Poser
WKR
Fill up your stove pots before you go to sleep. On the event some, most or all of your water is frozen, at least you have coffee.
I had a rooftop tent and annex for a couple seasons. I ran my Little Buddy heater in the annex off a 20lb bottle. W 2 of us sleeping up in the tent and with the buddy heater on high we got a considerable amount of condensation and frost on the roof/walls. By the 4th day the mattress was pretty damp.I’m taking my boys to Nebraska in a Nov for a rifle deer hunt and will be taking my truck w/rooftop tent that has attached annex…it’s a great setup that we used last summer in Rocky mtn national park and a New Hampshire/Maine trip this year…coldest nights were high 20s/low 30s…looking to add a stove to the annex room…any suggestion for a stove and retro fit stove jack?
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I've got to clean mine about every 4th day. I just let the fire go out and take the flue apart and run a pine of fir limb (with needles still on) through each piece. It's kinda like a poor man's chimney sweep.Just to report back made it 4 days camping, with temps getting down to -10 the last night. Stove and my 15 degree bag with merino bottoms and base layer top kept me plenty warm along with my knit hat. Feet did get cold though so I threw one of my extra layers in the bottom of the bag.
Water filter froze and couldn’t get it unthawed but had a Steripen so wasn’t a big deal.
Did have an issue with the stove though after burning 4 straight days with pine the creosote started building up so bad in the pipe and spark arrestor that it was actually starting to smoke out through the front door so we made the decision to pull camp and hike out.
Anyone have that happen to them? No hardwood to be found. How do you clean it in the field or keep it from building up or is that impossible?
Just to report back made it 4 days camping, with temps getting down to -10 the last night. Stove and my 15 degree bag with merino bottoms and base layer top kept me plenty warm along with my knit hat. Feet did get cold though so I threw one of my extra layers in the bottom of the bag.
Water filter froze and couldn’t get it unthawed but had a Steripen so wasn’t a big deal.
Did have an issue with the stove though after burning 4 straight days with pine the creosote started building up so bad in the pipe and spark arrestor that it was actually starting to smoke out through the front door so we made the decision to pull camp and hike out.
Anyone have that happen to them? No hardwood to be found. How do you clean it in the field or keep it from building up or is that impossible?
Where did you find those temps? I spent 7 years on the slope and saw 60 once. I had frost nip in about 2 minutes of exposed skin.As many have said, water has to be insulated (e.g. in the bottom of your bag) or heated (next to a wood stove that stays stoked through the night)... or both. In my experience water filters and hydration packs are garbage below about 25 degrees F.
And yeah, the backpack stove will last 4 hours if you are lucky/skilled... but 2 is more like it before it's not putting out enough heat to matter. Piling rocks helps. I have found that using wood from the roots/stumps of trees lasts longer than branch wood. Adds another hour or two.
With the right gear I have slept in -60F no problem with no heat of any kind... but that's not usually something one would encounter during hunting season in the lower 48!
And yeah, don't forget your hat and piss bottle!
On Denali. High camp (~17K).Where did you find those temps? I spent 7 years on the slope and saw 60 once. I had frost nip in about 2 minutes of exposed skin.
At 60 below I'd be afraid to sleep.
Yes, this. Clean that thing every 2-3 days if you want good draw.Yeah, after a couple of consecutive days, you’ll need to clean the spark arrester and bang the pipe -it can get really clogged up.
Yes when ever I’m stuck hunting 4th rifle or just out backpacking after November, which usually has long sub zero nights.Do any of you guys that hunt in that cold weather have a cold camp? I'm wondering what you guys do to keep your water thawed and your water filter from freezing, other than having it inside your sleeping bag. I don't have a stove, and sleeping with my water filter and water bottles is the only solution that I have found.
Not experienced with rifles, but I don't bring my archery equipment inside/warm up. Once it is frozen, let it stay frozen. If my bow get's iced up/frozen (EX Arrow Rest freezes due to moisture), only then will I bring it inside. And then it needs to totally dry out. Otherwise you will have squeaks and creaks due to refreeze.What are you guys do with your rifles at night and super cold weather to ensure no condensation forms inside the barrel and chamber. I experienced it this year and wondered why it happened. I left my rifle with the muzzle taped and the bolt closed and had it on the ground inside my shelter overnight. What is the best way to avoid creating condensation in there? Leave the rifle outside the tent with the bolt open?