cuerro viejo
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2013
- Messages
- 3,607
Ha, I got a HD 55gal contractor bag I’ve used just like that before.You guys really need to get on board with keeping a secret poncho in your pocket.......
View attachment 941393
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Ha, I got a HD 55gal contractor bag I’ve used just like that before.You guys really need to get on board with keeping a secret poncho in your pocket.......
View attachment 941393
So you think 10x10 is ideal emergency tarp sizing?
Really looking hard into an emergency shelter, also looking at some poncho options?
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I'm a novice with tarps, but the weight of the DD is 17 oz and I don't think going a little smaller is gonna shave much weight. With the 10x10 (which is really like 9.8'x9.7' or something like that) I can do a variety of pitches including pitching it into a tarp tent which was pretty slick. I did that pitch in the yard and wife and I crawled inside and it was pretty cozy, definitely could sleep there a night if we needed to shelter in place and it's a lot more solid coverage than the other pitches I practiced.So you think 10x10 is ideal emergency tarp sizing?
Really looking hard into an emergency shelter, also looking at some poncho options?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
As a primary shelter, For two people and their packs/weapons yes.So you think 10x10 is ideal emergency tarp sizing?
Really looking hard into an emergency shelter, also looking at some poncho options?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I used to carry a Kelty Noah's Tarp to cover my Copper Spur so I had a place to sit out when it was raining. That thing is too heavy for my liking. But a good quality tarp for sure. Much better options for a shelter out there now. SEEK has a light weight 10X10. I used that for a year or 2. Still heavier than I like. I went to a TeePee shelter and now don't need a tarp for that but I found the light weight 8x10 where I bought my bivy sack out of Montana and that works great! When I think of the name of that one, I'll post it up. Working out of town so I can't go look at it at the moment.Comprehending?
I do, I witnessed a situation not much unlike yours back in the 90s.
It was winter, I was still asleep, completely unaware my kids were already up, and what they were doing.
Still in their pajamas, they just sat there like nothing was wrong, eating Froot loops, on the couch.
The temperature was probably 68 degrees, colder than your harrowing ordeal, yet like you, they kept their wits about them, and survived, all without starting a fire.
Even though lessons like ours, prove a fire is not always necessary, I don’t go around suggesting to not to be prepared for one, just in case.
And yes, I do carry a tarp. Kelty Noah tarp.