bernieq wrote: Moisture on the inside of the outer wall of a tent and when buffeted by wind, sprays water - onto the inner with a DW tent - onto the person with SW tent.
headwerkn wrote:on an outside-in pitch tent like the Hillebergs you can drop the inner hangers from the fly while in the vestibule and generally access the underside of the fly with a towel.bernieq wrote: Moisture on the inside of the outer wall of a tent and when buffeted by wind, sprays water - onto the inner with a DW tent - onto the person with SW tent.
headwerkn wrote:onto the inner tent, which inevitably soaks through onto the inner over time and produces the "rain" effect we all despise. All the dual-wall tents I've owned over the past 15 years (Snowgum Storm Shelter, MSR Hubba Hubba, Hilleberg Nammatj and Soulo, as well as various cheapo Coleman/Spinifex car camping tents) have suffered from it
Franco wrote:Don't get the CF poles .
headwerkn wrote:* Serious question - how often are people actually snapping or bending walking poles? It has only happened to me once in 15+ years of owning/using walking poles. Lost the first 100mm off the tip off a battered Salomon S-lab carbon pole (aka a really light, whippy carbon fibre pole designed for trail running, not bushwalking as much) that's likely seen a dozen ultramarathons on top of countless miles of bushwalking. Was still able to pitch the tail end of the ProTrail perfectly fine with a bit of cord for the rest of the trip.
headwerkn wrote: ... two trips (Spires and Gell/Hippo).
north-north-west wrote:
From Gell to the Hippo is one long and convoluted walk, especially if you managed that and a trip to the Spires (with a fair bit of time tent bound) in ten days.
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