Which Backpacking Shelter is the BEST

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2024
  • 00:00 Hey y’all
    00:31 Tents (Pros and Cons)
    02:19 What I Look for
    04:19 Freestanding
    05:22 Semi-Freestanding
    06:07 Non-Freestanding
    07:05 Double Wall
    09:48 Single Wall
    11:32 Footprints/Ground Sheet
    12:33 Stakes
    13:42 Tarps (Pros and Cons)
    15:52 Poncho Tarps
    16:45 Bivys (Pros and Cons)
    18:24 Hammocks (Pros and Cons)
    19:47 Components
    21:38 Quick Summary
    You Can See My Re-Attempt At Hammocking Here: • Episode 7: Finally Try...
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @HomemadeWanderlust
    @HomemadeWanderlust  Před 5 lety +246

    Sorry this was so late! CZcams wouldn't process the video for some reason! Here are the time stamps:
    00:31 Tents (Pros and Cons)
    02:19 What I Look for
    04:19 Freestanding
    05:22 Semi-Freestanding
    06:07 Non-Freestanding
    07:05 Double Wall
    09:48 Single Wall
    11:32 Footprints/Ground Sheet
    12:33 Stakes
    13:42 Tarps (Pros and Cons)
    15:52 Poncho Tarps
    16:45 Bivys (Pros and Cons)
    18:24 Hammocks (Pros and Cons)
    19:47 Components
    21:38 Quick Summary

    • @KimberlyGreen
      @KimberlyGreen Před 5 lety +2

      Dixie ... Don't buy a hammock --- I will give you my unused Hennessy Hyperlite Asym Zip (hennessyhammock.com/products/hyperlite-asym-zip). I bought it before I really considered shelters & don't want it.

    • @viveviveka2651
      @viveviveka2651 Před 5 lety +11

      Homemade Wanderlust Thanks for the time stamps. Thoughtful feature.

    • @kimcox-grosso1397
      @kimcox-grosso1397 Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you! ;)

    • @viktordubec
      @viktordubec Před 5 lety +2

      Hey Dixie, if you are considering hammocks I believe many will agree - DD hammocks, you can go either for the ultralight or you can negate the biggest drawback of hammocks (need of trees) with their travel hammock that can be used on the ground as the bottom is waterproof (just check for twigs, rocks etc as it will get pierced). Personally I have the travel one and although I don't have huge experience with hammocks, so far it rocks and beats tarp+sleeping bag setup all the time.

    • @TainoXtreme
      @TainoXtreme Před 5 lety +1

      The only kind of shelter I have not tried is the bivy sac. After trying all the different shelters, I have found that tarp Will be my preference of choice including a small mesh enclosure. It is all about the bandages and it is bandages and from there it would be a matter of taking your choice. My tarp is a 12 x 10 ultralight tarp that offers me the perfect set up when it’s raining at arrival. It gives me the comfort of having a very big shelter to deploy all the rest of mine sleep system in a dry area. I can take my time to do things without wearing about getting any more wet. I always set it up over a ridge line that I put between two trees. Good video. God bless you.

  • @petereastwood7868
    @petereastwood7868 Před 5 lety +852

    Attention side-sleepers: something I learned in the boy scouts a gazzillion years ago was to scoop out a hollow under where your hip will be. I haven't seen this mentioned on any youtube videos that I have watched, and it's probably less effective with an inflatable pad, but it is something to consider to make your sleep on hard ground a bit more comfortable, maybe.

    • @DadBodDrumming
      @DadBodDrumming Před 5 lety +59

      its a nice idea, but many hikers follow the Leave No Trace principals and this would violate that.

    • @petereastwood7868
      @petereastwood7868 Před 5 lety +281

      Chad Sanborn -- Nonsense. You leave more trace with your footprints, or the outline of where your tent or ground sheet was. And you can fill in the hip hollow next morning. Don't be so preachy and sanctimonious!

    • @DadBodDrumming
      @DadBodDrumming Před 5 lety +40

      @@petereastwood7868 hardly preachy unlike your post. Just offering a possible explanation. And if your footprints are digging holes with each step you may want to change your shoes. Get outta here with your asshat reply.

    • @chriseidam7319
      @chriseidam7319 Před 5 lety +16

      I learned about that in the '70s, then forgot all about it. You are right - if your pad STB, it is the next best thing.

    • @chriseidam7319
      @chriseidam7319 Před 5 lety +91

      @@DadBodDrumming ,
      Compared to all of the other impacts - trekking pole scars, camp fires, trail erosion, digging pooper holes, putting stakes in the ground - a hip trench is inconsequential and is easily reversed, which is what I would do. To be clear, I might only do this if my pad gave up the ghost.
      The only damage done would be to roots and mycellium, which would grow back in days. In fact, it would likely lead to plant seeds germinating, as any green thumb will tell you.

  • @jennifergraham9199
    @jennifergraham9199 Před 5 lety +7

    I use a hammock and just wanted to add that I use a slightly modified clear shower curtain as a rainfly/tarp. It keeps me dry but offers the luxury of seeing the stars and nature around me!

  • @richardgoeringer561
    @richardgoeringer561 Před 5 lety +322

    Long time hiker here and one thing about hammocks they are addictive the first time I used one on a boy scout weekend trip when I was 13 I spent the rest of the summer trying to figure out how I was going to set it up in my bed room at home and now at 40 I still use a hammock everytime I go out

    • @matthewjacobs141
      @matthewjacobs141 Před 5 lety +18

      Well, I'm 73...so my happy days of sleeping on the ground are over...bought a Hennessey Jungle 2 layer and have never slept better. 2 layers mean you're not fighting your insulation(pads ...foam or air) once you get in, they are locked in place between the layers

    • @davidlazarus67
      @davidlazarus67 Před 5 lety +8

      Richard Goeringer I sleep in a hammock at home and sleep so well in it.

    • @matthewjacobs141
      @matthewjacobs141 Před 5 lety +14

      @@davidlazarus67 You're single I take it

    • @davidlazarus67
      @davidlazarus67 Před 5 lety +10

      MATTHEW JACOBS Yes but I know of couples who have two hammocks in their bedroom. I think for their intimate issues there are still other places they can go.

    • @chiuansheng
      @chiuansheng Před 5 lety +2

      After go hike with my girl friend. I love Tent!!!!;)

  • @thalliumrc3981
    @thalliumrc3981 Před 4 lety +6

    I'm a ADV motorcyclist and this is some of the most useful camping information channel I have found.

  • @nataliesullivan7184
    @nataliesullivan7184 Před 5 lety +9

    If it’s pouring rain💦, with most freestanding double wall tents🏕, you can set up the fly (outer wall) first. It takes a little longer to clip the inner onto the poles from the inside, but at least your inner wall stays completely dry. Love 💕 your videos Dixie, keep them coming. I’m watching from Australia 🇦🇺. 👍🏻

  • @jackillin
    @jackillin Před 5 lety +18

    My friend sold me his very expensive, light weight double wall tent & I used it while travelling around the world for several years, I didn't realise till the end of my travels that you could separate the inside & outside!! Ahahahah Dixie talking about the inside section getting wet while attaching the outer shel & I'm laughing at my stupidity all those years, would have been cooler in India if I had taken off the outer shell, well mine came from my friend set up like that and I always packed it, unpacked & set it up as a single unit!! I loved that tent, single person tent that managed at a stretch to accommodate me, another girl & our 2 backpacks while hitchhiking around New Zealand - Huge Vestabule. It even survived a morning hungry duck attack!

