Tiny Tent Camping Is The Worst...

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024
  • The Rad Ridge Raider is my most hated tent but something about it stops me from selling it. I take it on a final camp to the summit of Slieve Binnian to try and decide once and for all...
    Rab Ridge Raider: geni.us/cGTG9
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Komentáře • 768

  • @StephenJReid
    @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +24

    A Terrible Time Camping In A Cave: czcams.com/video/thTZWCjnl_U/video.html

    • @evildoctorbluetooth
      @evildoctorbluetooth Před 29 dny +1

      Quoting scouse fireman sam:
      What ya doing in a cave?

    • @HyperboreanForeskin88
      @HyperboreanForeskin88 Před 23 dny +1

      youre head looks lower than your legs. anyone would have a terrible nights sleep sleeping like that

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 23 dny +2

      @@HyperboreanForeskin88 no my head was higher. Hard to tell from camera angles sometimes

    • @lindalarsson1436
      @lindalarsson1436 Před 20 dny

      No way

    • @RobespierreThePoof
      @RobespierreThePoof Před 18 dny

      It I climbed in there with you, I bet it would be much more cozy

  • @peterb2272
    @peterb2272 Před 17 dny +166

    As a 20 yo soldier this would have been my dream piece of kit
    As a 60 yo my back and knees are screaming rude words at you.

    • @thePronto
      @thePronto Před 16 dny +8

      I first had one of those in the early 80s. If you get inside one, pissed wet through in some plantation in Sennybridge, you wake up dry (ish). I probably slept 4 nights in 2ft of snow in the Yorkshire Dales: no problem. Not sure what he is complaining about.

    • @theminister1154
      @theminister1154 Před 12 dny

      I'm 60. I did several long trails with a 10x12 tarp in my 20s. 550 Colorado trail, a real banger, all of AT Virginia fOR 600M, chunks of the PCT, chunks of the CDT. That tent is nightmare kit that no one should ever consider. 10x12 tarp still gets me by, though I certainly use a hammock now.

    • @alfredstimoli2590
      @alfredstimoli2590 Před 8 dny

      I agree. Unfortunately, now at 66yo and overweight, I find myself claustrophobic. In addition, as a prostate survivor I find I'm getting up regularly to go. Oh, how I wish I was 20 again.

    • @SecuR0M
      @SecuR0M Před dnem

      Hoss spitting facts rn.
      Get one that opens on the side.

  • @Grassmonster3
    @Grassmonster3 Před měsícem +660

    As someone riding hard on the heels of 70 with considerably less flexibility than I used to have, crawling backwards into a coffin and crawling out again in the morning before my back has had time to unstiffen is just a big fat NO. All my tents are side entry so I can fall/roll out in the morning.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +52

      Side entry definitely easier!

    • @cuz129
      @cuz129 Před 28 dny +3

      I'm the same era of hiker. That's just too small for me!

    • @cuz129
      @cuz129 Před 28 dny +3

      It's good content! I thought it was quite well done.

    • @cuz129
      @cuz129 Před 28 dny +2

      Too funny the gas effects!

    • @unclepeteswildadventures
      @unclepeteswildadventures Před 26 dny

      Side zipped bivvy? Love my Alpkit Elan. Btw I’m pushing 70 too!

  • @kathrynhilder9609
    @kathrynhilder9609 Před 14 dny +59

    Hi Stephen. 😊
    In the morning when you crawled out of the tiny tent all I could think was "Look! Now he's a beautiful butterfly!" 😂
    Cheers from South Australia.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 13 dny +14

      🤣 If I'd sprouted wings it would make getting off the mountain easier!

  • @Theorangeman.
    @Theorangeman. Před 27 dny +393

    Having to get out of it twice just for camera shots. Priceless

    • @standunitedorfall1863
      @standunitedorfall1863 Před 17 dny +3

      Not to mention if he had to pee.

    • @pinkyandorbrain
      @pinkyandorbrain Před 13 dny +8

      I enjoyed that he left that bit in at 12:30. I always wonder how annoying it must be for these content creators to do everything twice.

  • @dstaron3162
    @dstaron3162 Před 17 dny +73

    Beans, cabbage and shoes... oh the fresh air.

  • @gregwhates5948
    @gregwhates5948 Před 25 dny +285

    As ex-military, I’ve always found a bivi bag and a small tarp can get you through any conditions in the UK hiking. I’ve still got a Survival Aids GoreTex bivi from the 90s that is still perfectly functioning and big enough for a bag and all my gear

    • @Tharrel
      @Tharrel Před 18 dny +16

      And I think that’s the only use for it - the military, where maybe stealth camping is much more important than other aspects, and lightweight is a must rather than a luxury, because of all the non-camping gear you need to carry. And it’s not for fun, so nobody cares if a soldier is comfortable.

