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31/7/2013 at 11:16pm
Location: essex Outfit: tent
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Hi 'Tiacat'
I really hope your bout of illness hasn't put you off camping and you are feeling better.
I agree with the others with the losing the shower/toilet and opting for a site with these facilities. We have a 'bog in a bag' for the kids night-time
wee wee's.
I noticed that you mentioned that you didn't feel you had enough time to be organised, and I can sympathise.
What I tend to do, is on the return of a holiday, I get EVERYTHING out, clean what needs to be cleaned and then pack it away. I put all of our chairs/airbeds and other big items into one of those massive 'dot cotton' style laundry bags. That way they stay clean in the garage. I then have one of those large storage boxes with a lid and in there I put all of our clean crockery and cutlery and other kitchen utensils. Those pots that store inside each other are great and we keep our clean plates in a large plastic cake box as opposed to a washing up bowl. Serves the same purpose, but it has a lid to keep the dishes clean once they are washed.
Then when it comes to holiday time, the only thing I have to really sort out is our clothes.
We also have a 'kit bag' which is always stocked with tools, scissors, batteries, torches, carabina clips, bungees, cable ties etc. Really handy to have things like that in one place.
I still feel like we take half the house with us, but they are a few things that help me to stay sane whilst organising our annual camping trip.
Take Care :-)
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31/7/2013 at 11:16pm
Location: Chorley in Lovely Lancashire Outfit: Losing count
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I wonder about the carpet you describe, I imagine a proper carpet, even if thin, is fairly bulky and not the easiest thing to pack.
Have a look on Marshalls Leisure website, they have a Coleman Fremont 8 tent carpet for £20 at the moment. Its 408 by 370cm so a pretty good fit for a 4m bell. I adapted a carpet for my smaller 3m bell, I just cut up to the middle (stopping where the pole would be) and finished the raw edges with a cotton tape. You could easily put a bit of velcro on to hold the edges together, I've not got round to this yet, I just have this bit under my bed.
I'm working on something similar for my bigger 5m bell.
Your first time is a big learning curve, you'll set up much quicker next time, enjoy, it's a great life
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01/8/2013 at 7:12pm
Location: Kent Outfit: Karma Canvas 5m ZIG
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Quote: Originally posted by rainfollowsus on 31/7/2013
Hi 'Tiacat'
I really hope your bout of illness hasn't put you off camping and you are feeling better.
I agree with the others with the losing the shower/toilet and opting for a site with these facilities. We have a 'bog in a bag' for the kids night-time
wee wee's.
I noticed that you mentioned that you didn't feel you had enough time to be organised, and I can sympathise.
What I tend to do, is on the return of a holiday, I get EVERYTHING out, clean what needs to be cleaned and then pack it away. I put all of our chairs/airbeds and other big items into one of those massive 'dot cotton' style laundry bags. That way they stay clean in the garage. I then have one of those large storage boxes with a lid and in there I put all of our clean crockery and cutlery and other kitchen utensils. Those pots that store inside each other are great and we keep our clean plates in a large plastic cake box as opposed to a washing up bowl. Serves the same purpose, but it has a lid to keep the dishes clean once they are washed.
Then when it comes to holiday time, the only thing I have to really sort out is our clothes.
We also have a 'kit bag' which is always stocked with tools, scissors, batteries, torches, carabina clips, bungees, cable ties etc. Really handy to have things like that in one place.
I still feel like we take half the house with us, but they are a few things that help me to stay sane whilst organising our annual camping trip.
Take Care :-)
No, not at all, I have identified my next site already. I will be taking the loo and shower with me but we think that by much better organisation and packing skills we may have enough room for the things we missed. We have everything already organised in the house, its now stored under a bed whereas it was all in the loft. It wasnt the time needed at the house end, it was because we only took half a day off work and it took about 2 hours in boiling sun to work out how to put the roof box on the roof rack. this took far longer than we had anticipated and so then we were rush rush rush when packing the car, rush rush rush when at the campsite when we should have been relaxing and neither of us like the heat. so we wont make those mistakes again. I am generally very organised, we have everything all together, we have a 'kitchen' bag with our cutlery and our 2 plates(!) and we have a kit bag with pegs, mallet, small tools, clips etc etc.
So next time, full day off on the day we leave, leisurely packing up of car and sitting at the campsite before even setting up. unless its raining of course.
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01/8/2013 at 7:16pm
Location: Kent Outfit: Karma Canvas 5m ZIG
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Quote: Originally posted by honeybell on 31/7/2013
I wonder about the carpet you describe, I imagine a proper carpet, even if thin, is fairly bulky and not the easiest thing to pack.
Have a look on Marshalls Leisure website, they have a Coleman Fremont 8 tent carpet for £20 at the moment. Its 408 by 370cm so a pretty good fit for a 4m bell. I adapted a carpet for my smaller 3m bell, I just cut up to the middle (stopping where the pole would be) and finished the raw edges with a cotton tape. You could easily put a bit of velcro on to hold the edges together, I've not got round to this yet, I just have this bit under my bed.
I'm working on something similar for my bigger 5m bell.
Your first time is a big learning curve, you'll set up much quicker next time, enjoy, it's a great life
Thanks, the carpet is fairly bulky, but we made it worse by folding it loosely so as not to damage it. When we got home, we put it in the garden and rolled it up tight as we could. This put the size down to about a 3rd and now we think that we can fit this in the roof box with the other bulky items (the sleeping things). We also rolled the tent up much tighter. I dont really want a different carpet as although its unorthodox, I am so pleased with myself that we got it! However, if we continue to have problems fitting things in, we will have to look for something different in the future.
