What's your best tip or hack for camping?
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The explanation I've always heard for the sheet bend is that it is used for tying together differently sized ropes. But honestly, every time I've tied it, it was fiddly to tie and felt sketchy to actually load. For any actual work that is important or possibly dangerous, I would not use a sheet bend. The double fisherman's is far more secure. The flat overhand bend is almost as secure (depending on the rope), and fast to tie. If untying after loading is a priority, you can just tie two bowlines with the loops going into each other - back them up with barrel knots if you expect cyclical loading, as this can cause bowlines to slip.
Everyone I know talks about how easy the butterfly is to untie after loading. But then, they are comparing to an overhand or figure 8 on a bight. If being able to untie after loading is a priority, I use the bowline on a bight.
For anyone reading - please do not try to haul anyone up anything using your newfound bowline skills, unless you are in a very safe situation - like, helping someone walk up a steep hill. Hauling unconscious bodies through the air without appropriate precautions can kill or permanently disable a person. Especially don't do this with cheap Walmart rope that is rated for "trust me bro". And especially don't do this if you don't understand how to preserve your progress, gain mechanical advantage, or lower the victim again safely. Source: rock climber for 15 years, WFR certified, SPRAT certified.
Thanks for the expert advice! I didn't realize sheet bends were so suspect, I'll have to research the knots you described.
Hmmm, maybe I tied the butterfly wrong or am remembering it wrong. I'll have to play with it and see, it's honestly been a year or two since I've put one under load.
And thanks for the disclaimer! Yeah I didn't mean to make it sound so easy to help someone with knots, I've never actually used a bowline for this purpose, I've just heard it explained that way for emergency use. But I agree it'd have to be an extreme emergency to risk using the wrong equipment or technique, better to just wait for proper help if it's safe to do so.
All of my experience is just novice stuff with Paracord, etc etc. My rock climbing experience is all just indoor bouldering
Thanks again!
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I just want to add that I got a cheap string of LED red lights that just power off a USB power bank. Red light lets you see in the dark while not ruining your night vision! I create a huge circle around me because somehow that makes me feel safe when Iām sitting at a fire.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Nice, I'll check for the USB ones.
A large red circle... summoned anything yet? :^P
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Any kindādrive-up camping, backpacking, RV camping, in the woods, at the beach, in a shelter, let's hear it all.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]For most outdoors-people the terms camping and binge drinking are interchangeable so a couple of luxuries are needed for the next morning.
First up to take care of is the morning AGB (After Grog Bog) so a camping dunny and a toilet/shower tent is a must. Don't fool yourself into thinking a shovel and hole in the ground is good enough, you are not a cat.
Second is some wet bum wipes for cleaning the dags off your turd cutter after dropping off your AGB.
Third is an Aeropress (and a set of scales!) for making yourself a good coffee. This easy to use hardware is well known and the internet is full of peoples favourite recipe for creating the perfect coffee:
- 18g of coffee
- 90g of water
- 90 second brew time
- flip over and press into mug (should take about 10 seconds to press down)
- add more hot water and/or a little bit of milk to your personal preference
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Thanks for the expert advice! I didn't realize sheet bends were so suspect, I'll have to research the knots you described.
Hmmm, maybe I tied the butterfly wrong or am remembering it wrong. I'll have to play with it and see, it's honestly been a year or two since I've put one under load.
And thanks for the disclaimer! Yeah I didn't mean to make it sound so easy to help someone with knots, I've never actually used a bowline for this purpose, I've just heard it explained that way for emergency use. But I agree it'd have to be an extreme emergency to risk using the wrong equipment or technique, better to just wait for proper help if it's safe to do so.
All of my experience is just novice stuff with Paracord, etc etc. My rock climbing experience is all just indoor bouldering
Thanks again!
No problem.
And you are probably tying the butterfly correctly. It's just easier to untie than an overhand on a bight, which can get absolutely welded under load. But seriously, bowline on a bight is such a sexy knot to untie after loading. It just comes right apart no problem.
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Headtorch.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Honestly good to have in general if you live in a place that's sometimes night.
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Highly recommended if you camp socially often. Blinding people with your headlamp is a social faux pas among experienced outdoors people.