  • @visamedic
    @visamedic Před 3 lety +7

    I’ve been a backpacker for over 30 yrs. Yes it was a lot of info, but you presented it extremely clearly and thoroughly. I always like to see others takes on stuff, and being a packer from the 80’s I always try to stay up on the lighter materials, especially as I get older. 😁

  • @rowanwalker9927
    @rowanwalker9927 Před 5 lety +39

    I love spreading out and having the den feeling in my tent! I can definitely be a home body at times, and it was nice to have that settling into my home feeling on trail.

    • @Surfbird11
      @Surfbird11 Před 2 lety

      I think a lot of people feel the same.

  • @nickxidis9571
    @nickxidis9571 Před 5 lety +290

    Shug Emery’s CZcams channel is also a good hammock resource. Plus he’s a hoot to watch.

    • @HomemadeWanderlust
      @HomemadeWanderlust  Před 5 lety +14

      Yes! Thank you for adding that.

    • @LYLEWOLD
      @LYLEWOLD Před 5 lety

      yep, exactly what i was thinking.

    • @stephanieniesen1804
      @stephanieniesen1804 Před 5 lety +13

      Shug is great! He gives a lot of options and why he likes em, so you can weigh what your preferences are in contrast.
      I love my hammock from Dream Hammock! I have the raven. I also really like my hanger tarp from underground quilts; I've had really good experience with their customer service. And their tarp is very well made. If you're worried about privacy, winter tarps with doors are always an option. I use one when I car camp, to keep neighbors from seeing too much!

    • @WaitWhat99
      @WaitWhat99 Před 5 lety

      Yeah hes hilarious

    • @camezcym4975
      @camezcym4975 Před 5 lety +3

      Will add Tim Watson's and Spiguyver name here. What I did not learn from Shug I learned from them

  • @dalaillamathepctme6957
    @dalaillamathepctme6957 Před 5 lety +159

    I'm a free-standing double-walled tent gal. I like the sturdiness of them, the warmth when it's cold, the stars when it's fine, and how lightweight they've become. As well, nowadays, most double walled tents can be set up with the fly and stakes or a footprint, then the inner tent is put up from the inside so it never gets wet. Or, in the case of my 4-year old Mira Exped ii, and many others, the fly and inner tent can be kept connected on take-down and set up as one, thereby also negating the wet floor issues of setting up in rain.

    • @TransylvanianHiker
      @TransylvanianHiker Před 5 lety +4

      I came here to leave the exact same comment, I also use an Exped which pitches all-in-one and used two Vango's before with the characteristic. On the other hand, most of those kinds of tents don't have the option to pitch the inner alone (which I would never do around here, because you never know when rain hits, but maybe around other places, weather is more predictable).

    • @0zthehikingsailor
      @0zthehikingsailor Před 5 lety +2

      Sadly we are still wet getting into the tent or do you have a suggestion for this always wet in a tent person lol

    • @dayday_13
      @dayday_13 Před 5 lety +5

      The Hiking Sailor on the AT 2019 coat all the seams of the tent with a water proof glue before going camping and let it dry. They sell the glue most places and lasts for a while. Without a rain fly I’ve found that the term waterproof tent doesn’t exist

    • @blueeyeswhitedragon9839
      @blueeyeswhitedragon9839 Před 5 lety +12

      I've camped usually with tents ( in the old days...canvas), tarps, and pop-up campers, but with mosquitoes, ticks, and blackflies...there is no peace in the bush or camp areas if you are not closed in. Here in Canada, weather can be a problem, but the cold can mitigate the bug problem, but then it has it's own serious side effects. I'm still waiting for someone to show me where sleeping in warm weather without bug protection is enjoyable or possible. I know people do it, I've done it myself, but without cold temp's or strong winds...the bugs always win.

    • @ryudom
      @ryudom Před 5 lety +4

      @@blueeyeswhitedragon9839 I travelled through washington and oregon from june to oct without a drop of rain or a mosquito. no tent, no sleeping bag.

  • @brucewarren5248
    @brucewarren5248 Před 5 lety +11

    I ride mountain bikes in the desert and "camp" in the car. I stumbled on this video and learned so much that I may get and use a tent. BTW, the video is extremely well done and edited. Thanks for caring enough to do a good video.

    • @fixerupperer
      @fixerupperer Před 3 lety

      There are a few car tents commercially made, especially for hatchbacks, suvs and trucks. A couple bike tents too. You can also rig up a decent shelter off a car with a tarp. Tent vs. tarp I find is most dependent on how much bug and critter protection you need.

    • @seattlegrrlie
      @seattlegrrlie Před 11 měsíci

      Nothing beats a car for shelter. I'll always prefer car to tent if I have car. Can't carry car up mountain switchbacks which is why I use tent

  • @cougarmeat8803
    @cougarmeat8803 Před 5 lety +3

    Excellent summary of the options - Thank you.
    Remember, you are NOT limited to tree areas with a hammock. Using rock climbing protection (stoppers/hexes, etc.) you can use cracks in boulders for support anchors. Also, let's say you'll be in trees for 5 days but open fields for 2. On those 2 treeless days, you can put a ground sheet down and your hammock on top of that. Use your hiking poles to support your tarp and you can tie the (built into the hammock) bug net to the hiking poles to keep it off your face. Sure - not as comfortable as in the air. But it allows you to mostly use the hammock as intended and still have shelter for the few days you can't.
    For privacy, you can stake your tarp low/close to the hammock and change with the hammock between you an any public. Without focusing on "ultra-lite" options, given the weight of components, the hammock is about as heavy as a tent setup but so much more comfortable. A good resource is www.hammockforums.net
    Remember, you get a flat lie by turning slightly diagonal; not making the hammock tighter.
    I like the first edition of Ultimate Hang a little better because it is much smaller/lighter so easier to carry in the field if you want printed reminders while learning. The second edition is good for a home reference. Thank you for giving hammocks another chance.
    Cougarmeat.

  • @Um_im_ryan
    @Um_im_ryan Před 5 lety +15

    IF YOU ARE SLEEPING IN A HAMMOCK READ THIS!!!! Before you take any chances, buy some good, long hammock straps, don’t use rope, if it rains when you are sleeping in your hammock the water will run down the tree, follow your ropes, and soak you. This happened to me in the summer last year in boundary waters, rainy, cooler night, I woke up at three a.m. cold wet and miserable, I was lucky that one of my friends who was with me let me in his two person tent, otherwise it could have been a lot worse.

    • @CM-ve1bz
      @CM-ve1bz Před 5 lety +9

      Ryan Adams
      Tie a rope around the hammock rope with a short tail hanging down, just before the ring. The water will drip off the tail instead of running down into the hammock.

    • @Um_im_ryan
      @Um_im_ryan Před 5 lety

      C M ok thanks

  • @amywaren740
    @amywaren740 Před 5 lety +27

    Good to see the video, wondered if you were safe. That was terrible yesterday in Beauregard. Hope all your people were all right. We're down here in Montgomery. War Eagle!

  • @Goon911stillfightin
    @Goon911stillfightin Před 4 lety +16

    I love my Hennessy hammock tent we used them in the military and I loved it than and now

    • @jwilsonhandmadeknives2760
      @jwilsonhandmadeknives2760 Před 4 lety +2

      same here. i live in FL and aside from about four weeks a year you can count on hot, humid, rainy, buggy. A hammock feels like air conditioning compared to a tent. I'll never sleep on the ground again unless I have no choice. Unless you can cram a sealy posture pedic into a tent, I"ll stick with the hammock.

  • @elizabethd2916
    @elizabethd2916 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you Dixie. That was an absolutely fantastic breakdown of the different shelter types along with the pros and cons of each. I really think this is going to be a great series and I appreciate you doing it.

