Do you have a preference between the Sawtooth and Cimarron? Any specific experience you have with them would be helpful. Setup, performance in wet or windy conditions, comfort, useable space, anything like that would help. I’m leaning Cimarron right nowI've been in an SO Redcliff, SO Cimarron, Kifaru Sawtooth and a couple canvas wall tents. All of them work great in the Snow and or Rain, if you can stay out of the heavy wind. If you can't stay out of heavy wind, I agree with IBen on what to use.
If I had to pick between the 2 it'd be the SO Cimarron 7 days a week and twice on Sundays. The ONLY thing in my opinion the sawtooth was better at was shedding wind. But not by much. Both tents did pretty well in rain, hail and snow. I highly recommend a nest though. Condensation builds up quickly when the stove isn't going. So when you wake up the tent is soaked. Reach out of the nest dry and fire up the stove again, 10-15 mins later, tents dry. 1 hunting season in the sawtooth, 7 in the SO tents. 40-50 mph winds, storms, hail, nasty shit. We learned real quick the SO tents were like packable motels compared to the sawtooth. I'd 100% rather ride out a shitty storm in the SO than the sawtooth. Cimarron and Redcliff both had more headspace, room to move, usable space, stove jack location for the stove setup, comfort was great, easy setup. My buddy and I are 6' tall 200lbs. Redcliff fit us, gear, stove, nests, sleeping pads, firewood. Cimarron is more for 2 people n stove, no gear, you can take a tarp. Or do like we did and get 2 Cimarrons to shed some weight a piece and wind. Each of us had their own Cimarron with all of our own gear, stove, firewood, nest, sleeping pad, packable chair etc...Do you have a preference between the Sawtooth and Cimarron? Any specific experience you have with them would be helpful. Setup, performance in wet or windy conditions, comfort, useable space, anything like that would help. I’m leaning Cimarron right now
That is awesome feedback - thanks a bunch. I’ll have to look at the Redcliff too because I’ll definitely have situations where I need to fit 2 guys and gear … I just also need something light enough for backpacking if it’s just me.If I had to pick between the 2 it'd be the SO Cimarron 7 days a week and twice on Sundays. The ONLY thing in my opinion the sawtooth was better at was shedding wind. But not by much. Both tents did pretty well in rain, hail and snow. I highly recommend a nest though. Condensation builds up quickly when the stove isn't going. So when you wake up the tent is soaked. Reach out of the nest dry and fire up the stove again, 10-15 mins later, tents dry. 1 hunting season in the sawtooth, 7 in the SO tents. 40-50 mph winds, storms, hail, nasty shit. We learned real quick the SO tents were like packable motels compared to the sawtooth. I'd 100% rather ride out a shitty storm in the SO than the sawtooth. Cimarron and Redcliff both had more headspace, room to move, usable space, stove jack location for the stove setup, comfort was great, easy setup. My buddy and I are 6' tall 200lbs. Redcliff fit us, gear, stove, nests, sleeping pads, firewood. Cimarron is more for 2 people n stove, no gear, you can take a tarp. Or do like we did and get 2 Cimarrons to shed some weight a piece and wind. Each of us had their own Cimarron with all of our own gear, stove, firewood, nest, sleeping pad, packable chair etc...
Get the Redcliff, you'll be happy. It's really light and worth it, especially for 2 guys with gear.That is awesome feedback - thanks a bunch. I’ll have to look at the Redcliff too because I’ll definitely have situations where I need to fit 2 guys and gear … I just also need something light enough for backpacking if it’s justme.
Cabelas 4 season tents are just fine, I am not familiar with Eureka tents as far as durability. I've been on the north side of the Brooks twice now, and my cabelas 4 man, xpg 4 season tent performed excellent. Rule of thumb, a tent rating, cut it in half for comfortable occupancy. I like a 4 season tent for extra peace of mind. Friends on our first trip used some 3 season tents and were fine. We saw temp swings from 65 degrees down to 22 degrees and sustained winds to 50 mph and just to 60 mph. Longer cyclone style stakes are a must, cover with rocks too. Alaska is a different animal all unto itself, and you need to be prepared to ride out anything. Your being dropped off, this isn't the lower 48.Am I courting disaster if I'm considering some of the Eureka and Cabelas 4 season-rated tents?
Not familiar with the Cabela's XPGs. Realize we're talking a different category of tents, here, but I have a Eureka family tent and am not impressed with it's durability even when you account for the fact that it is a lower-class tent. IMO, the Eureka punched BELOW it's weight class.Cabelas 4 season tents are just fine, I am not familiar with Eureka tents as far as durability. I've been on the north side of the Brooks twice now, and my cabelas 4 man, xpg 4 season tent performed excellent. Rule of thumb, a tent rating, cut it in half for comfortable occupancy. I like a 4 season tent for extra peace of mind. Friends on our first trip used some 3 season tents and were fine. We saw temp swings from 65 degrees down to 22 degrees and sustained winds to 50 mph and just to 60 mph. Longer cyclone style stakes are a must, cover with rocks too. Alaska is a different animal all unto itself, and you need to be prepared to ride out anything. Your being dropped off, this isn't the lower 48.
Our camp in 22', 6 people, we ran 3- 4 man tens for sleeping and 1 6 man tent for surplus gear and relaxing in poor weather.
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Cabelas XPG is an expedition class tent, it's pretty solid.Not familiar with the Cabela's XPGs. Realize we're talking a different category of tents, here, but I have a Eureka family tent and am not impressed with it's durability even when you account for the fact that it is a lower-class tent. IMO, the Eureka punched BELOW it's weight class.
Copy. When I said I wasn't familiar, I just meant I had never used one or owned one.Cabelas XPG is an expedition class tent, it's pretty solid.
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I’ve seen AK sheep guides running Eureka & Cabelas..Am I courting disaster if I'm considering some of the Eureka and Cabelas 4 season-rated tents?