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#16 |
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The key question is whether you are carrying it / cycling with it.
If you are carrying it then consider... proper brand names such as Wild-country, Hilleberg and the like. They are very nice but relatively expensive (mine's a Wild-country - v. happy customer and all that). I've also used a Vaude, and been extremely impressed with the severe conditions it stood up in - bearing in mind it wasn't even claimed as a proper mountain tent. The Vaude was also exceptionally easy to put up too - a big advantage when you're moving on each day, or it's raining and you arrive late etc.The improvements over cheap tents are in small details - rather than overall design. Worth it in my opinion, but poorer value all the same so it depends on how much you'll use one, and budget etc. So if I had to carry / cycle with it, I'd probably get a Hilleberg, and pay the considerable money, or perhaps a Vaude (slightly cheaper) - which stood up to some very severe conditions on one occasion.. These are typically 3 feet high style tents, so probably not ideal for you, unless you really have to carry yourself. On the other hand, if you will be car-camping ... then there is a great deal to be said for a family camping tent, or something close to it. Also even the cheaper tents in this sector are still reasonably good. In my humble opinion, the traditional frame tent is now obsolete, as it's really so heavy, and a team effort to put up (but v. good as living-space). I think I'd get something like a giant hiking tents - with a room one or both ends . Perhaps something like this, or at least this sort of design (though I've not actually used this exact one) http://www.fieldandtrek.com/product...F9OYII5NYG89ZBW Vango do one similar which I have sat in all day on a very rainy trip, and which wasn't too bad to put up However one design I'd avoid looks just like a giant-sized geodesic 4-crossed-pole mountain tent - very good at first glance, but to put it up relies on you first erecting two small inner tents an exact distance appart then putting the overall flysheet over both. This is just daft and is a pain. Some tents exist looking like a star-shapped moonbase (possibly also Vango) - but these are a pain to put up - needing a team-effort - too much so in my view. Although spacious once it's done. There is a secondary question as to whether you are stopping in one place for a week, or moving on every few days - this gives you the big, luxury tent, versus modest, easy to put up, equation. If you're going to France at some point, then Decathlon often do tents extremely cheaply at the end of a season. Their own brands, though inferior in various small details, than the "designer labels", are still stoking good value for what they are. Vangos etc also appear in Decathlon I'm told. Another thought is that there's really no point in a proper mountain tent for camping on campsites. On my caving trips, cavers being "outdoor types" have all bought small mountaineering tents, but on wet days, everone seems to be sitting in someone's family tent, not skulking in their small mountain tents ! Another, ostensibly obvious, comment is that (unless you have to physically carry it), there is no point buying special camping saucepans and plates etc. Use proper saucepans and china plates from home rather than some daft 1 thou' aluminium nonsense which burns the food. Similarly it's better to eat proper food than dehydrated space-porridge and the like. Cheers Hywel |
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