  • @williamdulitz6525
    @williamdulitz6525 Před 5 lety +54

    Don't forget about shugemery for hammock camping know-how
    He's been a pervasive advocate for the hammock way of life

  • @Moocharoo
    @Moocharoo Před 3 lety +7

    Love the way you call the poncho tarp the extreme end... I've been camping with with a poncho for over 20 years and has always been my favorite camping set up. Never realized it was extreme, just though it was normal ;-p

    • @WindsongPodcast
      @WindsongPodcast Před 2 měsíci

      I'm interested in this method. Can you recommend a good way to learn about it?

  • @lerdapuris8597
    @lerdapuris8597 Před 5 lety

    I'm so happy you're doing a series like this. It's also very clear how much effort you're putting into it. Love u!!

  • @Dan-uw6xv
    @Dan-uw6xv Před 5 lety

    Good to see you made it through the nasty weather. I hope your family/friends/loved ones are well. Thanks for the video.

  • @Ikreisrond
    @Ikreisrond Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for the overview, quite thoroughly! Especially on the tarp+bivi part. Not a lot of people get that right. They only think of either a tarp, *OR* a bivi. Not about a tarp *AND* a bivi, like you’ve mentioned. Which ultimately works better against mosquitoes, moisture and wind.
    Also, you’ve got some impressive hair. And for a non-native English speaker that I am, I like that accent!

  • @azdesertrunner56
    @azdesertrunner56 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks Dixie, good info. Glad to hear you are ok from the storms.

  • @deborahbusch5179
    @deborahbusch5179 Před 5 lety +77

    Thank you Dixie, being a beginner backpacker, I found this video very helpful.😁😁

  • @jamesdickens7666
    @jamesdickens7666 Před 5 lety +2

    I’ve been hammock camping for years, and it’s the best sleep that I’ve had in the woods. I use a Skeeter Beeter Pro and a sil nylon tarp. Works great for me.

  • @nomad9024
    @nomad9024 Před 4 lety +7

    My favorite backpack tent so far for solo hiking is the Snugpak Ionosphere. It's a mix between a bivi, and a tent. It's great for cowboy camping.

  • @berniebroering7438
    @berniebroering7438 Před 5 lety +4

    Dixie (J.) I'm praying for you and your community because of the devastation from the storms and I hope that it'll be a quick recovery. That said, thanks for your informative videos, but take your time in getting some out if you need to, I am sure we can understand your situation. Family, friends, and community first!

    • @atmako1
      @atmako1 Před 5 lety

      Bernie Broering I was thinking along those lines also-wondered if Dixie lived near the impact....tragic event...puts a lot of things in perspective..

  • @theomillstorm7367
    @theomillstorm7367 Před 5 lety +1

    I just took my 3 oldest boys each on his own camping trip. My oldest and I backpacked 2 miles and hammocked there. That was, by far, the most comfortable sleep of the 3 trips! Despite the insane thunderstorm, the hammock trip was cooler and generally more comfortable than the tent trips. This was our FIRST backpacking overnight, but we knew enough to bring tarps, lol

  • @robertwilliams7715
    @robertwilliams7715 Před 5 lety

    Most useful run through I've come across! Always used tents but decided on an alternative for this season. Thank you!

  • @joshjohnson1792
    @joshjohnson1792 Před 5 lety +5

    Great to hear you are thinking about trying a hammock again! I love being outside camping but I was really tired of waking up in a tent with a sore and stiff back every morning. So when I saw some other scout leaders using hammocks a few years ago I decided to start doing some research. The most common thing I was reading, when I first started researching, was how comfortable people were sleeping. So I took the plunge and bought a Hennessy Jungle Explorer Asym Zip. Wow was it ever an amazing sleep! I went from tossing and turning, trying to get comfortable and waking up tired to sleeping 10-11 hours a night and waking up very rested. I now have three hammocks for myself and family. I have added a Hennessy Cub (for the kids) and most recently a Dutchware Chameleon. Hennessy is a great starting point for hammock noobs because of their all in one hammock kits. They also have a wide range of hammocks for everyone's needs (ultralight to heavier double bottom hammocks). I now love the Chameleon for its modular nature. You can get just what you need to get started or buy everything for it and be set up for all the seasons and possible weather that mother nature can throw at you. Don't for forget to get an underquilt (like the Hammock Gear Incubator) for backside warmth. If you go with the Chameleon you will also need to get a tarp. There are many options for tarps all depending on how much coverage you want and how light you want it. You can even get tarps with doors for bad weather and privacy! Well I hope you enjoy the hammock this time and don't forget to check out Shug's videos for all hammock info.

  • @samtoshner8002
    @samtoshner8002 Před 5 lety +5

    One thing I love about tarps is all the room they provide. I have recently started using an oversized tarp in addition to my tent when I'm not as constrained by weight.

    • @KrisHudsonLee
      @KrisHudsonLee Před 2 lety

      I just got a pocket tarp. Very light weight. Not huge, but big enough to create a nice shelter in addition to my Zelter Shelter. I'm a huge fan! It really does fit in a pocket and is really good and waterproof.

  • @CraigBaer
    @CraigBaer Před 5 lety

    My wife and I really enjoy your videos. I had a bad motorcycle accident and so a tent just sucks for my hips. I love the Hammock Bliss Sky Bed. It's an asymmetrical design that has a sleeve for you to slide your sleeping pad into. Doesn't slip and I've kept very warm down to freezing temps without anything else under me. Big shout out to The Ultimate Hang and Shug's videos. Also, ProfessorHammock has great videos for all of the people that just want to totally get deep into the hammock lifestyle. Thanks again! And for sure (guys), designate yourself a pee bottle for when you just don't want to get out of your shelter at night. Best advice I ever received.

  • @djsomers100
    @djsomers100 Před 5 lety +2

    Hiked the Marble Mountains/Trinity Alps and norther Yosemite back in the '60's with homemade denim hammocks with a tarp slung over them. Heavy but comfy. Currently using Zpack Triplex which I love!
    Wow your videos are outstanding Dixie. Thorough, entertaining, and spot on!

  • @Astrick132
    @Astrick132 Před 5 lety +11

    I love my hammock. Last time I went out backpacking it started to rain and once I got my rain fly up first I set everything else up under the fly and out of the rain. It was also nice in the morning having my cup of coffee and breakfast while staying warm in my hammock.

  • @RomeoJN
    @RomeoJN Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for the advice! We’re shopping for tents for our summer trip right now and this has a great run down on general features and terms, and things to consider.

  • @truehearted2295
    @truehearted2295 Před 5 lety

    It's GREAT! to hear your are still open to trying a hammock. Looking forward to hearing your opinion on this topic.

  • @jongrall
    @jongrall Před 5 lety +24

    Great overview, Dixie!
    Personally, I favor a hammock for myself in the backcountry. When I first got into hammocking I got an all-in-one system from Hennessy Hammock. After a while using that, I realized that silnylon wasn't the best shelter/tarp material in wet weather, and I needed a longer hammock to be a bit more comfortable. So, I switched to a Warbonnet Blackbird XLC, and got a few specialty bits and pieces for it such as a cuben fiber tarp from Hammock Gear, "spider web" tree huggers, and a ridgeline and suspension system from Dutchware Gear.
    I still really enjoy my hammock, and plan to use it on the Benton MacKaye trail in a couple of weeks, as well as on the JMT this year (if I can get a permit!). However, despite the superior comfort, I have noticed 3 major downsides. Despite my best efforts to get the lightest gear money can buy, a complete hammock setup is going to be heavier than a comparable tent or tarp setup. As you mentioned, you also need suitable trees, and while this isn't a problem on the AT, it can be an issue on other trails, meaning you may need a second shelter system for use on other trips. Finally, setting up a hammock properly takes skill and time. Even with practice it can take me 20-40 minutes to get everything setup just right, plus 15-20 minutes to take down and pack, and that may be a lot more time than most people are willing to put into their shelter each day.
    I still use a 2-person tent with my wife when we go camping together - a Big Agnes HV UL 2 - but tents definitely aren't my favorite when hiking solo. The main issues I have are sleeping on the lumpy ground, the awkwardness of an inflatable pad, competition for great sites, risk of flooding in really wet weather, and how filthy the outside can get.
    Bottom line: there's no perfect shelter.

