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Date: 25 Feb 2005 08:51:46
From: Pamela Dallas
Subject: Tent for Solo Touring
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The zippers on my 20+ year old Early Winters tent are finally falling apart, so it's time for a new one. I'd like a free-standing 2-person tent that packs down to under 20" in length. Recommendations? Good manufacturers? Thanks, Pamela
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Date: 02 Mar 2005 13:11:02
From: Pamela Dallas
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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Well, I've been shopping the net the past few days to see what's available. Then today I got an REI e-mail with the 20% Savings offer. Ended up ordering the Bibler I-Tent plus the optional footprint. This looks like it will be easier to set up than my old Early Winters tent, and it appears to weigh about the same. Hope the Bibler lasts 20+ years like the EW. It will get a good test on my Spring 2005 tour, from Reno NV to Death Valley, on to Palm Springs, thence to the Pacific Coast south of LA, up to Santa Barbara to visit family, and finally back home via the California central valley and then up over the Sierras, probably on CA88. On the way to and within DV I expect to be riding about 150 miles on dirt roads. I'll probably write this tour up at CrazyGuyOnABike when I get back. Thanks to all for their contributions. Pamela
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Date: 01 Mar 2005 20:27:50
From:
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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Ah, Early Winters. Way ahead of their time, way ahead. Spent a bunch of money with those folks, cool stuff, still have most of it. Self-contained or supported touring? Is budget a big factor? You've gotten some great leads on European tents. They're really cool. And single walls are getting better and cheaper; less weight. If you're going self-supported, grab a cup of coffee and google ultralight backpacking. The techniques are not for everyone, takes some imagination to see yourself using this gear in the rain or for long hauls. But you can be warm, dry, and securely fed carrying about 1/2 the weight most people load on their bikes (not counting water, food, tools, spares, not much you can about that stuff except pack it). Going ultralight isn't for everyone but the statistics are difficult to ignore. In my last few seasons of backpacking, I reduced my 35-50 pound load to 11-20 pounds, not including food and water. It was rekably liberating. david boise ID Pamela Dallas wrote: > The zippers on my 20+ year old Early Winters tent are finally falling > apart, so it's time for a new one. > I'd like a free-standing 2-person tent that packs down to under 20" in > length. > Recommendations? Good manufacturers? > Thanks, > Pamela
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Date: 01 Mar 2005 14:45:37
From: BentJay
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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I know what you mean, Tom. I was trying to find a Greenspeed tent, but alas they are currently unavailable. Perhaps we can convince Mr. Sims to produce one! BentJay
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Date: 28 Feb 2005 08:19:50
From: BentJay
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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I use a Kelty 2-person tent which, when I bought it from Performance Bicycles was called the Stratus. It's very slightly short for my height (5'10") but it packs down incredibly small and light, IMHO. I split one of the aluminium pole sections (which I repaired on tour with some tape...) and Kelty not only fixed the pole but sent several spares at no charge! I'd say that great service is worth something. You can see the tent in several pictures in my journal (below). BentJay See my tour journal at: http://aroundthelake.crazyguyonabike.com
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Date: 28 Feb 2005 21:41:39
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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BentJay wrote: > I use a Kelty 2-person tent which, when I bought it from Performance > Bicycles was called the Stratus. It's very slightly short for my > height (5'10") but it packs down incredibly small and light, IMHO. I > split one of the aluminium pole sections (which I repaired on tour with > some tape...) and Kelty not only fixed the pole but sent several spares > at no charge! I'd say that great service is worth something. You can > see the tent in several pictures in my journal (below). Is there a special synergy when using this tent while touring on a RANS Stratus? :) -- Tom Sherman - Earth
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Date: 28 Feb 2005 09:23:23
From: Peter Clinch
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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Pamela Dallas wrote: > The zippers on my 20+ year old Early Winters tent are finally falling > apart, so it's time for a new one. > > I'd like a free-standing 2-person tent that packs down to under 20" in > length. > > Recommendations? Good manufacturers? IMHO freestanding is an overrated feature. Of my 3 tents only 1 is freestanding, and that's the one I use to camp on shingle beaches in gales from the sea kayak. I've never had to abandon an attempt to pitch one of the others, and if a tent isn't freestanding then it packs down smaller and weighs less, all else being equal. I use a Saunders Spacepacker for cycle camping, but assuming you're in N. America you're unlikely to find one there. The Hilleberg Nallo is a very good tent with reference standards of construction, and the GT version has a colossal extended porch for extra comfort, work on the bike in the rain, or whatever. Pete. -- Peter Clinch Medical Physics IT Officer Tel 44 1382 660111 ext. 33637 Univ. of Dundee, Ninewells Hospital Fax 44 1382 640177 Dundee DD1 9SY Scotland UK net p.j.clinch@dundee.ac.uk http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~pjclinch/
