Backpack wood stove tents

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Nov 29, 2017
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676
Location
CO
I'm looking at transferring over from a traditional backpacking tent to a tarp style tent with a stove jack. I have a wall tent with a stove that I love and coming back to dry everything out is nice. I'd like to have a similar experience while working out of a backpack.

Does anyone use one? Is the UL stove a gimmick and do you find yourself leaving it at home? Looking for good options for a 1-2 person setup. This has been on my radar https://argalioutdoors.com/collections/tents/products/lemhi-3p-tent

Thanks.
 
I'm looking at transferring over from a traditional backpacking tent to a tarp style tent with a stove jack. I have a wall tent with a stove that I love and coming back to dry everything out is nice. I'd like to have a similar experience while working out of a backpack.

Does anyone use one? Is the UL stove a gimmick and do you find yourself leaving it at home? Looking for good options for a 1-2 person setup. This has been on my radar https://argalioutdoors.com/collections/tents/products/lemhi-3p-tent

Thanks.
A stove is great, but you need to consider your campsite location and keep it close to wood sources. The further you have to go for wood, the more time it takes away from hunting, as does prepping the wood and collecting/prepping wood in the dark sucks. Get a good-sized saw, like a Silky 170+ or Boreal 20+, and a good knife is nice to have as well for battoning wood.
Depending on the temps, you're gonna need a lot of wood, since the stoves burn it up fairly fast. Having 2 doors in your tent/tarp is a must, IMO, for getting wood inside without making a mess in the sleeping area.
 
I'm using Nortent of Norway hot tent and their titanuim stove. It's not cheap but winter camping is so much nicer. Not only can you heat yourself with a relatively small ammount of wood, you also dry your gear and prepare food. And it doesn't take a whole lot of wood to feed it... a pile of wood you'd burn in an hour on on open campfire will probably last the night in a hot tent.

Con is you have feed the stove every hour or so if you want it birning all the time. You can fill it up and get maybe 2 hours but you'll basically be in a sauna.
 

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We have a stove built by another member here on rokslide. It's pretty slick. It's nice to come back to camp and fire it up to get a little warmth before bed. 1000006011.jpg


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Cimarron and stove was awesome for me this year. For one and gear it’s a palace with the stove. I have the Cimarron lite with one door, so two with stove and gear require you to use space efficiently.

I spent about 30-45 minutes gathering and processing wood for each 2-3 night jaunt.

One tip - rig a way to hang a clothes line in the tent, or cut an evergreen trunk with a bunch of branches to use as your tent pole. You can hang clothes on it to dry.

Having dry gear to start the day is a real morale booster when it’s cold and wet
 
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