Kevin Dill
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2014
- Messages
- 3,158
We all know this more about preferences and less about what actually will work. If you leave gear outside you can always fit more people inside. Some of us use our shelter as a basecamp home with certain luxuries as opposed to some who mostly just sleep in their shelter. Crowding up some is fine as long as everyone is relatively settled in their place.
There's no right/wrong - better/worse shelter in these choices....only a matter of what you like and will be happiest with. I happen to value space a lot, as it equates to my comfort on longer hunts in colder climates. I'll stand upright to get dressed or take a nighttime leak, thank you. My chair, cot, stove, woodpile, longbow, backpack, cookstove and other things will be in there wth me, dry and protected. I can hang some damp gear from overhead lines and dry it with heat.
That said, I'm a realist and there's no way I'd be in this setup on a shorter hunt....a longer distance pack-it-all-in hunt....a must-be-mobile hunt. There are better ways to skin those animals. So go with what will work AND what you will enjoy the most while keeping within your budget.
There's no right/wrong - better/worse shelter in these choices....only a matter of what you like and will be happiest with. I happen to value space a lot, as it equates to my comfort on longer hunts in colder climates. I'll stand upright to get dressed or take a nighttime leak, thank you. My chair, cot, stove, woodpile, longbow, backpack, cookstove and other things will be in there wth me, dry and protected. I can hang some damp gear from overhead lines and dry it with heat.
That said, I'm a realist and there's no way I'd be in this setup on a shorter hunt....a longer distance pack-it-all-in hunt....a must-be-mobile hunt. There are better ways to skin those animals. So go with what will work AND what you will enjoy the most while keeping within your budget.