    • @sabre22b
      @sabre22b Před 18 dny

      I never found one big enough.

    • @scheisstag
      @scheisstag Před 18 dny +3

      I lived 5 years in tents. If its not a hobby any more, but a way of living. And if you have the opportunity to enjoy nature every day. You dont want "too much nature". Aka: wind and rain while you sleep. That said: A tent and a bivybag come at around the same weight. But a tent offers way more comfort and becomes a home. While a bivybag is only a shelter with the only advantage that it allows you to "enjoy" or oversee your surrounding more.

    • @NikosKatsikanis
      @NikosKatsikanis Před 18 dny +1

      i like to be able to see enemies approaching too

    • @hueco5002
      @hueco5002 Před 17 dny

      @@TharrelI used one as a rock climber for any destination that required more than half a day’s hike to get to the mountain.

  • @Redskies453
    @Redskies453 Před 18 dny +51

    Accidentally hotboxing yourself with gassy veg in Italian is priceless.

  • @Cipher00007
    @Cipher00007 Před 9 dny +7

    Beans and Cabbage, a flatulence Nightmare.
    I’d be lucky to survive the night!!
    Absolutely howling!! 😂😂😂

  • @ultimilkman
    @ultimilkman Před 20 dny +17

    “I would have appreciated some artificial flavoring because it seems, you weren’t able to find any natural flavoring”. Pure gold 9:10

  • @mirrorizen
    @mirrorizen Před 7 dny +3

    I love the professional production alongside the hilariously real character

  • @emmasmith8367
    @emmasmith8367 Před 20 dny +18

    The most camping ive ever done has involved hot showers and electricity but theres a real draw to this. Also your exit from the tent was cinematic masterwork😂

  • @hultagertrude6905
    @hultagertrude6905 Před měsícem +121

    It’s a great video! They can’t all be winners anyway, that would be boring. You still went out there and did it, providing valuable intel for us couch warriors back here for gear etc! As long as you enjoy it, I say keep going buddy!

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +10

      Thanks! Although can’t say I did enjoy it 😂 thinking the Terra Nova laser pulse 1 might be more what I’m after but it’s really expensive

    • @notactuallytesco
      @notactuallytesco Před 8 dny

      ​​​@@StephenJReid I've used a phoxx 1-manner from OEX for years now and loved every second of it - people knock the budget brand, and it IS a kilo heavier than this Rab one but for the extra room you get along with a side entry and a solid hydrostatic head rating of 5l (plus the extra bit of protection from the inner setup - which in summer you can use on it's own) I'm not gonna complain! Love that tent to pieces, so could be worth a look in for yourself

  • @philmagowan4564
    @philmagowan4564 Před měsícem +65

    On the contrary this video has actually hooked me on your channel again. Really enjoyed the concept of putting more novelty camping products to the test. More please!

  • @Joedabamf
    @Joedabamf Před 17 dny +9

    you squeezed out of that tent the same way ace ventura squeezed his way out of that rhino

  • @gubsak55
    @gubsak55 Před 3 dny +2

    I was backpacking and camping in Ireland for 3 weeks back in 1978. Except for two days it was raining every day. Although I did not have any cooking gear with my, I was so pleased that I could sit in my tent, change my clothes and keep everything inside the tent without getting everything wet.
    Next year I hooked up with my new girlfriend, bought a tiny 3 person tent (Trio Tupek) and cycled around southern Scotland for 3 week. We were cooking (Trangia) just outside the tent and having an excellent time.
    Although we had bought the best gear we ended up soaking wet on several occasions (cycling for 4 hours in pouring rain etc.), but our tent was always dry.
    We used that tent for ten years camping in Denmark, Austria and France with our daughter, and we only dumped it when it was ripped by a drunk man tripping over the wires in the dark at a jazz festival.😢 I still miss it because it was so tough in winds, but we have moved on to bigger tents and now, that we have retired, a tiny caravan.
    Tents can be too small.😊

  • @pavlelalovic3306
    @pavlelalovic3306 Před 21 dnem +20

    My brother, greeting from Serbia first of all ... Second of all, just have to tell you that there is something so soothing and relaxing about your videos, and I have no idea what it is, but I damn love it

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 21 dnem +1

      Thanks 🙂 glad you are enjoying the videos

  • @TrippinBusa
    @TrippinBusa Před 25 dny +16

    Its the one man bearrito. some of the best sleep ive gotten have been in these during my time in service. always amazing to be able to look out and see the stars on a clear night.

