Joined: 20/5/2004 Diamond Member
Forum Posts: 6449 Tent Reviews: 4
Site Reviews Total: | 16 |
|
Site Reviews 2024: | 0 |
Site Reviews 2023: | 0 |
Site Reviews 2022: | 0 |
Site Reviews 2021: | 0 |
Site Reviews 2020: | 0 |
Site Reviews 2019: | 0 |
Site Reviews 2018: | 0 |
|
Site Nights 2024: | 0 |
Site Nights 2023: | 0 |
Site Nights 2022: | 0 |
Site Nights 2021: | 0 |
Site Nights 2020: | 0 |
Site Nights 2019: | 0 |
Site Nights 2018: | 0 |
|
Hi. If you're looking for the easiest standing height tents to put up solo if , like me, you're short and cack-handed, then I think you are looking at a Khyam QE tent, a small Cabanon or similar frame tent or a Cabanon pyramid tent. Trust me, I have been puzzling over this one on and off for the last twelve years!
The simpler the Khyam the better. The more extra poles and pegging you have to the less benefit there is to having the easy-up central dome. We had a Khyam Classic XL which was great and has been further improved since. I've also put up a two bedroomed XXL single handed which was fine to do but took more time than I wanted to spend on it.
More recently I have seen the light and discovered canvas tents! If you can cope with their bulk for storage and transport then small frame tents are laughably easy to put up. Don't fret about the weight of them, you build them up rather than lift them so eg my Cabanon Pacific weighs 20 kilos but is far easier to handle than a nylon tent weighing 12 or 15 kilos would be.
Single pole pyramid tents are even simpler because, er, they only have one proper pole!
There are other tents which are easy to put up but Khyams and frames are the easiest imo. Beware large tents which you may be told can be put up single handed ie if you're a six foot two rugby player with all the time in the world no kids to worry about and in perfectly windless conditions! Life, and camping trips, are too short to spend wrestling with a tent which is bigger or more complex than you need. MT
------------- Tackling life the Western District way
|