    • @burningcoal5705
      @burningcoal5705 Před 3 lety

      I used to use hammocks when I paddled through the boundary waters but my butt nearly always gets cold and I can't twist and turn to get comfortable. Bringing more blankets takes more weight to carry. I use a small Bivy now and its pretty easy to set up.

  • @ThatGuy-sf5pb
    @ThatGuy-sf5pb Před 4 lety +7

    Great video, I just want to give a bit of advice on using a tarp, being a long time tarp guy. If you use bungees (connect the ends into the ring/hole/whatever it's called, and just wrap the middle around a tree or something), you can set up the whole thing in a matter a couple of minutes, and it eases the need for a bunch of knots. Although there are some drawbacks (you can't do it on plains, in high winds it will move more than if you use a rope, etc.), I'd say it's a good way to start if you've never used a tarp before. I thought that I'd just give something I learned along the way. Also, it's sinfully easy to pack it up if you want to head out at before dawn, since you don't have to untie anything, just watch out so the bungees don't take out your eye ;).

    • @kenneth93mejer
      @kenneth93mejer Před 2 lety +1

      I know the video and comment is old, but this right here is a really good tip! We used to do the exact same thing in the army. The bungee cords is easy and quick to use but also secures down the tarp for a low profile.

  • @user-uh5fc3rd9e
    @user-uh5fc3rd9e Před 4 lety +1

    My experience with tarps and why I went back to a tent.
    1. Bugs have unrestricted access to you while under a tarp unless you bring a mosquito net which adds back the weight you saved with the tarp.
    2. If it is raining when you get to camp, you will be setting a tarp over wet ground. Most tents will be dry inside even on wet ground.
    3. Fear of snakes. While a snake would never crawl under a tarp with you, a tent makes one feel safer from this (unreasonable fear), thereby sleeping better.
    On hammocks: The issue is no insulation underneath, or having to pack in the insulation which adds weight to your pack.
    Thank you for this channel and all your videos. You are an inspiration!
    Paul

    • @wilsonb82
      @wilsonb82 Před 4 měsíci

      With tent you can't enjoy the view haha

  • @south_coast_tackle
    @south_coast_tackle Před 5 lety +2

    I'm a new hiker and I am leaning toward hammock camping. I've been watching Shugemery and also picked up "The Ultimate Hang v2" and am reading it now. So many options on gear it's mind blowing!

  • @HeyStevie100
    @HeyStevie100 Před 5 lety +149

    Perk's beard releases heat. science.

    • @miketaylor6700
      @miketaylor6700 Před 4 lety +8

      If perks beard gets any longer, he won’t need a quilt.

  • @gerreigka
    @gerreigka Před 5 lety +11

    Have you heard of a Tentsile tent? It is a hammock style tent that you suspend from trees, but it has ratchet straps to tighten it up so that you are sleeping in a flat suspension hammock type thing. It is very comfortable, and you can sleep off the ground, but you're still sleeping in the relatively flat space. I have one and I highly recommend them.

    • @Surfbird11
      @Surfbird11 Před 2 lety

      Looks amazing! Amazingly heavy, complicated and requires 3 trees in near perfect positions. Not something to put up daily.
      But it does look great.

  • @larrydonna369
    @larrydonna369 Před 5 lety

    Very comprehensive discussion. I think you covered it all. I use a hybrid system that consists of an 8 x 10 ft tarp with mosquito netting sewn around the edges. The netting keeps the mosquitoes out (although the crawly bugs can still get in). I rig it A-frame style supported with trekking poles or trees, and I generally use it in ground dwelling mode. However, I also have a lightweight (13oz) 9-foot solo hammock that I can rig up in places where I can't find a suitable level, rock free site. For these situations, I use my air mattress in the hammock for insulation and my unzipped sleeping bag as a makeshift quilt. This setup is compact, lightweight, inexpensive, and most importantly it provides flexibility for various conditions.

  • @paulhenry8174
    @paulhenry8174 Před 5 lety +1

    I started hiking with a tube tent a long time ago. Essentially a 10 x 10 trash bag. It worked great! In the summer, with few mosquitoes, in the forest, with very few rainy nights.
    If mosquitoes, rain, privacy and humidity are big issues a double walled tent is best.
    As I’m a desert hiking guy, the ground cloth, poncho is mostly all you ever need. Your enemies are wind and sun. With emergency cover for thunderstorms. Anything wet dries quickly bugs aren’t bad. (Shake out everything before packing)
    Looking forward to trying hammock camping in the future as old backs need all the help they can get.
    It’s really about conditions, comfort, and survival in cold and wet. Hypothermia is a life and death deal.

  • @stephenschwake524
    @stephenschwake524 Před 5 lety +21

    I use a hammock with a bug net and a rainfly when its warm, and a double-wall tent with an inflatable mattress and sleeping bag when its cold. A cheap blue polytarp makes a great footprint. I tuck the edges under. I don't understand why so much of the camping community can only use one system for all situations. Why not both?

    • @sonorangaming4450
      @sonorangaming4450 Před 5 lety +3

      I definitely use both being in Arizona. I do alot of kayak camping, so im usually near trees to use a hammock, but when its a big multiday, or i know the area is lacking trees, i will use one of my tents.

    • @user-yk5in5mz1d
      @user-yk5in5mz1d Před 3 lety +4

      i can barely afford one system, let alone 2 of them

  • @ScottKent
    @ScottKent Před 5 lety +28

    Umm...Most of us hammock campers do use a good tarp. DCF tarps and hexon 1.0 make for an exceptionally light setup. Ultimate hang is good, look at Shug's videos, and go look at the gear by Jared at Simply Light Designs. Jared will walk you through whatever you might need (he makes good stuff and gets it to you lightening fast too). Dutch over at Dutchware is a wealth of knowledge and resources too. You can lighten your hammock setup just the same as tent camping by paying a lot of attention to your sleep gear and getting better quality down or by having different summer/winter configurations (you don't always need a 20 degree underquilt). Shug also has a video about how to side-sleep in a hammock. Side-sleepers might consider a bridge hammock or another style that uses a spreader bar. Personally I find that sleeping at a 30 degree angle or a little more in a standard gathered end hammock lets me sleep on my side (so does extremely cold conditions if you consider the fetal position a form of side-sleeping, but I do that in a tent too). Hammock camping takes a little dedication and a willingness to experiment with styles and setups but once you get it dialed in...nothing beats it. Oh, and you can take most hammocks to the ground and use trekking poles for the tarp if you have to...and if you are also using a winter/summer sock or bug net the hammock is just like a bivy under a tarp. Only draw back to taking a tarp to the ground is that most hammock campers seldom bring a sleeping pad, but if you know your going to spend time on the ground you can plan ahead. Also, you don't always have to use trees...2 cars that won't be moving, 2 posts or signs, under a bridge, 2 big rocks (that also will not be moving), a swing set all work... NOT cacti though (you can, but if you damage them, depending on the type, you can be in a lot of trouble)...so yeah, after a while you'll be surprised at the solutions you can come up with for hanging a hammock.