If you are cheap like me, you can use a normal head torch and hold it in your almost-closed fist, that reduces the blinding a lot and you can control how much light you want
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Hammock camping is a very personal decision. Personally, I tried it for a while and just found it to be a hassle, and I never managed to find a comfortable sleep position.
But the hammock campers I do know recommend getting an underquilt instead of using a sleeping pad. Of course, this can fuck you over if you can't find any trees - but the underquilt isn't weirdly square in the hammock, and instead just conforms to the hammock's shape.
I prefer the thermarest because the shape keeps it in the hammock instead of getting messed up with my tossing and turning. It just conforms when I'm on it.
I have never had a situation where I couldn't find trees to camp in. Assuming any dessert campers out there know what kind of land they're exploring before they pack their gear. With a few extra pieces you could anchor to rock, too.
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No problem.
And you are probably tying the butterfly correctly. It's just easier to untie than an overhand on a bight, which can get absolutely welded under load. But seriously, bowline on a bight is such a sexy knot to untie after loading. It just comes right apart no problem.
That makes sense, I'll try the Bowline on a bite and report back! Thanks!
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Any kindādrive-up camping, backpacking, RV camping, in the woods, at the beach, in a shelter, let's hear it all.
Tin foil is excellent for cooking. It works more as an oven and just add water and it is a steamer.
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If you are on a budget, camp in whatever vehicle you already own.
I lived in a small car with my wife and cat for several months as we were moving.
Learned a ton from āCheap RV Livingā on YouTube.We had a solar generator with some panels, we cooked using electric skillet, had a twin bed, fairy lights use almost no power, and we had a 12v fridge. It wasnāt that bad but we eventually found a super cheap RV and live in that now.
Society has sunk to a level where living in your vehicle is acceptable as a valid housing option.
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Which you can't do without zip ties
Hah, is that a challenge?! Because I will totally try, fail, and proceed to tell myself that tarps are overrated anyway.
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For anyone reading this thread, my best advice is to learn to identify the different types of camping in order to identify what will be useful information to you. The bushcrafter has a different objective from the van camper, who has a different objective from the ultralight backpacker.
True this. I love camping but survival type campers say my version of camping isn't actually camping.
I'm sorry, but just because the campground has a sign out front that says "hotel" doesn't mean I'm not camping. I'm roughing it man. I don't even have my own pillow.
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Any kindādrive-up camping, backpacking, RV camping, in the woods, at the beach, in a shelter, let's hear it all.
An old Tesla bought in Norway has free charging the rest of it's (the cars) lifetime. It should work in all (or most) of Europe.
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Any kindādrive-up camping, backpacking, RV camping, in the woods, at the beach, in a shelter, let's hear it all.
- It's not about the destination, its about the journey
2.Things will go wrong but don't let that ruin your trip, see #1
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There are some surprisingly decent instant coffees out there nowadays; a fancy third-wave roaster in my city even does instant now.
I will second this. My wife and I tried all the instant coffees on some review site and one of the mid priced ones was surprisingly good. Originally it was for camping, but it was so smooth and didnāt upset our middle-aged stomachs after we drank a lot of it, so now we drink it all the time.
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Normally I'd be on solid ground, in a tent, with a sleeping mat beneath my sleeping bag, so it would probably be safe to keep my clothes under it, probably towards the end of the bag near my feet. I've also never had any sort of ice forming on my sleeping bag before since we always had tents for every campout as needed.
Maybe I'm misremembering the advice or it's bad advice, but in general I am probably never gonna have another chance to test this advice. So I'll take your word for it.
I'd definitely agree, solid ground and a tent would make putting them in the sleeping bag a bit less important (plus then you can use them as a pillow). Having them in our bag was just something I was taught in basic training and it worked well the few times I have woken up with frost or ice on my outer shell (all Army related "camping").
In the decades since I've slowly shifted from big tents to a small travel trailer, it's so much better on my joints lol.
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Society has sunk to a level where living in your vehicle is acceptable as a valid housing option.
I'd say it depends heavily on the vehicle.
2 people and all their belongings in a Golf is pretty dire.
But if you're 1 person in a proper Van set-up it can be pretty good depending on your location.