Tent alternative
#26
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#27
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Well yeah, not where I'd buy a pad or a cot or whatever.
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#28
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I might be all wet*, but I wonder about the relevance of bivy bags in an era of ~1# (and lighter) solo tents. One would choose the bivy for...cost reasons?
*and bitten by insects
*and bitten by insects
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#29
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- It is cheaper
- I don't need to carry a pole
- It is a little lighter
- It works well for sleeping on hard surfaces like under a pavilion roof (no need for stakes)
- I can sleep on top of it and climb in as needed (I like to cowboy camp)
- I can pitch a tarp or not depending on the expected weather
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#30
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Decades ago I did a canoe trip with three others. One guy said he would bring his big four person tent. The first night, I decided that it was really tight with four, later nights when it was nice out I just slept outside, which unfortunately meant a heavy dew on my down bag every night. That is the only trip that I have wished I had a bivy along.
I can see a bivy for someone that really values traveling light if they also have a tarp for rain protection like Staehpj1 mentioned. I used to campout under the stars a lot more often when I was a kid, but now I value a tent more. When I was a kid, if you had a nice tent you were clearly of great wealth, back then my friends and I were more inclined to deal with less gear because there was no choice, we had what we could afford.
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So, a bivy + a tarp lighter than a roughly half kilogram Zpacks Plex Solo tent?
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#32
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I know what you mean about the super light stuff now days. In the 1990s I bought a super light (4.6 pounds) one person tent, had two hoop style poles. Then about 20 years later, replaced that with a much lighter ultra light (3.6 pounds) one person tent. Then two years ago bought that trekking pole one person tent for backpacking, but I weighed it down with a pole so I do not have to fiddle with the height adjustment on my trekking pole, and some better tent stakes, and a ground sheet which pushed the weight up to 2.9 pounds.
My two person tent that I now use for bike touring is a Big Agnes Scout Plus (discontinued). A trekking pole type tent, but I cut poles that when folded up fit in my front pannier. Tent, with poles, a plastic ground sheet and some extra stakes tips the scale at 3.5 pounds. Big enough for all my gear in it, very happy with it. That replaced a two person tent that weighted 6.1 pounds. The weight of gear just keeps getting lighter.
I am also sold on tenting over a bivy, but I recognize that different people have different things that they enjoy and if someone prefers to use a bivy instead of a tent, I do not try to convince them otherwise. That said, this forum sometimes gets some preachy ultra light fans that disparage everyone else, there was one from my community that has not posted here for some time that could be pretty obnoxious at times.
#33
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Bear in mind that my bivies and tarps are not the lightest and most $$$. I don't own any super high tech fabrics so I could go a good bit lighter with the application of more $$$ for cuben fiber or whatever. Also I assume the tent you mention most likely requires a treking pole which typically isn't included in the weight.
I'd think it would be possible to stay down below a half pound if spending the kind of money the Zpacks tent costs on a tarp and bivy since that would probably get you a Dyneema tarp and bivy. That said, I haven't priced them lately as I don't find Dyneema worth the money to me.
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#34
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There are a couple of other ultralight tents on the market with advertised weights mere ounces more. Never camped in any of 'em. Neither endorsing nor dissuading. Caveat emptor.
"The really successful lightweight camper is one whose pack shrinks every year and whose enjoyment increases in ratio with every vanished ounce." - long-time British cycletourist and journalist Brian Walker, writing for Mother Earth News about 1970
Last edited by tcs; 03-19-23 at 08:01 PM.
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#35
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I included the weight of the optional carbon fiber pole - and the required 6 carbon fiber stakes. Manufacturer's (ZPacks) advertised total weight, 510g. Solo, single wall, small vestibule, not freestanding. I didn't include any weight for Gorilla tape to anchor the guylines on the deck of the Alaska Ferry.
I do sometimes take a tent when I don't mind the extra weight and feel it is worth carrying (it has been a while), but my favorite tent from my current gear is 2 pounds 9 ounces with the stakes and stuff I carry (Eurela Spitfire1). I think I paid about $80 on sale though.
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#36
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if you don't like noise like me, I've found some of the recent ultralight sleep pads can be noisy. On a recent camp trip, my two buds in their neighboring tents with their new setups woke me up multiple times when they were moving around trying to get comfortable. The material of their bags combined with the material of their pads made considerable noise. The old thermorests, Alps, or egg crate pads were quiet.
