Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: j_h_nimrod on March 15, 2015, 05:50:23 PMIf you are not getting farther off the road to camp than you can throw a full duffle then the traditional wall tent is for you. If you want space and a few miles on your boots before you camp then a tipi has a lot to offer. I still consider that fairly plush and pansy like, I don't understand why people insist on sleeping in a plush, climate controlled environment when they go out to "rough it". I have come to the conclusion most people (hunters included) are wimps and pansies. Carrying a weeks worth of (comfortable) hunting camp on your back in SE Alaska is not difficult. I have to laugh when people debate the weight of a tent stove, why do you need that? In 95% of hunting situations there is 0 (zero) need for a stove other than to cook and that is dubious. In at least 30% of hunting situations a tent is totally superfluous, it's not cold, it's not wet, it's not windy, it's not buggy.You've apparently not been in the Cascades high country in September and October.
If you are not getting farther off the road to camp than you can throw a full duffle then the traditional wall tent is for you. If you want space and a few miles on your boots before you camp then a tipi has a lot to offer. I still consider that fairly plush and pansy like, I don't understand why people insist on sleeping in a plush, climate controlled environment when they go out to "rough it". I have come to the conclusion most people (hunters included) are wimps and pansies. Carrying a weeks worth of (comfortable) hunting camp on your back in SE Alaska is not difficult. I have to laugh when people debate the weight of a tent stove, why do you need that? In 95% of hunting situations there is 0 (zero) need for a stove other than to cook and that is dubious. In at least 30% of hunting situations a tent is totally superfluous, it's not cold, it's not wet, it's not windy, it's not buggy.
Quote from: jackelope on March 15, 2015, 10:18:44 PMQuote from: j_h_nimrod on March 15, 2015, 05:50:23 PMIf you are not getting farther off the road to camp than you can throw a full duffle then the traditional wall tent is for you. If you want space and a few miles on your boots before you camp then a tipi has a lot to offer. I still consider that fairly plush and pansy like, I don't understand why people insist on sleeping in a plush, climate controlled environment when they go out to "rough it". I have come to the conclusion most people (hunters included) are wimps and pansies. Carrying a weeks worth of (comfortable) hunting camp on your back in SE Alaska is not difficult. I have to laugh when people debate the weight of a tent stove, why do you need that? In 95% of hunting situations there is 0 (zero) need for a stove other than to cook and that is dubious. In at least 30% of hunting situations a tent is totally superfluous, it's not cold, it's not wet, it's not windy, it's not buggy.You've apparently not been in the Cascades high country in September and October.LOL! I spent weeks in Oct, Nov, and Dec in SE Alaska in the field where the Cascades look downright balmy. Inches of rain daily and an average of 38 degrees will separate the men from the boys and we never had a stove and though I would have enjoyed one I would not have enjoyed packing it in. We had a few cabins we based out of but spike camps were tent, tarp, sleeping pad, and sleeping bag.
Hunting goals are wildly divergent. Some are not satisfied if they can’t do what some mule skinner from 100 years ago did, with his gear set. Why stop there? Why not what Grog would have done 7500 years ago? Spears and animal furs for clothes, cave? It’s as logical a decision as avoiding other modern gear because if you use it you might catch the gay. I don’t know what Grog’s word for weak sister would have been, but he’d have called me that.Anyhow. Tipi’s and stoves are what they are, tools. They’ll be very good for certain work and very poor for others. Still confused at the damning of smaller tipis because you can only stand at the pole. Considering you can, in fact, stand at the pole. Whereas, in non tipi’s you can stand at the nowhere. Anyhow you’ll like tipis if:You’ve done floorless and get it.You don’t want to move your camp daily.If you’re not solo at great distance.If you’re a modest distance with access to good wood and it will be very cold or very wet.Are hiking a long ways but have 3 or more guys and the weight penalty is now diminished.If you are car camping but the road system you use has crap for decent pull outs for a wall tent set up, or a great spot is at some distance to the road.Want a large set up that takes a miniscule fraction of the weight and space of a wall tent camp.Horse hunt and can occupy a great camp at the cost of 20 Lbs all in for a group of 6.Won’t be able to keep things dry in a cold camp no matter how hard you try.Find basking in the glow of a red stove rewarding at any weight penalty.I don’t use them on the high hunt for a couple reasons. Weight penalty. Nothing to burn way up there. Frequent fire restrictions. If weight’s not an issue, then a base camp tipi for multiple guys with bivi-tarp set ups for where you find yourself is great. Experience breeds the decision making on things like this. Absent experience, the advice of others is a poor substitute. If you can borrow a tipi and stove, do so before buying one.
Tagging because I use a tube tent on the high hunt because I can't decide what system to use. A tube tent costs 8 dollars and sometimes I can even use it more than one year! And it weighs almost nothing.