  • @Obi-Wan_Pierogi
    @Obi-Wan_Pierogi Před 22 dny +60

    I had a tiny tent and upgraded to a Nemo Dragonfly 1p and will never go back to that tiny tent.
    On my second trip, the weather changed and I was stuck in heavy rain for nearly 11 hours. I was able to sit comfortably and even cook under the vestibule (not safe, not recommended -- I know)
    I couldn't imagine getting stuck in my tent for over my 11 hours.
    I bought the tiny tent THINKING I was going to do some stealth camping -- nope. Not once.

    • @rogerwilco1777
      @rogerwilco1777 Před 16 dny

      I bought a bivy for my Pacific Crest Trail trip, thinking I was gonna 'save some weight'.. well I also found out I'm claustrophobic 1st night in..
      I kept waking up in a panic about half a dozen times, and had to climb half way out the tent to catch my breath again and again..
      Plus I like keeping my pack in the tent when possible (not the food). I use it as a pillow or can grab extra clothes etc..
      Saving an extra lb or two doesn't really matter if you cant get a decent nights sleep..
      Now I have an old Eureka Spitfire and a Nemo Hornet.. Both are light enough to backpack with and big enough to hold my pack or another person in a pinch..
      And I also had a terrible weekend at a Lake where it rained non stop, I couldn't imagine spending an entire weekend trapped in that coffin.

  • @johnnamaravelis4093
    @johnnamaravelis4093 Před 21 dnem +16

    In my late 50’s I was using a military surplus bivy sack in lieu of a tent for backpacking. It didn’t have the rib poles to create a tiny tent, it’s more like a waterproof sleeping bag sleeve. I placed my trail runners under my knees on the outside. This kept my knees flexed for comfort & also to keep critters from crawling inside. I also placed my wedge shaped fanny pack inside the head as a pillow. The bivy lip kept it from sliding. Electronics & water filter in the sleeping bag toe to prevent freezing. A knotted length of paracord can be used to hang my backpack from a nearby tree, and I’m all set. This lifted tent would be an upgrade🤗

  • @lifelikeatob
    @lifelikeatob Před 25 dny +11

    I already laughed at the thumbnail but you going in and out of it was top notch 😂😂

  • @Mat-eq8mk
    @Mat-eq8mk Před 21 dnem +48

    I hate these things. They're a compromise that gives up most of the benefits of a tent while delivering few of the benefits of a bivy bag. Thanks for a great vid!

    • @teppet4119
      @teppet4119 Před 16 dny +3

      I always assumed these were meant for stealth/super lightweight camping.

    • @Mat-eq8mk
      @Mat-eq8mk Před 16 dny +7

      @@teppet4119 They are, but I don't understand why you'd choose one over a regular bivy bag which is even lighter and doesn't need any setup.

  • @neologian1783
    @neologian1783 Před 12 dny +3

    So glad to see such an honest review and I could not agree more. I've tried "bivvy" camping (or micro tent....or tiny tent...whatever you care to call it) and POSTIVELY HATE IT. No functional vestibule, can't sit up, no room for some of the gear that's nice to have in a tent with you, no room for keeping your pack out of the rain, door arrangement lets in rain in heavy weather....and speaking of heavy weather you have to get out of any wet outerwear outside (and fast) because there's no way to remove it inside without crawling all over your sleep system in your wet gear....and even in good weather it takes a contortionist to get in our out of clothing inside the bivvy anyway so all that needs to happen outside regardless. Waiting out bad weather? You better like laying prone staring at the ceiling because they're pretty much only good for just laying there. Not worth the weight savings in my personal value system.

  • @michaelbatterbee448
    @michaelbatterbee448 Před měsícem +6

    Great channel .
    Being only 4 ft11 tall my two man tent is like house to me sometimes I even sleep in different places inside it.
    Like if it’s windy I’ll go and sleep in another part of tent it’s great 😂

  • @hunter556x45
    @hunter556x45 Před 20 dny +6

    Watching this from my king sized bed, my claustrophobia has me coming out in a sweat just watching you getting in and out of that thing. Would be an extreme sport for me to get in that, and if someone zipped me in they'd be off my Christmas list!

