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fraucarlso
I am not really planning on backpacking so I am more interesting in a one or two person tent that can withstand all weather possibilities. I know the best tents tend to be expensive but I would like to find the best one at the lowest price. So can you tell me which tents are best for what I want and if they are expensive or not? Thanks! :)
Answer
To be clear, Coleman tents leak just as much as most other manufacturers, but they will replace/repair the tent if you send it in. For the price, they are good tents and you can pick up something that will work for around $50.
For my money though, you can upgrade to an REI tent for about $100. Their Camp Dome 2 is a tried and true tent. It's well built and they will also work with you if there is a manufacturing defect. If you go to their website, the tent has been reviewed by over 100 people and received very positive remarks.
http://www.rei.com/product/731378
Lastly, if you buy from REI, if you try the tent out and decide you don't like it, you can usually return or exchange it as long as you didn't damage it.
Most tents are for 3 season use. A 4 season tent is designed to hold up the weight of snow during winter. If you aren't planning to use it during the winter, or it doesn't snow in your area, a 3 season tent is all you need.
To be clear, Coleman tents leak just as much as most other manufacturers, but they will replace/repair the tent if you send it in. For the price, they are good tents and you can pick up something that will work for around $50.
For my money though, you can upgrade to an REI tent for about $100. Their Camp Dome 2 is a tried and true tent. It's well built and they will also work with you if there is a manufacturing defect. If you go to their website, the tent has been reviewed by over 100 people and received very positive remarks.
http://www.rei.com/product/731378
Lastly, if you buy from REI, if you try the tent out and decide you don't like it, you can usually return or exchange it as long as you didn't damage it.
Most tents are for 3 season use. A 4 season tent is designed to hold up the weight of snow during winter. If you aren't planning to use it during the winter, or it doesn't snow in your area, a 3 season tent is all you need.
How do I fold a military poncho into a backpack.?
Wesley
I once worked with a guy who knew how to fold/roll his poncho so that he was able to store all his gear in it like a backpack when we hiked. I can' t remember how he did it. This seems like the perfect solution for ultralight backpacking. This way your gear would be protected from the rain, and you could also use the poncho to build a shelter at night which would get rid of the weight from a tent. Does anyone have any ideas?
Answer
Those ponchos have small eyelets fitted round the hem so they can be used as a shelter strung between tree branches or from bits of line, or even pegs bashed into a rock face, and they can be strung up for collecting water, which runs into the large hood.
Whether issued to the US Army, UK, Germany, India, China, etc, they all work the same with just small changes in design.
They can certainly be used for wrapping your gear but it isn't a good idea if rain is expected unless you have another cover for yourself and then you may as well have used the extra weight on a lightweight backpack of which many models are available, and use the poncho for it's primary purpose of keeping the rain off you which it does very well.
It also can't be used for collecting water if it's wrapped round your gear keeping it dry and you can't use it for another intended purpose of providing a green cover for you to scrim up in....army for hiding.
Lay down on the grass or in the bushes, get the poncho over, and disappear. When it's opened out its long....twice the length it is when worn as a poncho.
For the military it's use is obvious but it's also good for wildlife watching and photography as an instant hide.
It also makes a good ground sheet big enough to wrap around you and although it doesn't provide a complete cover that way it can do a good job of keeping a wind off and keeping most of you dry while you sleep on the ground as an alternative to stringing it up to act as a roof over you.
If it was keeping your gear together all that gear is coverless when you use the poncho for anything else so using the poncho as bag for your stuff isn't a great idea.
Ponchos are not the only good thing from the military for camping out with.
Army combat blankets are green proofed nylon sheets like proofed nylon tent material, around seven feet by five which are intended to cover casuaties on stretchers in battle zones and they are very strong and totally waterproof and they make an excellent shelter.
One of my tents is made of three sewn together for two sides and a floor and bits of another cut and sewn on for the back and front. The seams are treated with seam sealand and then taped with seam tape which you can buy from camping shops.
The whole tent weighs just over a pound and cost peanuts for sealant and tape from a camping shop, and the used combat blankets from an ex-army store.
I also use a Coleman Raid, which weighs 980 grams, just under 2 lb and has stood up to fierce weather on my cold wet island home and on the Scottish Highlands and the Alps in Austria and Slovenia, and is one of the tents used by mountain runners on two-day events where you run with all your kit including a stove and food and camp overnight in some remote location before setting off on the second half of the course.