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02/8/2013 at 5:45am
Location: Oxford Outfit: helsport Kongsvold
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Yep you have the idea, a grate so air can get in below the fuel, you need this for peat or coal, but not necessary for wood, just put your wood in the bottom of the stove(will probably help with the consumption). Decent hardwood logs will be worth the extra cost, maybe your supplier might sell you the small bits cheap. You are probably right about the peat blocks and the environment, but the extraction of peat was never the problem, the taking up of the land for other purposes was really the problem. I probably only burn a few kilos a year as i only use it with the open fire as we like the smell in the tent, most times we have the fire we use the enclosed burner and I am a builder so have acces to a ready supply of offcuts etc. Practice with the stove, you will get used to roaring it up when you want to boil the kettle etc, but shutting it down so it is just ticking over at other times, I have re-read your original post and you say you have the water heater, is it a frontier you have. If so you will only want that ticking over in the tent, I had one and got rid of it , it was too big and kicked out too much heat for a 5m tent. As you say you are not likely to be summer campers you will love the stove especially if you camp into the real winter. Just one thing consider getting a carbon monoxide alarm, we have one which we cable tie to the centre pole, you never know even with a sealed flue.
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02/8/2013 at 2:01pm
Location: essex Outfit: tent
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Quote: Originally posted by tiacat on 01/8/2013
Quote: Originally posted by rainfollowsus on 31/7/2013Hi 'Tiacat'
I really hope your bout of illness hasn't put you off camping and you are feeling better.
I agree with the others with the losing the shower/toilet and opting for a site with these facilities. We have a 'bog in a bag' for the kids night-time
wee wee's.
I noticed that you mentioned that you didn't feel you had enough time to be organised, and I can sympathise.
What I tend to do, is on the return of a holiday, I get EVERYTHING out, clean what needs to be cleaned and then pack it away. I put all of our chairs/airbeds and other big items into one of those massive 'dot cotton' style laundry bags. That way they stay clean in the garage. I then have one of those large storage boxes with a lid and in there I put all of our clean crockery and cutlery and other kitchen utensils. Those pots that store inside each other are great and we keep our clean plates in a large plastic cake box as opposed to a washing up bowl. Serves the same purpose, but it has a lid to keep the dishes clean once they are washed.
Then when it comes to holiday time, the only thing I have to really sort out is our clothes.
We also have a 'kit bag' which is always stocked with tools, scissors, batteries, torches, carabina clips, bungees, cable ties etc. Really handy to have things like that in one place.
I still feel like we take half the house with us, but they are a few things that help me to stay sane whilst organising our annual camping trip.
Take Care :-)
No, not at all, I have identified my next site already. I will be taking the loo and shower with me but we think that by much better organisation and packing skills we may have enough room for the things we missed. We have everything already organised in the house, its now stored under a bed whereas it was all in the loft. It wasnt the time needed at the house end, it was because we only took half a day off work and it took about 2 hours in boiling sun to work out how to put the roof box on the roof rack. this took far longer than we had anticipated and so then we were rush rush rush when packing the car, rush rush rush when at the campsite when we should have been relaxing and neither of us like the heat. so we wont make those mistakes again. I am generally very organised, we have everything all together, we have a 'kitchen' bag with our cutlery and our 2 plates(!) and we have a kit bag with pegs, mallet, small tools, clips etc etc.
So next time, full day off on the day we leave, leisurely packing up of car and sitting at the campsite before even setting up. unless its raining of course.
Totally agree, I try to stay at home the day before we go anywhere so that I can pack at my own pace. The heat is stifling at the moment, it's hard to get anything done. My partner and I have got it down to a good team effort when it comes to packing. I sort it out and he loads the car, and he's fabulous I must admit. Wishing you all the best with your future excursions :-D
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03/8/2013 at 11:43pm
Location: Aberdeenshire Outfit: Several tents and a hammock
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Quote: Originally posted by tiacat on 31/7/2013
yes, that was our plan but I never got the chance this trip. I'll try again next time. Have you got the stove fan, I suppose you dont really need it in the 4m?
No, I don't have the stove fan. The 4m is very cosy without one.
When I first used the Frontier I burned logs and was disappointed that there didn't seem to be enough heat to cook successfully. I've played about a bit since then and found that kindling burns hottest, especially with the door slightly ajar and the baffle in the open position. However, it also burns through too quickly so I have invested in an axe and now chop up a bag of logs into smaller chunks about three times the thickness of kindling and this burns really well. I can throw in some kindling if I want a real roaring blaze. It just means having to find space for the 'stove wood' in the car as I don't know how happy some sites would be if I turned up wielding an axe!
Anyway, I can now cook on the stove top with no problem. I also bought a flat bottomed kettle which sits in direct contact with the stove because my other one had a little ridge around the base and that seemed to prevent it coming to the boil.
Somewhere on this forum, I think, I read that wood burns best on a bed of ash, while coal needs a grate and air under it, so I just allow the ash to build up and it seems to work fine.
------------- Sarah
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04/8/2013 at 8:03am
Location: Kent Outfit: Karma Canvas 5m ZIG
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ah, well we appear to have done the opposite, burning with fast burning but hot wood fuel, we were cooking up a storm, the water boiled up really quickly (for a stove), we cooked sausages easily, but of couse we got through so much.
Now, we have found a local supplier that claims that wood briquettes are slow long heaters, so we will investigate these and take kindling also for quick hot heating. However of course Ive been looking at gas burners as advised on this thread. I really dont like the idea of taking portable gas, dont know why. And I know this is going to sound really bad, but I cant stand utilitarian looking things, I really wanted to fill the tent with attractive old fashioned looking things rather than something functional looking. (I dont really like the 'kitchen' we bought, its so ugly)
Plus its more to put in the car. Im not sure what to do.
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