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#37
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if you don't like noise like me, I've found some of the recent ultralight sleep pads can be noisy. On a recent camp trip, my two buds in their neighboring tents with their new setups woke me up multiple times when they were moving around trying to get comfortable. The material of their bags combined with the material of their pads made considerable noise. The old thermorests, Alps, or egg crate pads were quiet.
Since I started using a bivy I just slept on the bag (and pad) in the bivy to protect the bag when it was really hot.
It is also bad for the pads to get all that sweat, sunscreen, and bug dope on them any way.
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#38
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My Neoair Xlite was really noisy when I slept on it with bare skin in hot weather (too hot to be in the sleeping bag). If I rolled or otherwise peel myself off of it it was quite loud. Wearing a tech tee resolved it enough that my tent mates said it was pretty quiet and no problem. You may be fussier about the sound than them though. I think if you slept on top of your sleeping bag it would also resolve the issue, but when it is really hot I didn't want to sweat on the bag.
Since I started using a bivy I just slept on the bag (and pad) in the bivy to protect the bag when it was really hot.
It is also bad for the pads to get all that sweat, sunscreen, and bug dope on them any way.
Since I started using a bivy I just slept on the bag (and pad) in the bivy to protect the bag when it was really hot.
It is also bad for the pads to get all that sweat, sunscreen, and bug dope on them any way.
I also always sleep in a tee shirt. Camping trips, I bring synthetic fabrics for clothing that dry faster after a wash.
I got used to my Neo Air noise quickly, it drove me nutty until I fell asleep only for the first few nights I used it, but after those few nights I did not notice it.
#39
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A gal that I used to work with always used a sleeping bag liner in her bag, she said she did it to keep her bag cleaner. That made a lot of sense to me, so I started doing that over a decade ago. I have a silk one and a microfleece one, I pick which to bring based on anticipated cool or warm weather. I find that a sleeping bag liner works great in hot weather by itself, and as it cools off during the night I start using more and more of my sleeping bag.
I do try real hard to avoid sweating in my sleeping bag so that minimizes the need. I do that for two reasons. First sweat isn't that good for the bag or it's cleanliness and second it means you will likely get colder when the temperature drops later and you are damp with sweat. I tend to go in stages as it cools down. Maybe starting out out of the bag, or using it like a quilt, hanging a leg out, and so on, only getting in and zipping up tight as it actually gets cold. I think I stay warmer for the bag's rating by not getting all sweaty early in the night.
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#40
bicycle tourist
There aren't many kitchen + sport + outdoor companies out there. However, my guess is most of these products get sold via other channels, e.g. Amazon or found first by Google Search and not by people going to this web site to browse what they want to buy... Their "About Us" page still describes them as started as a kitchen products company, so I'm sure their is a story of how compression socks and sleeping pads got added.
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#41
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The specs are pretty impressive. I have shyed away from tents in that class due to price and perceived need for handling with great care and worry about wear and tear. Never having even seen one in person I may be overly concerned about that aspect of Dyneema. How robust do you find your Zpacks tent?
I do sometimes take a tent when I don't mind the extra weight and feel it is worth carrying (it has been a while), but my favorite tent from my current gear is 2 pounds 9 ounces with the stakes and stuff I carry (Eurela Spitfire1). I think I paid about $80 on sale though.
I do sometimes take a tent when I don't mind the extra weight and feel it is worth carrying (it has been a while), but my favorite tent from my current gear is 2 pounds 9 ounces with the stakes and stuff I carry (Eurela Spitfire1). I think I paid about $80 on sale though.
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#42
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By the way I have been more than a little tempted with the REI Flash Air 1 Tent. It seems like a reasonable compromise for a cheapskate like me who doesn't want to spend $600 for a tent and worries about Dyneema maybe being fragile. It is comfortably under 2 pounds and with a 20% off sale the price is pretty decent. I have liked a few of the other Flash line of items from REI. With the 20% off deal going on I may pull the trigger on one. I will most likely still use a bivy for some types of trips even if I buy this tent.
For light weight backpacking, I am quite happy with my single pole tent, I think you have seen photos of mine on this forum, if not I can post a photo. But not doing so now as I do not want to hijack this thread. I made a pole for mine so I do not have to mess with the length adjustment on my trekking pole, the REI one includes the pole. And it looks like the REI pole could be folded up short enough that you could velcro that to your top tube.
Mine is heavier but mine has a separate netting tent, REI one has a single wall ceiling that will get coated with condensation.