Dougfirtree
Well-known member
Am I missing something? Why does a glorified tent fly cost 600 dollars? I find the idea of these pretty intriging, but seems like the tent itself should be a bargain.
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I used my Redcliff/stove for the first time last week in Idaho and I walked away asking myself the same question.Better question why would you want a hot tent?
Not a fan? Can you elaborate? I’ve been thinking about getting what you have but would love to hear your thoughts, likes/dislikesI used my Redcliff/stove for the first time last week in Idaho and I walked away asking myself the same question.
If you want something to hang clothes to dry...go big and then double it. In fact if you're not backpack camping, I'd just buy something else and consider something with poles that you can hang stuff from. My Backcountry Shelter doesn't have enough room to hang anything especially if there are more than 1 person trying to also occupy that spaceI really don’t know how well I would like one with the potential condensation issues, but I still want to try a hot tent at some point. Nothing beats a wood stove to dry out wet, snowy clothes.
That’s good feedback, thanks. I have a wall tent for truck camps and love it. I’d use a tipi for quick solo truck camps and probably some cold weather backpacking.If you want something to hang close to dry...go big and then double it. In fact if you're not backpack camping, I'd just buy something else and consider something with poles that you can hang stuff from. My Backcountry Shelter doesn't have enough room to hang anything especially if there are more than 1 person trying to also occupy that space
Take a look at Luxe gear. I realize they are not American made, but they are a lot more reasonably priced. Thus far we love our hexpeak.Am I missing something? Why does a glorified tent fly cost 600 dollars? I find the idea of these pretty intriging, but seems like the tent itself should be a bargain.
Nothing beats a wood stove to dry out wet, snowy clothes.
Not a fan? Can you elaborate? I’ve been thinking about getting what you have but would love to hear your thoughts, likes/dislikes
This has always been my assumption about how a hot tent trip would play out.Condensation.
I really have no interest in waking up every hour to keep a stove going. Having a heated tent was great when we were awake. When we woke up the next morning it was -6 outside and the entire shelter was covered in frost. Not just a little bit. We got back from scouting and the sun had melted the condensation and everything we owned was wet. I just don't see how you can set up a floorless shelter on top of snow, heat it, sleep in it, and not have condensation. We packed up all of our wet stuff and drove to a hotel to dry everything out. That's where we stayed for the duration of the hunt. I'm sure we could have mitigated some of the condensation by keeping the shelter off the ground by a few inches, but it was windy and -6 was cold enough at night without a windchill in the tent.
Cold camps are what I’ve always done in the past with some good and some miserable results. I didn’t have a WM bag and an Xtherm pad the last time I backpacked in November though, and I do now. Honestly now that I’m in Wyoming I just don’t backpack in November because of our season timing.Have you heard of this stuff called "wool"... I think it comes from some animal... anyway apparently all the rage
I do agree it's awesome to dry out stuff after late season hunts.
That said I think hot tents create more problems than they solve, aside from the condensation issue there is also the sleeping issue. Those small titanium stoves cool down rapidly, so you are going to get your tent hot, then layer appropriately to sleep at that temperature, then you will wake up a couple hours later freezing. At that point you either need to mess with the stove or add clothes.
Personally I'd rather just come back to the tent immediately get in my bag, cook some dinner, then go to bed and sleep 10 hours. If you get a good bag or setup you can sleep comfortably all night at -5 or whatever no problem, no messing.
I guess if your a boomer with a raging prostate the hot tent makes sense... I reserve the right to 180 on this in 15 years.
They are crazy expensive, but look very nice. At 35 pounds I’m not sure I would go that route over a wall tent, especially for a truck camp. If I was packing in on horses I’d probably just bring a wall tent and if packing on llamas I’d rather save the weight and go with a tipi.I am curious about Stone Glaciers new 6p hot tent. I think the dome tent is a far better design, esp in terms of condensation management. They cost a small fortune... but my interest is piqued.