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Topic: Wild Country/Terra Nova Appreciation Club
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16/5/2007 at 12:14pm
Location: Cumbria Outfit: Wild Country Halo73 Hoolie 6 Pop-up
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Joined: 04/5/2007 Standard Member
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I'm relatively new to this forum, but I thought I'd try and revive this thread and see if there's any more interest!
I'm a big Wild Country/Terra Nova fan, so you can count me in! It's funny, but if this were a backpacking/outdoor activities forum, there would be countless people confession their love of these tents. Hard as it may be to believe, I'd never even heard of Outwell before using this site.
My first tent was a 2-man Terra Nova Quasar - and I reckon that it's still (after all these years) the best tent on the market for serious wild camping in all seasons. It's the sort of tent montaineers use in the alps/andes/himalayas. Not the lightest tent on the market, but I've survived some serious weather, without any problems or leaks.
When we had our first child, we realised we needed a bigger tent, so went with a Wild Country Family Khamsin. Likewise - very impressed - another geodesic design, and almost like a scaled up version of the Quasar, with same lightweight alloy poles etc, and at around 8kg light enough to carry in a rucksack. Plenty of room for four in two bedrooms, and although it's obviously not as sturdy as the Quasar, we've had the satisfaction of emerging from an intact tent, unscathed and dry after a wild stormy night in France, to smugly survey the carnage of other tents around the site.
Now we've got three kids, so we've had to upgrade again, and it had to be a wild country tent again! We've gone with the Halo 73, recommended by a fellow Wild Country fan. Not had a chance to try it out yet, but boy is it heavy! Not used to these non-backpacking tents.
I know they're really specialists in backpacking/mountain tents, but as a consequence even their family tents are well designed, with an emphasis on sturdiness and weatherproofness - hence they seem to be the only manufacturer prepared to give a no-leak guarrantee. One disadvantage is that their tents tend to pitch inner-first, but they're pretty quick to pitch and you can normally use the fly to keep the inner dry if you're pitching in the rain. An advantage of this deisgn is that the inners are always nice and taut & no sagging. I've had good experience dealing with the company too - when one of the poles on my Quasar got bent after a particularly wild night, they just sent me a replacement, gratis.
So - you can definitely sign me up for the Wild Country/Terra Nova appreciation club!
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16/5/2007 at 2:35pm
Location: Mansfield Outfit: swift challenger 490 SE LUX
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hi mdskids! Don't worry about pitch size, the halo isn't as big as the vario but just make sure you line it up as the porch extends quite a way. We found it dead simple to put up and first time was on a caravan hardstanding pitch, which gives some idea of size. The tent covered the pitch with the guys going off the pitch, but was fine. Another good thing about it is drying it at home, we just sling the fly over the sofa in conservatory and it doesn't take long to dry out. Easier than the vario which takes forever to dry and is huge!
If you wanted to partly try it out, maybe u could just put up the central poles and then see what space you have? Because the poles are angled its really simple, and no struggling to bend the poles when the flysheet isn't equally lined up like on the vario! As for internal space, each bedroom comfortable takes 2 single airbeds, except for the one at the back which you can zip a single airbed in, but nothing else. We put a kid in each bedroom and sleep in the central living area, but the porch is a bit low although you can happily sit and do the cooking!
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