    • @HomemadeWanderlust
      @HomemadeWanderlust  Před 5 lety +4

      Thank you for all of the info! I really appreciate it :)

    • @stephanieniesen1804
      @stephanieniesen1804 Před 5 lety +1

      I've had to use a tree in combo with a van door frame to hang! You can get creative! Good tips, thanks!

    • @adventure_hannah3841
      @adventure_hannah3841 Před 5 lety +7

      Dude YES! I've hung underneath a bridge over a creek in summer, between two telephone poles, between two cars, and on a swingset. Another plus of hammock camping is if one person likes a tight hang and one likes a loose hang, you can stack two hammocks and a ground-dweller under one tarp like 3-level bunk-beds and save a ton of room at campsites.

    • @ScottKent
      @ScottKent Před 5 lety +3

      Heh...yeah, I've stacked them before too...can be funny when they try to convince my short self to hang higher. I've also paddled up to a shore and just hung a hammock between trees over the water with my kayak under me...it's a little scary in Florida because I'm always worried about gators, but it was great in Hawaii. Hammocks also come in all different sizes so figuring out how you like to lay is part of the fun...and you get to own a bunch of hammocks :)

    • @ScottKent
      @ScottKent Před 5 lety +1

      @@HomemadeWanderlust Hey Dixie...i forgot to mention that if you want to avoid the whole underquilt thing and make it easier to go to the ground with a hammock setup; consider a double layer hammock with an open end to insert your inflatable sleeping mat. Schill brothers also have a good video from a while back where they and one of their wives all tried the same model hammocks but with one made of Hexon 1.0 and the other made from Hexon 1.6...long story short, the wife thought the 1.0 was softer but noticed no difference in the sag while the heavier guys thought that the 1.0 was softer and each had about 23% more sag than with the 1.6. however, they both preferred the increased sag as they felt it let them sleep on their sides better. Just some thoughts...

  • @ohialehuacrozier8638
    @ohialehuacrozier8638 Před 3 lety +2

    Tent? Yes. Hammock? Yes. My bed? Yes. Love some sky watching.
    Thanks for your sharing. Side sleeper her also.
    Mahalo nui loa. Aloha ke akua. To All.

  • @marissabell4473
    @marissabell4473 Před 5 lety

    I was considering using my hammock and getting a tarp, but going through storage in our place I found an almost new 2 person MEC backpacking tent.
    As someone who has never done backpacking or thru hiking but really wants to, it was like a sign from the universe to get out there.
    Just waiting for it to warm up.
    Love your channel. You’re an inspiration.

  • @johnthefox6239
    @johnthefox6239 Před 5 lety +3

    I am a hammock kind of guy, and something i would suggest is to ALWAYS have an under quilt. That is the most important bit. And know the weather before you go and make shure that if there is rain bring a tarp. One thing that i like is a bug net for my hammock.

  • @oldmenhikingjeffgandee
    @oldmenhikingjeffgandee Před 5 lety +4

    Check out Dream Hammock, Hammock Gear, and Dutchware Gear, three of my favorite cottage vendors. Great video!

  • @jacquelineho8623
    @jacquelineho8623 Před 3 lety

    This was sooooo informative. Ive been camping for years but the explanation in this was so helpful. Thanks for taking the time to film this 🙏🙏🙏

  • @jcb24146
    @jcb24146 Před 5 lety

    so excited for this series!! thanks for all your work and dedication to putting this kind of info out there - you’re the best dixie!!

  • @aeabottss22
    @aeabottss22 Před 5 lety +14

    Hammock suggestion: Warbonnet Blackbird. Has everything you could ask for in a hammock. I’ve taken it on a couple trips and love it. The “shelf” on the side is indispensable for a backpacking hammock in my opinion.

    • @flaskehrlenmeyer4349
      @flaskehrlenmeyer4349 Před 5 lety +1

      i sleep in a blackbird xlc every night, indoors and out.
      i am a side sleeper, and i have found that i experience better, longer sleep and also a great deal of pain abatement in a hammock. literal life changer.

    • @adamghahate3323
      @adamghahate3323 Před 5 lety +2

      Did the pct in 2016 in a warbonnet blackbird and edge tarp. Doing the same this year! 15' straps. Dutchclip, Dutch beetle and dutch tarp bling all around.

  • @mattcoppel141
    @mattcoppel141 Před 5 lety +4

    Dream Hammock is the best, very customizable and hand made n Ohio. I have 4 of there hammocks and love them.

  • @ambermeade963
    @ambermeade963 Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much for your time posting these videos. They’re all so informative!! 🙏👍🤓

  • @jeffalbillar7625
    @jeffalbillar7625 Před 5 lety

    You are thorough, young Lady. You could, without being arrogant, call this video the ultimate tent/this and that guide. Very informative.

  • @DavidUKesb
    @DavidUKesb Před 5 lety +3

    Love your accent. Reminds me of watching the Dukes of Hazzard!

  • @jaymiller286
    @jaymiller286 Před 5 lety +32

    Check out Dutchware hammocks, tarps, and connecting gear. Make it easy to set up.

    • @netgraphx
      @netgraphx Před 5 lety +3

      Dutchware gear is great. It always seems to add up quick in my cart, but don't regret anything I've purchased.

    • @JohnFrahm0676
      @JohnFrahm0676 Před 5 lety +2

      Dutch is the way to go. Check out his chameleon line. Best set up I have found.

    • @benningtoncamper2852
      @benningtoncamper2852 Před 5 lety +2

      Dutchwear is hot right now. I chose Warbonnet Outdoors stuff as it was gear I was able to try out at a hang when I was shopping. I made the initial mistake of buying a complete ENO setup for my first overnighter... After two nights at a hang, I bought the Blackbird XLC.

    • @williamdulitz6525
      @williamdulitz6525 Před 5 lety +1

      The Blackbird XLC is fantastic! I have a friend with a Dutch, a Hennessy, and a Blackbird, and the Blackbird XLC was by far my favorite

    • @m1tthrawnuru0d06
      @m1tthrawnuru0d06 Před 5 lety +1

      Currently using a Dutch hammock and a Warbonnet tarp. Can't wait till I can get Dutch's Chameleon.

  • @HeatherDDawnHowes
    @HeatherDDawnHowes Před 4 lety

    Thanks for all of Your detailed informative Videos!! They are are really appreciated especially for a Female that hikes alone often & is always on the look out for tips. You Rock!! ❤️

  • @collegestudent247
    @collegestudent247 Před 3 lety +1

    Tarps are soo light and once you get the hang of it you can set them up super fast, which is great if the weather turns bad suddenly. Also, you can get an additional component to add door vestibules to make it private and to block out wind.

  • @Happymars24
    @Happymars24 Před 5 lety +5

    Honestly, I like and use all 3 options. Just depends on the length of the hike, weather, etc.

  • @flipfloddess9986
    @flipfloddess9986 Před 3 lety +3

    You got some hard core southern twang when you say nice.

  • @bluestag5744
    @bluestag5744 Před 4 lety +1

    In “the old days” I used a tarp, then a bivy bag I actually made (it wasn’t pretty, but it worked lol). In middle age I love my tent. I don’t go as far and I’m much slower than I was twenty years ago, but I like my comforts with my tent, sleeping pad, and my little pack chair...and my knee brace and medication lol.

  • @tsavage4185
    @tsavage4185 Před 5 lety

    As always, a wonderful video Dixie. Informed, experienced people are always interesting and informative to listen to. Thanks

  • @dracphelan
    @dracphelan Před 5 lety +11

    Like you, I tried one of the cheap hammock setups (last year). It seemed good at first. But after a few hours I was very uncomfortable.
    This year I got a Warbonnet Ridgerunner hammock. It is light years better than the cheap setup.

