Winter Camping Gear
There are many things my wife does not like, but most
definitely the things she likes the least is being cold. She abhors cold weather. She works all day with a heater on year around. I am close but not quite as bad. When camping you cannot always find a warm
spot. They are rare, but there are
things, some special gear that are able to help keep you warm when experiencing
harsh climates.
One of our favorite things we have now experienced is a
Diesel Heater. Yes, we have the Mr.
Buddy Heater and have used it tons, but everything else we have runs off
propane and sometimes we need to preserve what we have for other uses. We like the butane powered Kovea Heater and
take it everywhere (it stays in the vehicle) as it is so small and packable in
its own little case. The diesel heater
has now become our favorite for several reasons. I filled up the tank, holding one gallon of
fuel, and plugged it in to our power source, at 6 p.m. on a Tuesday night. On Wednesday morning at 9 a.m., it was still
running, warm and toasty in our tent. I
was amazed and pleased. I was also
extremely excited to be able to crawl over to the door of the rooftop tent,
take my wireless remote control, and turn the temperature up and down on the
heater, without crawling up and down the ladder. I was not accustomed to this luxury. Yes,
having to carry diesel fuel, and have to provide it an electrical source, is a
pain, but the benefits outweigh the struggles in this area. I made some adjustments and changes to the
heater itself (just a plan Amazon diesel heater that runs around $159) so it
will fit inside the Artemis Ammo Box, so packing it is a breeze as it stacks
with the rest of the gear that I carry. It
has become a staple for all of our winter camping trips from here on out.
Another piece of gear that we love during winter camping is
our tent annex. Zipping this annex onto
the bottom of the Howling Moon Tent, we have all the privacy that we need (and
my wife loves to have), along with a place where we can get up, stretch, put
our clothes on and get ready for the day inside the warmth of an enclosed
shelter. It is a large bundle to haul
inside the vehicle, but when winter camping it is well worth it. When you have a rooftop tent, you are not
able to stand up or bend the way you are supposed to bend (at my age anyways)
to get dressed and undressed or do whatever you need to do to get ready for bed
or ready for your day. This gives you
that needed space to be able to move around in the warmth (we sit our heater on
the ground outside the annex, run the hose inside as the heat rises and
perfectly warms the annex and tent) and not exposed to the winter elements
outside. The annex is one of the items
we never leave home without when camping in winter. For privacy and warm shelter, it is our best
option outside of the tent.
Awning walls are another way we have found to stay warm
while winter camping. The zippered walls
on our Howling Moon awning come together to form an enclosed area where we can
set up our propane fire pit and warm our area where we sit, hang out, cook and
just generally get out of the weather while still experiencing the
outdoors. If the nights are cold and the
days are warm (as it usually is here in Arkansas), you are able to open up the
windows and see outside and bring more of that outdoor love into your living
space. When that sun drops down, as does
the temperatures, you can close those windows, fire up that propane fire pit
and provide yourself with a warm area in which to cook and eat dinner. What a great, large usable space to enjoy the
outdoors and be able to keep out of the elements at the same time. There are few camping items we enjoy more than
the walls around this awning.
You have to get out there and figure out what you need to
make you comfortable. If you are not
comfortable, then you will not go.
Nobody loves pain and suffering (well normal people anyways) and
therefore you must discover what you need to extend that camping season out to
eight, ten or even twelve months. You do
not have to fly south for the winter if you have the right equipment to make
your experience a memorable one, and that memory does not have to have you
recalling a night you almost froze to death.
It is just getting that experience, and discovering what it is you need
to add to your growing collection of gear!
Happy Camping!
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