Today's Backpacking
Tents are Smaller and Lighter than Ever Before
Backpacking tents, tents (usually nylon)
designed specifically for hikers and backpackers in mind,
can be a backpacker's best friend. Sure, there alternative
ways to spend a night in the woods. Many fast and light
hikers are relying on bivy bags to keep themselves warm,
nesting their sleeping bags inside waterproof bags and
eschewing a tent all together. However, these weight
watchers often wake up in sleeping bags soaked with
condensation, even if the sky was clear all night. Other
hikers spend the night under ultra light tarps or in
hammocks, but when it starts to rain most of them find
themselves flooded out, all too happy to share your dry,
waterproof tent.
Backpacking tents aren't the heavy, leaking, cumbersome
shelters they once were either. Construction from nylon shells
and fiberglass or carbon-fiber poles mean that today's tents
are smaller and lighter than ever before. No more hassling with
mismatched tent poles in the middle of the night either; most
manufactures now string their break-down poles with bungee
cords which allow the pieces to snap together quickly. These
poles, combined with color-coded snaps on the tent body, mean
that most tents can be set up by one person in minutes, even if
that one person is stumbling into camp in the dark as it's
starting to rain.
Once the tent is set up, you can be assured a dry night. The
rain flies of modern backpacking tents are waterproofed and
seam-sealed, so you won't wake up at 3am to that tell-tale
drip-drip-drip of a leaking seam. They're ventilated too,
allowing the moisture and condensation from your breath to
carry outside and avoid wet tent walls in the morning. Another
handy, common feature is a vestibule, allowing you to leave
your muddy boots and pack outside your tent but still out of
the rain.
Other small touches abound. Many backpacking tents are
equipped with gear lofts, utilizing the extra space at the top
of the tent's dome for storage of small items and bags. Others
have attachment points for flashlights or lanterns, though it's
important to keep sources of flame or heat away from the
synthetic materials. Small pouches sewn into the inside of the
tent serve as handy places for pocket change or eyeglasses.
When storm clouds roll in it's good to know that you can
easily carry a warm, dry shelter in your backpack, which can be
ready to keep off the rain and snow for years to come.
Muna wa Wanjiru is a web administrator and has been
researching and reporting on Internet Marketing for years. For
more information on Backpackin, visit his site at Backpacking
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