OK, so perhaps I'm being a little melodramatic - but we had nothing but rain between 8am yesterday to the early hours of this morning, at which point the wind took over for a short while before giving way to more rain again just in time to pack up today.
On the bright side at least I know that my Quechua pop-ups are very weatherproof - they both held up admirably to the elements!
EDIT Just wanted to add that we had a lovely weekend despite the weather. We didn't get chance to do a proper walk, but did manage an hour tramping round the local lanes with the dogs yesterday afternoon. Sometimes just being 'away' is enough!
Now I must get back to drying off the tents in the living room :0)
Just returned from our first trip to Keswick with the tent and we gave up after 3 days as whne we got back to tent yesterday afternoon opened nit up to find puddles in the middle and yellow water inj the corners of the ground sheet. Wern't sure how to deal with it as had pitched the tent in the pouring rain on Thursday and thr ground underneath the tent was just getting softer and softer and muddier so gave up and came home. Wouldn't have but had boys aged 22 months and 5 and the little one had to be carried everywhere. Any suggestions of how to deal with this type of weather would be really useful for the future.
Just returned from our first trip to Keswick with the tent and we gave up after 3 days as whne we got back to tent yesterday afternoon opened nit up to find puddles in the middle and yellow water inj the corners of the ground sheet. Wern't sure how to deal with it as had pitched the tent in the pouring rain on Thursday and thr ground underneath the tent was just getting softer and softer and muddier so gave up and came home. Wouldn't have but had boys aged 22 months and 5 and the little one had to be carried everywhere. Any suggestions of how to deal with this type of weather would be really useful for the future.
Thanks Andie
The trouble is Andie that most family tents sold are made for occasional rain with Hydrostatic head ratings of 1000mm to 2000mm. For the type of heavy downpours we've been getting the last couple of years this isn't really sufficient. It's also a good idea to make sure the seams are taped and that they have not started pulling apart where they are stitched. After a while nylon and polyester tents will deteriorate due to ultraviolet light and will either need re-proofing or replacing, Grangers and Nikwax both do re-proofing products and seam sealants.
If the ground is completely sodden though then eventually it will probably find it's way in through the grounsheet however good it is. The only way to try and get around this is by making sure you pitch on a well drained pitch or raise the groundsheet from the ground using hay or ferns or anything else that comes to hand.
You aren't being melodramatic at all. I left the pub in Braithwaite (two miles out of Keswick) just before midnight last night, to a blanket of water falling out of the sky, a river where the road had been two hours earlier, water gushing three feet high out of drains that couldn't cope, thunder, lightening, and I arrived back at a waterlogged campsite where some had taken refuge in their cars.
Needless to say, I am home early, as it is nonsense to be out of doors in weather like that.
Hi all.
Well you cannot stop the site getting wet, but you certainly can keep the inside dry and warm, and it does not cost a fortune.
You can go on eBay now and search for cabanon tents, you can buy a frame tent some of the older ones for around £50 or even a three year old one for under £200.
These tents will keep all the rain that we ever get in the UK out and with the proper care will continue to do so for 30 years. You then go to pondkeeper.co.uk and buy a flexiliner at least 12" larger than the tent footprint about £30.
Tent up lay flexiliner down going up the tents PVC coated polyester walls, you can cut this liner to any size it will never fray of tear, no matter how wet it gets under this ground sheet it will never come through or it will have to get deep to come over it
Modern tents that will keep you as dry as this will cost you over £1000.
Regards
Rex.
PS don't peg the bedroom through the liner the weight of the beds will hold it down as your furniture and boxes will in the sitting area, and don't forget you can safely cook in the designated area of the tent, because you don't get condensation.
------------- "Be the person your dog thinks you are" (BM)
we were in the Lake District last year in the rain in a Montpelier 12, we were in the soggiest bit of the site so put down groundsheets first then the tent. this has a SIG, first time users, and so glad we did!! We were very dry, we also used campbeds rather than camp mats and found the sleeping bags were dry, wheras my sister had a 12 berth tent with a footprint grounsheet and her tent was soaked, the rain came inone side and ran through to the other side. it took 3 days to dry the tent out in our attic as it was still raining when we got home.
------------- Julie
Why is it always my toothbrush that gets left behind?
at one point last summer on Isle of wight, we had so much water under our groundsheet that if you poked it, you could se the groundsheet ripple like the water underneath it.!!! But it never came thru the groundsheet, came over it twice tho Considering the amount of rain we had that holiday am suprised it wasn't worse. The worse bit was breaking camp, was actually dry, but the stench of the water were it had been under tent for a week was rotten.
------------- Shelli
Campers do it in the mud!
Hubby says we can't camp as much this yr mmm we'll see!!
camped in 2009= 27nights
Booked for 2010 = 30 nights.
Is it that bad in the Lakes?!! We are supposed to be going camping with some friends this weekend. My OH and I have done the rainy camping break before but I know one couple has never been before and aren't the most hardy... Even if the weather clears up by the weekend, is the grass going to be like a bog? We too had the ripple effect groundsheet in France last year...
Just back on sunday from a week in the lakes, well
it rained and rained, best weather was the day we
travelled down lol.Have a sig tent though so was
dry and warm inside but got a bit sick of getting wet
and muddy everytime we left the tent.Doesn't help having
a wet dog either!!!
Got to say though that the weather here in Fife
was even worse while we were away but have to admit
looking to go abroad with the tent next year.
We were in the Lakes from the beginning of July for a couple of weeks and it rained every day, one night it did't stop till dawn. I've never seen so much rain but we were dry and cosy in our Cabanon Rotonde frame tent. Undoubtedly the best tents for the British summer, funny that they're made in France!