Jags,
Sadly, Ian was killed by a drunk driver in Greece in 2008. If not for that, I have no doubt he'd still be going. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Hibellhas he a packing list in that book
Nothing I can cut-and-past here. For a good idea of what he took, see his presentation on Blue Peter in 1975, here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ny81vcxTZQk Lightweight discussion at 2:07 and contents details starting at 2:40. Ian was a master at minimalist packing, and I recall his reasoning for taking only three socks: a pair to wear, and one to wash/dry at any one time in rotation. He always took a tin of shoe polish to keep his leather-cleated cycling shoes in fine shape, as well. I remember looking at his photos as I selected my philosophically similar Detto Pietro Article 74 cycling shoes...which still serve me well so many decades later. I leave the shoe polish at home, but would bring it on a world tour. Ian was no dummy. Oh! I still have and use the same Cutter first aid kit in my HB bag...I just update the contents annually and with use.
There is also a video of his Darien Gap crossing here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ylhWPCekdM , and a nice slideshow retrospective by Nic Henderson here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsQxt9-vK-kSome nice pages about Ian here (root):
http://www.bikebrothers.co.uk/ianhibell.htmAnd showing his bike setups:
http://www.bikebrothers.co.uk/ih_touringbikes.htmI do have a detailed packing list of his reproduced in an old
Bicycling magazine from the '70s. I'll see if I can find it, and will post his list here when I do.
All the best,
Dan.