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Date: 25 Feb 2005 19:23:48
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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Pamela Dallas wrote: > The zippers on my 20+ year old Early Winters tent are finally falling > apart, so it's time for a new one. > > I'd like a free-standing 2-person tent that packs down to under 20" in > length. > > Recommendations? Good manufacturers? This reminds me of the article reprinted in RCN #48 (Nov./Dec. 1998), PAGES 24-25. See <http://www.culturechange.org/issue11/brian-campbell-house-bike.htm >, <http://www.livejournal.com/users/crasch/2004/06/20/ >. On a similar note: <http://pittsburgh.indymedia.org/news/2002/10/208_comment.php > (scroll down to the bottom). -- Tom Sherman – Earth
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Date: 25 Feb 2005 16:30:33
From: skip
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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"Pamela Dallas" <pamela.dallas@att.net > wrote in message news:1109350306.901225.86280@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com... > The zippers on my 20+ year old Early Winters tent are finally falling > apart, so it's time for a new one. > > I'd like a free-standing 2-person tent that packs down to under 20" in > length. > > Recommendations? Good manufacturers? > > Thanks, > Pamela > A Sierra Designs Clip Flashlight two person has worked well for me for the last 20 years. This tent is still being made which means it has stood the test of time. It isn't freestanding, but I prefer to have it anchored down. It survived a hell of a storm on the Outer Banks that drove me to an inland motel. The next day this tent was one of the few left standing. It packs to 18" in length. I forget what it weighs, but it doesn't weigh *too* much for bike touring. I bought a three person Sierra Clip Flashlight from REI last year for a bit more room when someone is with me or when I'm kayak camping and the extra weight isn't a problem. The quality seems the same if not better. These tents are quite easy to set up and take down. skip
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Date: 25 Feb 2005 12:01:11
From: Jon Meinecke
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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"Pamela Dallas" <pamela.dallas@att.net > wrote > > The zippers on my 20+ year old Early Winters tent are finally falling > apart, so it's time for a new one. > > I'd like a free-standing 2-person tent that packs down to under 20" in > length. > > Recommendations? Good manufacturers? I like Eureka tents for cost effectiveness, but I also own REI and Sierra Design tents. Where are you touring? You don't mention budget, type of use (1,2,3, or four season) or how much extra space you want inside for gear... Do you want single-wall or double-wall construction? Do you often camp where it's windy? Do you plan to spend a little or a lot of time in the tent? Do you care about color, e.g., for stealth camping? Aluminum poles or fiberglass? Two-pole rectangular dome-style tents are popular. Eureka Apex and Zeus models are very reliable and reasonably priced, but REI, Kelty, mot, Mountain Hardware, Sierra Designs and others all have basic two-pole rectangular footprint dome tents. If you can live without the free-standing aspect, I think the Sierra Designs Clip model tents have a lot to offer for bike touring. They are light weight, setup quickly, and shed wind and weather very well in my experience. I've never not staked my free-standing tents,-- seen more than one become free-flying (not mine). Look at campmor.com, rei-outlet.com, sierratradingpost.com for sometimes bargains on old model year and closeout tents. Subscribe to touring@phred.org mailing list if you're not already a member. http://www.phred.org/mailman/listinfo/touring Browse and search the archives: http://search.bikelist.org Tents for bike touring have been discussed there recently and historically. Check out the various equipment lists people sometimes include in the tour diaries at www.crazyguyonabike.com. Also google alt.camping and rec.backcountry for tent discussions. There are also a number of backpacking gear review websites. Jon Meinecke
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Date: 25 Feb 2005 12:43:19
From: Jon Meinecke
Subject: Re: Tent for Solo Touring
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"Jon Meinecke" <jonmein@nospam.net > wrote > I like Eureka tents for cost effectiveness, but I also own > REI and Sierra Design tents. Just got REI-OUTLET coupon code: GM225 for 20% selected items (1) including older model REI Half Dome ($72) and Sierra Designs Clip ($95) tents... Here's the link to the list of selected items for which the 20% discount for one item applies: http://email.rei.com/cgi-bin12/DM/y/hWKv0DjDyE0Bfp0oSc0Eu Jon Meinecke
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