It's good fun, has some very fit and pleasant participants of both sexes, and worth a look if you like mountains and running and using very lightweight gear.
The Raid is old now and the new version called the Rigil is a bit wider so two people fit in it better although I've slept with two in the Raid quite often...err, very close and only really suitable for people intending to share a night together in a race but not as a normal camping tent for two. The Raid is tiny.
One carries the tent and the other carries the stove and pots which weigh about the same so the weight is shared and you share the food weight equally.
Good if you're running as a mixed team with your partner . You run even lighter than by yourself.
Here is the new version, the Rigil.
Coleman tents are excellent for the money. I have three for various uses, all well worth having.
http://www.worldofcamping.co.uk/shop/coleman_rigel_x2_tent__1665 . . . . . .
http://backpacking-in-europe.com/coleman-rigel-x2-backpacking-tent-reviews/ . . . . .
Those ponchos have small eyelets fitted round the hem so they can be used as a shelter strung between tree branches or from bits of line, or even pegs bashed into a rock face, and they can be strung up for collecting water, which runs into the large hood.
Whether issued to the US Army, UK, Germany, India, China, etc, they all work the same with just small changes in design.
They can certainly be used for wrapping your gear but it isn't a good idea if rain is expected unless you have another cover for yourself and then you may as well have used the extra weight on a lightweight backpack of which many models are available, and use the poncho for it's primary purpose of keeping the rain off you which it does very well.
It also can't be used for collecting water if it's wrapped round your gear keeping it dry and you can't use it for another intended purpose of providing a green cover for you to scrim up in....army for hiding.
Lay down on the grass or in the bushes, get the poncho over, and disappear. When it's opened out its long....twice the length it is when worn as a poncho.
For the military it's use is obvious but it's also good for wildlife watching and photography as an instant hide.
It also makes a good ground sheet big enough to wrap around you and although it doesn't provide a complete cover that way it can do a good job of keeping a wind off and keeping most of you dry while you sleep on the ground as an alternative to stringing it up to act as a roof over you.
If it was keeping your gear together all that gear is coverless when you use the poncho for anything else so using the poncho as bag for your stuff isn't a great idea.
Ponchos are not the only good thing from the military for camping out with.
Army combat blankets are green proofed nylon sheets like proofed nylon tent material, around seven feet by five which are intended to cover casuaties on stretchers in battle zones and they are very strong and totally waterproof and they make an excellent shelter.
One of my tents is made of three sewn together for two sides and a floor and bits of another cut and sewn on for the back and front. The seams are treated with seam sealand and then taped with seam tape which you can buy from camping shops.
The whole tent weighs just over a pound and cost peanuts for sealant and tape from a camping shop, and the used combat blankets from an ex-army store.
I also use a Coleman Raid, which weighs 980 grams, just under 2 lb and has stood up to fierce weather on my cold wet island home and on the Scottish Highlands and the Alps in Austria and Slovenia, and is one of the tents used by mountain runners on two-day events where you run with all your kit including a stove and food and camp overnight in some remote location before setting off on the second half of the course.
It's good fun, has some very fit and pleasant participants of both sexes, and worth a look if you like mountains and running and using very lightweight gear.
The Raid is old now and the new version called the Rigil is a bit wider so two people fit in it better although I've slept with two in the Raid quite often...err, very close and only really suitable for people intending to share a night together in a race but not as a normal camping tent for two. The Raid is tiny.
One carries the tent and the other carries the stove and pots which weigh about the same so the weight is shared and you share the food weight equally.
Good if you're running as a mixed team with your partner . You run even lighter than by yourself.
Here is the new version, the Rigil.
Coleman tents are excellent for the money. I have three for various uses, all well worth having.
http://www.worldofcamping.co.uk/shop/coleman_rigel_x2_tent__1665 . . . . . .
http://backpacking-in-europe.com/coleman-rigel-x2-backpacking-tent-reviews/ . . . . .
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Title Post: What is a good, relatively inexpensive tent to buy?
Rating: 95% based on 981 ratings. 4,6 user reviews.
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Rating: 95% based on 981 ratings. 4,6 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
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