  • @michelstronguin6974
    @michelstronguin6974 Před 28 dny +11

    Loved the video! Yeah, for the weight I would much prefer the X-Mid solid one, its 825 grams, if you must you can take 14 good long stakes to hook up all its attachment points, that will make it storm proof, it will overall come at the same weight, but you will have loads of room inside, double walled too, so no condensation issues. Your trekking poles are there anyway, so using them for your shelter is a sweet bonus.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 28 dny +2

      I got the regular X-Mid 1 this year for long distance multi-day trips, great tent.

    • @dontall71
      @dontall71 Před 27 dny +1

      At $400.00 US dollars for the Ridge Raider, and $264.00, lots of room in the X-Mid1 Solid and light weight, the Durston is my choice. Although the Durston does have a much larger foot print there aren't the condensation problems.

    • @michelstronguin6974
      @michelstronguin6974 Před 27 dny

      @@dontall71Yeah the footprint is big, but you can always do the skinny pitch that Dan Durston shows on his website. It basically collapses the vestibules down, so the tent is just a thin rectangle.

  • @northwestwalking
    @northwestwalking Před měsícem +12

    So the chocolate moment felt almost like we were eaves dropping on a very personal moment 😉
    I picked up a Eureka bivy years ago for my bike and felt the same way. Once inside it is a cozy little nest and you almost forgot how miserable it is to do anything beyond lay down

  • @VicvicW
    @VicvicW Před měsícem +17

    What is slightly entertaining, is that for 350g more a few years ago, Lidl did a 2 pole, single skin 2 man tent that is easily much nicer than this one. Perfect for one person and kit.
    The real kicker? It was 25 quid. Love it to bits. One of my favourite little tents.

    • @CB19087
      @CB19087 Před 18 dny

      Let us know how many camps you get out of it before it breaks, genuinely interested to know

    • @VicvicW
      @VicvicW Před 18 dny +3

      @@CB19087 had it for years. Have used it a good number of times (it's my go-to tent for solo stuff). Genuinely a really nice purchase. It's a ridge tent, so one pole up the middle and an A pole at the top end.

    • @CB19087
      @CB19087 Před 18 dny

      @VicvicW suprised to hear that as everything I've ever got from the middle isle is usually rubbish. You obviously got lucky there 🍻

    • @VicvicW
      @VicvicW Před 17 dny +2

      @@CB19087 believe me, I am similarly surprised. The only downside is that it collects condensation like nobody's business if you have the rain door shut while sleeping in it. Ventilation on it is complete pants.

    • @CB19087
      @CB19087 Před 17 dny

      @@VicvicW I wonder if that's because it's single skin?

  • @bernardnulty9036
    @bernardnulty9036 Před měsícem +9

    Well you've just saved me a shit tonne of money 😂
    Was trying to talk myself out of buying a ridge raider for the last 3 weeks

  • @michaelandcolinspop
    @michaelandcolinspop Před 25 dny +6

    You had me rolling with your sense of irony and well-placed humor. I learned something, laughed a lot, and promptly started to make plans for some fall camping in the Appalachians. Subscribed.

    • @joewoodchuck3824
      @joewoodchuck3824 Před 23 dny

      Where in Appalachia?

    • @michaelandcolinspop
      @michaelandcolinspop Před 22 dny +1

      @@joewoodchuck3824 West Virginia, preferably.

    • @joewoodchuck3824
      @joewoodchuck3824 Před 22 dny

      @@michaelandcolinspop I've never been to that section but it should be nice. I live next to the NE Tennessee section.

  • @DemoNinja79
    @DemoNinja79 Před 22 dny +10

    I would have placed the slanted tent in front of the sleeping tent with the slanted end facing the wind for maximum protection.

  • @jimyeats
    @jimyeats Před 14 dny +1

    My go-to’s are either a very roomy Oware two person bivy (14.3oz), or just a reasonably sized tent that you can actually use (currently a Big Agnes Seedhouse 2). The bivy is nice because other than an utterly torrential downpour it will keep you dry from scattered shower without any extra prep (obviously you can use a tarp for full rain protection), and it doesn’t matter if you twist and turn. You can move all about and you can get into far easier than you do your sleeping bag.

  • @SundaySmiles1
    @SundaySmiles1 Před 12 dny

    I have a Ridge Master myself, the fact it opens also from the side is a blessing in it's own right. Saves trying to go down the 'tube' when you're stiff and sore

  • @chrisj5634
    @chrisj5634 Před měsícem +6

    Great video as always. I considered the ridge raider but ended up buying an Outdoor Research Helium Bivy which I use with a DD 3x3 tarp. Very similar to the ridge raider. Lightweight and easy set up even in high wind. Like yourself, the tarp is just for cooking & chilling under.

