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Joined: Jun 2006
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Joined: Jun 2006
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I heard it's not a problem because all the guides have umbrellas?



A wise man is frequently humbled.

GB1

Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 1,149
O
Campfire Regular
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O
Joined: Dec 2001
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What is this "dry" you speak of?

The elders out here on the NW coast have spoken of such a thing but most of us have not seen it.

Joined: May 2007
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I am adding a stove to my tipi. I got a sierra designs mountain tarp and stove from liteoutdoors. Just working out the kinks this weekend. I experimented with mre this fall. It was hit or miss. Okay as lunch like chili and chicken, but the beans or pasta was bad. Mountain house or freeze dried is much better and lighter.

Joined: Dec 2007
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Campfire Ranger
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My sleep set up sucks. I'm too damn old for the little Z Lite pad. I want to check out the BA set up. Looks comfy.


“Life is life and fun is fun, but it's all so quiet when the goldfish die.”
Joined: Jun 2006
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Joined: Jun 2006
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MM, check out the combination of a light closed-cell pad like a 3/4 length z-rest or evazote with a Neoair on top. It's outstanding to sleep on, not too heavy, and the foam pad has a lot of other uses like sitting on when you glass, eat lunch, or lounge around a campfire.



A wise man is frequently humbled.

IC B2

Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 5,611
Campfire Tracker
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Will improve my tipi stove.

I'm glad I built one and tried it in fairly deep cold before selecting and buying an obviously better commercially made stove.

My first stove was 5x5x9.5" with flat top useful for cooking. Used in -20 to -25F range, when red hot it would keep the temps above freezing in the upper half of the tipi. Frost never left the lower tipi sides and cooking on the stove plus breath of two people kept building frost condensation on the walls. Even so it felt wondrously warm in the tipi compared to outside.

The stove galloped between red hot and almost going out in cycles of about three minutes. It would not maintain warmth in a space as large as the 6 man tipi in temps that cold. It had to be fed fairly dry sticks constantly. A better designed stove would undoubtedly improve performance but the voracious appetite for fuel soured me on really small stoves. I have already built a cylinder stove that is 10 inches diameter and 13 inches long. The tipi, extra cord and quite a few stakes fit inside the stove.

Also have some ideas about first time rolling of a titanium stove pipe but that is probably better in a thread of its own.



Joined: Jan 2001
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Originally Posted by OregonCoot
What is this "dry" you speak of?

The elders out here on the NW coast have spoken of such a thing but most of us have not seen it.


!!! grin !!!



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