Pictures of your tents.
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- Posts: 189
- Joined: 7 Mar 2019, 8:49pm
Re: Pictures of your tents.
A long gone Vango and the bad idea of a tent the Blackthorn which lasted one trip (poles snapped)
I've got a few others I use now Pete... I think
Re: Pictures of your tents.
Overnight camp at Once Brewed on Hadrian’s Cycleway.
DD tarp over an old Vango TBS100 inner.
DD tarp over an old Vango TBS100 inner.
Re: Pictures of your tents.
A thing like that would just blow away in our part of the world as would any tarp.
I am here. Where are you?
Re: Pictures of your tents.
Do i understand that you have never been to Hadrian’s Wall or Northumberland in general?
John
Re: Pictures of your tents.
The bit that faces the Atlantic ocean no I've not been there.
I am here. Where are you?
Re: Pictures of your tents.
So you haven’t experienced the almost permanent wind. I’m sure being in the middle of the Atlantic is wild. As is being on the North Sea coast.
John
Re: Pictures of your tents.
Never understood tarps -- unless it was the kind of weather we had here recently, hot with very little wind for a couple of weeks, I could only think it would be useful as a sun shade.
Normally the wind speed is high and there's not the same number of trees here that you have in England.
Might be good in a forest but we don't have many and I'd not be sure you would be allowed or want to camp there.
We live in a continual whirlwind soup of rain in a very exposed landscape and it's Baltic even in summer mostly. ( this year is exceptional in that we had some warm weather -- we are back to cold and very wet and windy now)
Normally the wind speed is high and there's not the same number of trees here that you have in England.
Might be good in a forest but we don't have many and I'd not be sure you would be allowed or want to camp there.
We live in a continual whirlwind soup of rain in a very exposed landscape and it's Baltic even in summer mostly. ( this year is exceptional in that we had some warm weather -- we are back to cold and very wet and windy now)
I am here. Where are you?
Re: Pictures of your tents.
I was experimenting the other day with a tarp, a bike and a walking pole - my idea is to use it for "wild" camping off the side of cyclepaths well away from any road (like disused and converted railways)
Disclaimer: Treat what I say with caution and if possible, wait for someone with more knowledge and experience to contribute.
Re: Pictures of your tents.
I’ve never used a tarp in a woods. I have used it on top of Cheviot.
John
Re: Pictures of your tents.
Might be an idea to say where you are - obvs if few trees will limit things - am planning to set up a tarp in a wood very soon (southern england).Cowsham wrote: ↑9 Aug 2021, 11:46am Never understood tarps -- unless it was the kind of weather we had here recently, hot with very little wind for a couple of weeks, I could only think it would be useful as a sun shade.
Normally the wind speed is high and there's not the same number of trees here that you have in England.
Might be good in a forest but we don't have many and I'd not be sure you would be allowed or want to camp there.
We live in a continual whirlwind soup of rain in a very exposed landscape and it's Baltic even in summer mostly. ( this year is exceptional in that we had some warm weather -- we are back to cold and very wet and windy now)
Sweep
Re: Pictures of your tents.
Near the county Antrim coast on the west side but on the top of the hills over looking the sea. Like a lot of the hills around here it's exposed to the Atlantic west wind which is the most common wind direction. Seldom get the extremes of weather but it's a constant cold wind and sideways rain.Sweep wrote: ↑9 Aug 2021, 6:24pmMight be an idea to say where you are - obvs if few trees will limit things - am planning to set up a tarp in a wood very soon (southern england).Cowsham wrote: ↑9 Aug 2021, 11:46am Never understood tarps -- unless it was the kind of weather we had here recently, hot with very little wind for a couple of weeks, I could only think it would be useful as a sun shade.
Normally the wind speed is high and there's not the same number of trees here that you have in England.
Might be good in a forest but we don't have many and I'd not be sure you would be allowed or want to camp there.
We live in a continual whirlwind soup of rain in a very exposed landscape and it's Baltic even in summer mostly. ( this year is exceptional in that we had some warm weather -- we are back to cold and very wet and windy now)
You could not stay dry in a tarp in sideways heavy rain even if it didn't become a kite.
Was in England a few weeks ago around the Yorkshire dales. We always notice when we're over the amount of mature trees you have compared to us less wind chill and the much more pleasant temperatures.
I am here. Where are you?
Re: Pictures of your tents.
Interesting.
I wonder if the footprint (including guy outs) would restrict the choice of site. I'm always surprised when I pitch in the wild how difficult it is to find a suitable site. To this end, small tents with more vertical sides seem to work better for me.
Re: Pictures of your tents.
I wondered that too but the footprint really isn't that much - it's the length of the tarp (3m) plus a guy rope at either end (which I can make very short) and about 5' wide (please excuse me mixing my metric and imperial). There's not much room underneath but enough to sleep and keep the gear in. I've pitched my tent (Vango Mirage Pro 200 - reasonably vertical sided semi-geodesic design but 2-man so not so small) on the same lawn and there's not a lot in it (but the tent is a lot roomier).Pendodave wrote: ↑10 Aug 2021, 12:10amInteresting.
I wonder if the footprint (including guy outs) would restrict the choice of site. I'm always surprised when I pitch in the wild how difficult it is to find a suitable site. To this end, small tents with more vertical sides seem to work better for me.
I have slept off the roadside a few times back in the 80s just using a closed cell foam mat, sleeping bag and the old bright orange Karrimor bivibag (like an oversized rubble bag) underneath the mat to be deployed in case of rain (it never did) My thinking on using it was to deploy it thus if it is already raining or obviously going to, to partly to reduce the equipment and partly to pamper to my anxieties of camping exposed on the side of a thoroughfare - I would worry less about the bike if it is "under canvas" next to me and I would prefer to be more "out than in", with a view of anything going on around me.
If I ever do make the trip I'm thinking of, I suspect that in all but the foulest of weather, I will forgo the tarp and just use the groundsheet under the mat (self-inflating - the old foam mat was replaced years ago), ready to wrap the groundsheet over me if it rains.
Disclaimer: Treat what I say with caution and if possible, wait for someone with more knowledge and experience to contribute.
Re: Pictures of your tents.
This depends on how you configure it - a tarp can be pitched so that it is pegged down to the ground on three sides (or two sides of a triangle) and it is possible to pitch it thus to withstand a lot of wind without turning into a kite too. One of the benefits of a tarp is that you can use it differently according to the weather conditions and the site conditions. Ultimately, it is a versatile single skin tent. Don't get me wrong - most of the time, I like to have my Vango Mirage Pro on a site with a washroom nearby and loads of gear but I reckon there are circumstances when a tarp and minimal gear would be a good choice (and I hope to put this to the test before the year is out).
Disclaimer: Treat what I say with caution and if possible, wait for someone with more knowledge and experience to contribute.
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- Posts: 189
- Joined: 7 Mar 2019, 8:49pm