    • @HomemadeWanderlust
      @HomemadeWanderlust  Před 5 lety

      Glad you got it figured out. With backpacking gear you often get what you pay for!

    • @joeshmoe3667
      @joeshmoe3667 Před 5 lety

      @@HomemadeWanderlust Oh the Bridge hammocks Are oh so nice! Like sleeping on a cloud! I sleep better in my bridge than at home in bed. They are ( because of weight) the best car camping hammock or way to sleep rather I've ever found. Get a double layered one and throw a pad in the bottom. Big ol synthetic sleeping bag and your big ole pillow from home off your bed, Heaven! On trail its simple gathered end and fancy 950 fill down quilts, but car camping I bring the luxurious Bridge! Ive got the JRB, my buddy have the warbonnet, both are amazing.

  • @zzlee6411
    @zzlee6411 Před 5 lety +3

    The hammocks I would suggest Warbonnet Blackbird XLC or the Hennessy Deep Jungle zip. The Warbonnet has a shelf to the side of that is so convenient. The Warbonnet can ether used with feet left or right. Some people like small light tarps. I like bigger tarps fro DD hammocks 4m by 4m. If You have poles or sticks you can set up your hammock on the ground. Your going want something to protect the hammock from damage.

  • @kristiiimarieee89
    @kristiiimarieee89 Před 5 lety

    I’m not outdoorsy, never once hiked, or backpacked and I have zero intention of ever doing such a thing. But for some reason I find everything you talk about so interesting and have been following you for years!

  • @stephanieniesen1804
    @stephanieniesen1804 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for all your videos! I've been backpacking a few times around Missouri and use a hammock. I'm exploring ground options and really appreciate all of your comparisons!

  • @BallJarSo
    @BallJarSo Před 5 lety +15

    I am one of those old, decrepit hikers who gave up ground dwelling when it became too uncomfortable. As for good information, you may want to join the community over at www.hammockforums.net. You can literally spend days finding answers to your questions. FWIW, my hammock rig is 1.4 pounds heavier than my ground kit.
    PS Love your channel! You are one of those who give hope to some of us that we may one day do a triple crown!!

  • @meowky1993
    @meowky1993 Před 5 lety +5

    Hope you and your family are doing alright with all the tornadoes down your way!

  • @9000george
    @9000george Před 5 lety

    Thank you for making all these videos.I work in a camping and hiking store in Australia and have learnt a lot since I've subscribed to your channel.

  • @martina3081
    @martina3081 Před 2 lety

    Great video, comprehensive and full of useful thoughts for beginners. Years ago I changed from using various kinds of tents to a hammock. Got a Warbonnet Blackbird, which is phenomenal. Lightweight and packable, pretty easy (and very customizable) to set up, extremely comfortable for sleep (diagonal flat sleeping), interior gear storage, extremely warm with ultralight down covers, no sleeping bag or pad needed, 10x12 silnylon fly can give you a huge enclosed room, even huger stand-up covered living room (with a super-comfy recliner/couch to lounge around in and massive covered cooking area), or furls away around the ridge line for stargazing, with almost instant deployment if rain starts. The one and only drawback, potentially, is the need for a couple of trees, but I've never once not been able to find a great spot to hang, and in a pinch you can actually pitch the whole rig on the ground using two trekking poles. I would never, never go back to a tent. :-)

  • @kimkremer8915
    @kimkremer8915 Před 4 lety +5

    I love my hammock. I love the feeling of the air moving around me. Tents feel too "stuffy" to me now.
    Hammocks definitely take some getting accustomed to, though. My first set up was around four pounds. This season, I used the Kammok Mantis UL: the whole rig is two pounds. The trade-off for an UL hammock is that they're more likely to fail. Mine did after a half-dozen uses. Kammok sent me a replacement (they stand behind their lifetime warranty so long as you haven't abused the gear), but had I been out on the trail I'd have been sleeping on the ground.
    I'm a side sleeper, and my most recent trip was the first time I was able to lie diagonally on my side & sleep. Even when I've had to sleep on my back, I've slept better than I would have on the ground. (I used to be able to sleep on the ground on a Zrest pad. No longer -- I very little sleep & I can barely move the next morning.)
    I just did the Washington Section J of the PCT. It rained almost every night. I use down underquilt & a Zenbivy. I was warm & dry the entire time. An advantage of tarps is one can set the tarp up immediately once in camp & work/eat/relax under it. I lie a sheet of Tyvek on the ground & keep all my gear (except for food) underneath my hammock. You should hang your hammock so you're relatively close to the ground; if it's hung properly, it's easy to reach all of your gear.
    I had a couple of short days in that were kind of miserable. I found I can sit up in my hammock (although this requires fairly good core strength). It was really far more a comfortable shelter than most people think.
    Privacy is less of an issue than one might think. First, I've frequently set up my hammock a ways off the trail, in the trees, where I'm not visible from the trail or practically invisible unless I draw attention to myself. Second, one can set up their tarp for maximum privacy.
    If there aren't two trees of appropriate size & distance apart, I can set the whole rig up as a bivy. This is the kind of thing one should practice at home ahead of time, and ideally plan for what you'd do on a slab of rock.

  • @chezwickcheese139
    @chezwickcheese139 Před 5 lety +3

    Just ordered my Duplex and can't wait for it to arrive. Lightweight tents are the way to go imo.

  • @avarosetta9784
    @avarosetta9784 Před 5 lety

    You're description was so helpful I wish other youtubers were this professional about their content.

  • @RogerZerne
    @RogerZerne Před 3 lety

    I'm kinda new to it but I've been hammock camping on my last few backpacking trips and am loving it so far.

  • @gray5627
    @gray5627 Před 5 lety +17

    Hi Dixie! You might wish to check out Dutchware Gear. Their Chameleon hammock is quite nice, and they have other good hammocks as well. Thanks for sharing! :-)

    • @jmminmn
      @jmminmn Před 5 lety +1

      Gray Hiker love my chameleon with integrated bug net. I started with a cheaper mass made hammock. While it worked out ok... I like how lightweight and versatile the chameleon is.

    • @inviso1111
      @inviso1111 Před 5 lety

      I'll second that. The simple netless hammock and an add-on bug-net along with any one of the suspension options Dutch offers gives you a flexible/simple system. Add a tarp and insulation and you're done. If you haven't already stumbled across Amsteel/Zing-It/Lash-It line, give it a look for tarp suspension and tie-outs, suspension, bear lines and all kinds of other fun uses. Very light, very strong, doesn't hold water and doesn't stretch. Dutch's price on cordage is great as well.

