooner the ice goes.
Frozen veggies do pretty good in this capacity - I think we had frozen green beans on day 10 this summer. For other foods you don't want frozen but are better cold, I try to pack food bags ahead of time and keep them in the cellar, where it's cool. Beers and liquor and tonic go into the drybags unrefrigerated, but they stay cool against the cellar floor, and that cool stays in the drybag when you close it up, so you aren't sticking warm beers into your cooler. Onions, peppers, taters, apples, oranges and eggs all do fine unrefrigerated in a barrel or drybag.
To address the portage point - yes, coolers are a pain in the ass to portage. I have muscled them up on one shoulder and hiked them, carried them in front of me, tag-teamed them with another guy - no method is fun. So this year I bought a cargo pack made for hauling moose and elk quarters out of the woods. Its an L shaped aluminum frame with no hinge - the L shape is permanent. It has a heavy duty cover with good straps and hip belt, and lots of attachment points. With two small horizontal straps to the handles, and one vertical strap from top to bottom, a cooler can be hooked up in about 30 seconds. A little help getting it on your back is nice but not necessary, then off you go. It worked great - my new favorite piece of gear.
Maybe it seems like a lot of effort to go through - but from my standpoint, there's no reason not to enjoy the hell out of every river trip. And fresh food and cold drinks go a long way in that regard. I'll post our TR from this spring's paddle down the Partridge soon, and will detail some of our meals - smoked brisket was a nice addition to the menu this year - not to mention the Costco apple pie!
_________________ "There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats." - WATER RAT, The Wind in the Willows
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