A couple of years ago with the Halo 300, while touring in Belgium (which is very densely populated), it took me FIVE hours to find an appropriate wild camping spot. And it was over 40 degrees C. Started looking at 3pm, finally found a discrete enough site at 8pm. And I thought at the time: if I had a hammock set up, I'd have found a spot in ten minutes.
Since then, I've pretty much been touring with a DD Travel hammock and their 4m x 4m multicam tarp, which is brilliant for blending into the woodland, even close to a road. But this is only for short tours in Britain. When I head out on a multinational tour again, I want to take a roomy tent, too, because I like a large bug-free base camp if I stay put somewhere for a while, but I've still got the hammock in case of a Belgium situation. The combination of the hammock, the tarp and the Halo 300 was getting into ridiculous bulk/weight territory, even for me, so I've been shopping around for another tent, preferably one that compliments the hammock set up.
After significant research and testing, I think I've come up with the perfect solution; the Hex Peak V4 double inner,
the dd travel hammock and 4m x 4m tarp,
(NB this isn't my personal setup, I got it off the internet. This setup will leak in the rain) and I can use the Hex Peak inner with the tarp in this configuration if there are no trees around:
I carry a camera monopod with me for filming, and that doubles as the tent pole. I was initially worried that this pyramid configuration would be troublesome in the wind, but after a few experiments, I've found it to be surprisingly stable in high winds. And the whole lot weighs in at far less than the Halo 300.