  • @uptrail7169
    @uptrail7169 Před 5 lety +5

    Hammocks! Like Shug would say WhooooBuddy))))

  • @kgdblade
    @kgdblade Před 5 lety +1

    Dixie this is one of the most comprehensive videos I've seen on the subject matter. I've been camping and canoe trekking for 40 years and thought I've seen (and tried it all). I found myself agreeing with you on pretty much all of your points. Canoe trekking is a bit more weight luxurious compared to backpacking, but like yourself I've settled on single wall cuben fiber (now apparently called Dyneema) tent from a custom tent maker. Our first one was a 4 person pyramid style tent that lasted 6 years but was more of a tarp shelter as it was floorless. We just upgraded to one with a floor and mesh front and back doors plus mesh linking floor and sides to alleviate the condensation issue you mentioned. The Ants finally got to us on our last trip up in Wabakimi Park in northwestern Ontario. One night my wife and I both woke up at the same time, both of us slapping our head with our hand and trying to dig out ant from our ear who decided to forage in the wrong place. We both muttered in harmony, NEXT YEAR WE'RE GETTING A FLOOR!.
    I liked how you showed that you can use rock cairns on non-spike able grounds with non freestanding tents. This was one of our biggest concern when going to a non-free standing tent. The good news is that when there isn't soil around, rocks are usually plentiful. Sometimes we will fill a couple of stuff sacks with smaller rocks for key tension points and use that as an anchor and load larger rocks on top of it when we think the wind conditions are bad. You can also tie directly to stumps and samplings if you don't mind a less tight set up.
    I hammock camped for two years and enjoyed it. Thought I'd never go back until the inflatable air mattresses came out (and my wife started tagging along on my trips). Those neoair mattresses give so much more comfort compared to the old foam/partial inflatable thermarests, are lighter in weight and have great r-values. When I went back to ground, there was no more looking up.
    Thanks again for putting out such great content. Newly subscribed! Ken

  • @mwottawa1
    @mwottawa1 Před 5 lety

    Thanks Dixie for all that insight. I think for my first time I will go with the tried and true free standing tent.

  • @otway00
    @otway00 Před 5 lety +4

    Long time hammock hanger here. While no system is perfect, I will stick with my hammock setup. You need to find and attend a group hammock hang before you go out and buy anything, You can find group hangs in your area at Hammockforums.net under outings.

  • @zekehooper
    @zekehooper Před 5 lety +3

    There is a great channel about Hammac camping. Called,
    shugemery, here on youtube.
    Very informative and intertaining!

  • @chrisheadley2980
    @chrisheadley2980 Před 5 lety

    My wife and I enjoyed this video. It gave us a few things to think about. We appreciate you and your videos. We are planning on two systems a Hammock and a backpacking tent as a back up. Thanks again. Keep one foot in front of the other. Bye

  • @Cogzed
    @Cogzed Před 3 lety

    Thanks for your video Jess! I love them. Extremely informative! Especially one's like this. Happy trails!

  • @beaustraley8416
    @beaustraley8416 Před 5 lety +3

    When tarping, dig a shallow trench all the way around. This keeps most moderate rain from running back in and prevents a lot of back splash.

  • @darcydole428
    @darcydole428 Před 5 lety +6

    You need to see an Australian swag

    • @jeffpiper7430
      @jeffpiper7430 Před 5 lety +2

      used swags for yrs , good for car travel but to bulky for most other uses , found the bike swags a bit bulky as well as not great in wet weather , you also need to dry out a lot longer in the mornings then other tents etc.. by the way when I say used them I worked with mineral exsploration companys etc etc so used them on a daily working basis

    • @hopefilledsinner3911
      @hopefilledsinner3911 Před 4 lety +1

      They're great 4 Australia.

    • @alexdraper1259
      @alexdraper1259 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jeffpiper7430 i was about to say this :) would be hard pressed to see anyone hiking around long term with a canvas swag

  • @TheGuitarsadist
    @TheGuitarsadist Před 5 lety

    Currently still using a 20 Year old Sierra Design Clip Flashlight for 90% of my hikes along with it's matching foot print. It just keeps on going and with the proper cleaning and occasional maintenance, no need to change. Though I do consider allot, even today while visiting the REI store. Then again it goes in with all the gear in my old reliable Dana Design ArcLite Swift Current. Hard to replace things that have worked for the sake of having newest and greatest, though I did get a new Ti Long Spoon today!
    Love your channel and it is one of the best and more informative for hiking or for that matter overall CZcams out there. Keep up the good work and providing great videos and information, occasionally even us old dogs learn new things.

  • @fairfaxvickers2714
    @fairfaxvickers2714 Před 5 lety

    Thank you SO MUCH for your awesome videos Dixie! I’m hoping to start my hike soon and am so grateful for your help! You’re such an amazing person and I wish you could be with me! 😋💕

  • @dirkanderson1606
    @dirkanderson1606 Před 5 lety +8

    I swear my lightweight, reasonably durable tarp from Harbor Freight $3.50 is doing just fine for me, I don't want your $600.00 Z Duplex. That said I'm not a long distance Thru hiker, I could see maybe a 2 week section hike.
    I just bought some Atwood Rope Mfg " Micro Cord " for ultralight ridges and guy lines, for longer trips I think I would stick with paracord .

    • @tenfourproductionsllc
      @tenfourproductionsllc Před 5 lety

      What size tarp did you get? I'll have to check it out. I love using a tarp over my bivy or tent which gives just so much options. How much does the tarp weight?

    • @joshuasumrallms
      @joshuasumrallms Před 5 lety +1

      Don't knock someone because they chose to purchase something you wouldn't. Besides, you said yourself you're not a long distance through hiker. Ultralight gear is so you can comfortably carry everything you want for a long distance. What works for you won't work for everyone and vice versa.

    • @dirkanderson1606
      @dirkanderson1606 Před 5 lety +2

      @@joshuasumrallms My apologies. I didn't actually watch the video until later, very well done. I don't have second chance hikers attitude I'm sad to say. No I'm not a long distance Thru hiker, but even if I was I wouldn't pay $600.00.for a tent! Cuban Fiber aka dyneema is used in some of my climbing equipment, in that application where my life (such as it is ) hangs from it I'll pay for it.. That said, I'm not so sure I'd use this $3.50 tarp on a thru hike either? maybe supplement it with Wahlmart insect bivy WooHoo!
      I was just looking at a ultralight 1 pound down sleeping bag $500.00 really? Not me. Andrew Skurka shops at Costco.
      I had no idea who Miss Dixie was, I did watch the Triple Crown Trilogy made a believer out of me.
      I will make a special effort at watching Miss Dixies videos before I run my suck.
      My ultralight backpack came from Target $36.00 whatever.
      P.S. I'm working through a spring Milk Thistle cleanse, does make me a little edgy, actually was thrown in jail while under the influence once. Don't knock it untill you've tried it!
      I apologise, buy a Cuban Fiber jock strap for all I care.

    • @dirkanderson1606
      @dirkanderson1606 Před 5 lety +1

      @@tenfourproductionsllc Harbor Freight has quite an assortment of sizes. I got the smallest , I believe it is 5'7" × 6'7" something like that? it's just a little bigger than my poncho tarp. It is what it is , but for the price it's holding up surprisingly well, I have 4 of them all together! (Hoarder). It does have some reinforcement around the edges and the grommets are the more solid kind that don't bend easily. Duct tape for repairs works fine.

    • @chriseidam7319
      @chriseidam7319 Před 5 lety

      That is awesome for you. I would love to be able to tarp tent, but...
      I live in New England, in RI, not far from Ground Zero for Lyme Disease. Tarp tenting in this general region is like playing Russian Roulette. I know a bunch of people that have or have had chronic Lyme disease. It is agony.
      Lyme disease is now arguably worse than AIDS, but that is never discussed. There is an excellent docu flick called Under Our Skin that reveals the cover-up by the CDC, AMA and Big Pharma. Lyme disease is a brutal killer that is one of the biggest cash cows for the medical industry, and likely is a weaponized disease from Plum Island, that either escaped on a water fowl or was intentionally released by which to generate trillions in profit.
      It takes about 20 years to die from chronic Lyme disease. From what I have heard, you will wish it took 20 days. A lot of people kill themselves instead of suffering with it.
      Don't want to be a Debbie Downer. Just trying to inform.

  • @BelowAverageHiker
    @BelowAverageHiker Před 5 lety +5

    I've always wanted to try a hammock but being a stomach/side sleeper with a bad lower back, I just don't think it's in the cards haha.

