blackbeard
Well-known member
Looking at a Cabela's Alaskan guide geodesic for my 1st 4 season tent. Anyone have any experience with it. Only $350 so it's in my budget.
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I planned on using a buddy heater as well. Thanks for the infoI bought one last year. It withstood some heavy wind and snow. This is the 4 person and I think more than 2 people would be tight with gear. After staying in it 6-7 nights, the only thing I really missed was being able to stand up inside. I used a buddy heater to warm it up when it got too cold. There was some condensation but it wasn’t too bad. I plan on using it again this year. Overall, it’s a solid and well anchored tent.
I believe the outback lodge is rated as a 3 season tent. I looked at that one previously and it is a single wall tent but seems to have decent reviews. I have no personal knowledge or experience with that tent. One budget tent that surprised the sh*# out of me last year was a buddy’s Ozark Trail wall tent with stove jack from Walmart. $350 without the stove and stood up to some rugged weather (if you aren’t interested in a tipi tent)
I looked at the Ozark wall tent a while back but I'm not sure if I want to go that route since it weighs 100 pounds. Might just go with the Cabela's geodesic. Thanks for the help.I believe the outback lodge is rated as a 3 season tent. I looked at that one previously and it is a single wall tent but seems to have decent reviews. I have no personal knowledge or experience with that tent. One budget tent that surprised the sh*# out of me last year was a buddy’s Ozark Trail wall tent with stove jack from Walmart. $350 without the stove and stood up to some rugged weather (if you aren’t interested in a tipi tent).
I have both the geodesic and the outback lodge original version without awning. The awning is the only difference. The outback lodge has done great for me kept me dry in a rain event of roughly 1.5” overnight. I’ve used it in the fall also with a buddy heater. You will get condensation, which wasn’t a huge setback. This one is much easier to set up solo. The geodesic I think my tent is the 6 person. Used it in colder weather 20 for a high right at zero at night with a buddy heater. Much less condensation in tent than the outback lodge. There was a build up of ice on the inside of the fly in the morning which was no big deal. It holds heat real well- had to go to bathroom in middle of night and it was like walking back into a heated room. Only down fall with this is setting it up solo. I think both if staked down right will hold up in high winds. I think the geodesic is a bit more sturdy just because the increase number of poles.Would the Cabela's outback lodge be better so I can stand up and would it handle the cold fine with a buddy heater?
The latest I'd camp is November. Would the outback lodge do fine? I see it's a 3 season but we all know November can be a pretty cold month.I have both the geodesic and the outback lodge original version without awning. The awning is the only difference. The outback lodge has done great for me kept me dry in a rain event of roughly 1.5” overnight. I’ve used it in the fall also with a buddy heater. You will get condensation, which wasn’t a huge setback. This one is much easier to set up solo. The geodesic I think my tent is the 6 person. Used it in colder weather 20 for a high right at zero at night with a buddy heater. Much less condensation in tent than the outback lodge. There was a build up of ice on the inside of the fly in the morning which was no big deal. It holds heat real well- had to go to bathroom in middle of night and it was like walking back into a heated room. Only down fall with this is setting it up solo. I think both if staked down right will hold up in high winds. I think the geodesic is a bit more sturdy just because the increase number of poles.
Personally, I too am the same with you as far as November is the latest I'd camp. The lodge in my opinion would condensate a lot more than the geodesic. I think the outback would be my choice if the weather is fair. I am 6 foot and I don't recall standing up being an issue. In November I think I would grab the Geodesic just because the condensation seems to be more on the fly rather than in the tent. I think the outback would work in November but I don't like the condensation I've experienced even in late October in it.The latest I'd camp is November. Would the outback lodge do fine? I see it's a 3 season but we all know November can be a pretty cold month.
Ok, thanks for the info. I'll go with the geodesic.Personally, I too am the same with you as far as November is the latest I'd camp. The lodge in my opinion would condensate a lot more than the geodesic. I think the outback would be my choice if the weather is fair. I am 6 foot and I don't recall standing up being an issue. In November I think I would grab the Geodesic just because the condensation seems to be more on the fly rather than in the tent. I think the outback would work in November but I don't like the condensation I've experienced even in late October in it.
Pre Bass Pro meaning when people there were knowledgeable, not sure if their quality has went down or not?I have used two different Guide tents. In New Mexico up high in the snow and in Alaska in September. I love those tents for being bombproof. Figure at least two sleeping spaces per person, but 3 is better yet if the weather goes to heck... Both were pre- Bass Pro acquisition.