Or plenty of room for SHEEP!If the bike isn't inside, that area can be used as a patio shade area.
Well, you'd have to ride the bike together...I like how they call it a 2-man tent. So where does the other guy put his bike?
About 10 million years since I've been camping and bought gear....is $400 "pricey"??PRetty nifty. Pricey though :/
Nope, you can get into a 200-600 range or more, for 2 person tents if you want to depending on your criteria.About 10 million years since I've been camping and bought gear....is $400 "pricey"??PRetty nifty. Pricey though :/
Well, you'd have to ride the bike together...I like how they call it a 2-man tent. So where does the other guy put his bike?
PRetty nifty. Pricey though :/
The next time it rains and you don't have those guylines out you are gonna be hating it my friend. You will be a one wet dude up their in rainy land.Intersting concept. But I like freestanding tents. This requires all kinds of guy lines, meaning lots of things to trip opn in the middle of the night. I know me, I'd trip on the suckers.
The next time it rains and you don't have those guylines out you are gonna be hating it my friend. You will be a one wet dude up their in rainy land.Intersting concept. But I like freestanding tents. This requires all kinds of guy lines, meaning lots of things to trip opn in the middle of the night. I know me, I'd trip on the suckers.
The guylines keep the fly off the tent body so the water does not wick through. They also keep a gap for air to circulate.The next time it rains and you don't have those guylines out you are gonna be hating it my friend. You will be a one wet dude up their in rainy land.Intersting concept. But I like freestanding tents. This requires all kinds of guy lines, meaning lots of things to trip opn in the middle of the night. I know me, I'd trip on the suckers.
Guy lines are for wind not rain. If it's so windy with my 300+ pounds of weight and gear that gets blow around, I'm finding a motel. :dribble:
I've been in a frog strangler or two and stayed dry -- never used guy lines. Maybe I'm just lucky but just staking the tent down and throwing gear in it has worked well.
Johnnie, you need to buy cheaper tents man.The guylines keep the fly off the tent body so the water does not wick through. They also keep a gap for air to circulate.The next time it rains and you don't have those guylines out you are gonna be hating it my friend. You will be a one wet dude up their in rainy land.Intersting concept. But I like freestanding tents. This requires all kinds of guy lines, meaning lots of things to trip opn in the middle of the night. I know me, I'd trip on the suckers.
Guy lines are for wind not rain. If it's so windy with my 300+ pounds of weight and gear that gets blow around, I'm finding a motel. :dribble:
I've been in a frog strangler or two and stayed dry -- never used guy lines. Maybe I'm just lucky but just staking the tent down and throwing gear in it has worked well.
I tend to agree, BUT, I don't camp all that much - ~1-2 times a yr.I'm not into spending anything over 1 bill on a tent. Infact most times on the motorcycle you are lucky to find me with a tent at all. Sleeping pad, bivy sack, and a good sleeping bag and I'm good to go under the stars. If it rains the bivy is waterproof. I do sometimes pack a Henessey Hammock with me which you can setup as a ground shelter if you want.
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