    • @seanpeine9258
      @seanpeine9258 Před 5 lety +5

      I have had back surgery and a cot or hammock is the only way I can camp well.

    • @happyfuntimereviews5600
      @happyfuntimereviews5600 Před 5 lety +4

      I'm a side sleeper with a bad back. Been hammocking for a few years now.
      I absolutely dread the trips when I have to go back to sleeping on the ground, (no trees).
      Give it a try, just don't lay like a banana and you'll probably get the best night's sleep of your life...

    • @Astrick132
      @Astrick132 Před 5 lety +3

      I slept in my hammock prior to having surgery for a herniated disc in my lower back, it was way more comfortable than sleeping in a bed. After some trial and error you can also sleep on your side in a hammock

    • @lethiapage4767
      @lethiapage4767 Před 5 lety

      I want to encourage you to try. I am a side sleeper too and hammocks are great! The peapod style ones (the ones with no spreader bars) swing from a single point rather than a plane so you have to be pretty athletic to tip them. You can get into a very comfortable side position as long as you have the right slack in it...a little dip but not tooooo smiley. Its also easier when you don't have an insulating mat and bulky sleeping bag in there with you. But anyway even if you can't side sleep in your hammock I'm convinced you don't need to, to be comfortable! In my exp the comfort of a hammock is unmatched if you have it set up correctly and really can offset your preferred position a bed. The first night I went to bed in a hammock I don't even remember what happened! I laid down and next thing I knew it was morning and I hadn't moved all night long.
      I am very pro-hammock as you can tell...I have a lot of body pain and also some anxiety problems and hammocking is one of the very few things I do that I can feel myself relaxing. Laziest yoga ever!

    • @dracphelan
      @dracphelan Před 5 lety +2

      Try one of the bridge hammocks. They are awesome for side and stomach sleeping.

  • @Badhippy
    @Badhippy Před 3 lety

    this was a question I had so I am glad you did a video on this topic, tent vs tarp. tarps are so light that I needed to know if I could make this work.

  • @davidjohn316
    @davidjohn316 Před 4 lety

    My old & trusty standard issue GI "woodland" camouflage poncho never fails ... a little more weight but durable and very versatile...including rain cover, tarp, foot print(ground sheet - dating me) including many configurations for a tent ... excellent presentation!

  • @lethiapage4767
    @lethiapage4767 Před 5 lety +5

    Poncho tarp just sounds like cutting it very very close. I wouldn't want to wear my shelter gear as I'm hiking around..its very likely you could damage it while hiking, esp if its brushy or rocky. When you use multipurpose gear you have to make sure you don't need both functions at once, too....how can you set up a tarp if you are wearing it as raingear?

    • @HomemadeWanderlust
      @HomemadeWanderlust  Před 5 lety +2

      Good point on damaging it. I agree it is a bit risky. Not for me, but the option does exist!

    • @richardross7219
      @richardross7219 Před 5 lety +1

      You are correct. We had the same problem in the Army. Two of us would snap our ponchos together and make a shelter out of it. If you went on guard you got wet. I carried a second poncho to solve that problem. We had heavy green duct tape to fix any holes. I always try to carry two light ponchos when on a day hike. Good Luck, Rick

    • @lethiapage4767
      @lethiapage4767 Před 5 lety +2

      @@richardross7219 I shopped army surplus and I have had one of those ponchos! I loved it but I also had a separate tarp for sheltering. I did press the poncho into service at times when I needed a boost for my tarp...extra length, another layer, a vestibule, or a beak for one end of my tarp (setup close to a tree to block the other end) for cold or rain. Smaller secondary tarp type materials are also good to set up as privacy curtains for a bathing area...or depending how rugged it is...
      I also found a stray piece of yardage from a Walmart bargain bin...just an ordinary square of silnylon about 4x4 feet. It was tough as nails and super lightweight! I carried it for sheltering booster but also to sit on while I ate, to stand on while I washed, a place to spread out gear, to lay down for gathering firewood and drag it back into camp, as a pack cover, as a ground cover etc..? Did a thousand handy but not imperative things so I was glad to carry it.

    • @richardross7219
      @richardross7219 Před 5 lety

      @@lethiapage4767 Excellent. Two other frequent uses of a surplus poncho are as a hammock and as a stretcher. You can set up a surplus poncho as a hammock and use a cheap poncho as a tarp over it. Corporals Corner does some excellent how-tos for these. I still have my two from 45+ years ago but some of the rubber waterproof layer has delaminated. The matching poncho liner allows you to turn a poncho w/ liner into a sleeping bag. Good Luck, Rick

    • @lethiapage4767
      @lethiapage4767 Před 5 lety

      @@richardross7219 yes sleeping bag cover too. I started to say hammock...up there where it says...."depending on how rugged it is" I meant to continue the thought of making a hammock with it. Military gear is no! joke! But mostly not going to lie I used that poncho as rain gear when I was hiking full pack. Another use? Firewood cover!
      Thanks for your military service and for sharing your backpacking wisdom!

  • @teaddub
    @teaddub Před 5 lety +3

    Actually, if you know how to use a tarp it will provide better protection from weather than a tent.

  • @jonmnelson
    @jonmnelson Před 5 lety +1

    Your videos are always so informative! Thank you for the great advice.

  • @jdeekaye6556
    @jdeekaye6556 Před 4 lety +2

    Love your videos :) I was pleased to see the 3 options I chose 9 years ago in your video. A Z-Packs duo for me, Helium Bivy for my son and Hennessy hammock for his dad. The Bivy is cool and I think it has heaps of versatility regarding where you sleep at night and you can tuck it into nature for extra protection. I love the weight of my tent but I think it was made wonky because the pole is too tall for the tent, I need to use shorter trekking poles instead, (I'm in Australia so I never returned it)... the hammock ended up getting sold. With a comfy pad and pillow ground sleeping wins hands down, a hammock is comfy but not practical for me with dressing, cooking etc

  • @Banditswet17
    @Banditswet17 Před 5 lety +9

    20 mins about tent to 2 mins for hammock!!!!! Hammocks deserves more time they are awesome you just need to get used to it
    Also I am exaggerating

    • @Jesterian
      @Jesterian Před 4 lety

      Your hammock + bug net + tarp takes 2 minutes?

  • @unacamper9123
    @unacamper9123 Před 5 lety +4

    Pee in the middle of the night? HA! That's what the poison marked big mouth 32 oz Nalgene is for in my pack.
    Haven't left the tent in the middle of the night for the last 30 years. Things can eat you if you leave the Tent at night!!!

    • @rucksackzen
      @rucksackzen Před 5 lety

      B Z easier for guys to do...but I do the same thing. I once fell down some stairs on a tent platform when getting up in the middle of the night to answer nature’s call.

    • @jwilsonhandmadeknives2760
      @jwilsonhandmadeknives2760 Před 4 lety

      that's why hammocks are the way to go! don't even have to stand up. unzip the bug net and roll toward the opening, jettison the pressure, zip the bug net back up LOL. the puddle is gone before I need to get out of the hammock.

  • @normanibrahim6247
    @normanibrahim6247 Před 4 lety

    I used a Big Agnes Tiger wall 2 ul on the AT this year (Vermont and NH). The tent with dual entry and vestibules provided lots of room and amazing water protection. One night it rained hard and I had set up the tent in a bit of a hollow area. In the middle of the night, something felt strange. The entire tent floor had water under it. Not a DROP came through. The color-coded single pole system is easy to set up. With foot print weight is about 3 lbs. Big thumbs up on this tent.

  • @peteprevenas4323
    @peteprevenas4323 Před 5 lety

    Excited to hear about you reconsidering hammocks😀