Quote: Originally posted by Bob61 on 04/6/2010
How do you know when a tent is dry? Most mornings in the summer you wake up to a tent covered with dew. On going home morning you wait as long as you can for the tent to dry off and in most cases it appears to be dry before you pack it away. For me, that is good enough, but how do you know there isn't some water lurking within a seam or a crease waiting to devour your tent?
Do people always erect their tents in the garden on arriving home in order to make sure it is completely dry? Even if they erect the tent at home (assuming they have room) they can't be sure that it has dried out properly and daren't leave it overnight to gather another dose of dew, so where do you draw the line?
I dry mine indoors, over the bannisters of the stairs down to my utility room. Every single trip, without fail, even if they were pretty dry when I struck the tent. Not lost a tent yet. It's a complete PITB of course to be dragging tents up and down the stairs but at least I've got somewhere to do it.
That's not entirely practical for most people though and you're right, there's always dew on the underside. This is where non-SIG tents score yet again of course as you can be pretty sure when a flysheet is dry, especially if you unpeg and flip the skirts up for an hour. It's pretty easy to dry a seperate groundsheet. Only thing I can suggest here with a possibly not quite dry SIG tent is to at least take it out the bag and leave it in a heap, turning it over and fluffing it up for 48 hours or so, just to make sure.
Yes, boring. A faff. Hard work. Etc. And most of the time you can get away with it tbh. But there's only one way to be sure not to get mould and that's to dry it properly, whatever method you use.