  • @Mat-kr1nf
    @Mat-kr1nf Před měsícem +12

    I came to the Ridge Raider after using the Dutch Army bivvy tent and waking up with virtual terror, full claustrophobia (bearing in mind, 30 odd years ago I was a keen potholer, so no stranger to tight places). Compared to the Dutch Army bivvy, the Rab Ridge Raider is a palace!😁

  • @michaelmcphee2930
    @michaelmcphee2930 Před 26 dny +14

    I'm in Western Australia and have a kiwi made bivy sack that has a long side entrance, suitable for a fella in his 70s. I was concerned about the coffin analogy to sleeping in a bivy, but I've found it really very cosy and comfortable. It seemed to me that your head was downhill from your feet, which wouldn't help you to sleep.
    I have a Big Agnes 2P tent, which takes about 8 minutes to pitch. The Bivy takes less than two minutes to set up and just as much time to pack up. The fact that it has a smaller footprint is also a benefit. I don't carry a stove so cooking is not an issue.
    It stood up well on 115kph gale force winds one evening down on the south coast. When packed up, it is about the size of a 1.5 L water bottle and weighs about 900g.
    It's definitely my Go To accommodation when on the track.

    • @michaelw2816
      @michaelw2816 Před 25 dny +1

      Is this the MacPac Cocoon? I have just bought one and it seems OK, my only worry being whether the single layer means that my sleeping bag will get wet if touching the fabric in rain

    • @michaelmcphee2930
      @michaelmcphee2930 Před 25 dny +1

      @michaelw2816 Yes, it's the bush cocoon. I'm really happy with it. It's perfect for discrete setups off the track.

  • @8urface
    @8urface Před 22 dny +6

    Those rocks where you camped are wild!

  • @HarrisonWheeler358
    @HarrisonWheeler358 Před 6 dny

    I've never had any desire to visit Ireland until seeing this video...amazing looking place! thanks for sharing

  • @Xhadp
    @Xhadp Před 28 dny +8

    Had someone in our group do a bivy tent like that on our section hike. It surely was a talking point in our group about the way he did things since there was other things he did that were questionable from a hiking perspective but he still made it through the hike so can't complain.
    And wow, all that wind even with a wind barrier would freak and chill me out and make me all uncomfortable.

  • @M_Bamboozled
    @M_Bamboozled Před měsícem +13

    High wind inside and out 😂

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +6

      Near floated off during the night 🤣

  • @Teddy12399
    @Teddy12399 Před měsícem +5

    I really enjoy spending the night in my Alpkit Elan hooped bivvy. Probably less room than your Rab but it has a zip that goes 2/3 of the way down the side which makes getting in and out a lot easier.
    Thanks for sharing.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +2

      Yeah I've seen that one and thought the side entry looked like a better idea!

    • @Teddy12399
      @Teddy12399 Před měsícem +1

      @@StephenJReid On top of my thermarest I’m nearly nose to the roof! Takes some getting used to. Cheap though 🤷‍♂️

  • @JoelKalich
    @JoelKalich Před 14 dny +1

    If this was a "subpar" video I can't wait to watch the rest of your stuff! This was the first one recommended to me (as well as a lot of others, considering it's your second most viewed).

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 14 dny +1

      For some reason this video has taken off. Seems people are interested in tiny tents 🤷‍♂️

    • @JoelKalich
      @JoelKalich Před 14 dny +1

      @@StephenJReid As someone making a few videos of my own, the confusion as to why videos perform well is mutual haha. Glad to have found your channel.

  • @bardofthe90s57
    @bardofthe90s57 Před dnem +2

    The shine and crisp crack of that chocolate bar speaks to very even and proper "tempering" of the chocolate. When solidifying, getting the chocolate to cool at just the right speed to get the chocolate crystals to align in just the right, efficient way is a whole process and skill.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před dnem +1

      Yup they know what they are doing. Their small factory smells unbelievable

  • @ruben247
    @ruben247 Před 17 dny +1

    5:36 this thing would profit so much from one more rod in the center that goes in a half circle and makes the entire thing more "tunnel"-like instead of it flopping around like this

  • @jakeanderson9477
    @jakeanderson9477 Před 16 dny +3

    First video I've watched of yours and I really like how honest and genuine you come across. You feel like a real person saying real things and I like it

  • @davidbodeker6752
    @davidbodeker6752 Před 19 dny +3

    2:39 looks like someone else already shotgunned the best spot

  • @BamBam-gs7eb
    @BamBam-gs7eb Před 29 dny +4

    This tent has been in my basket for ages. Love the dream, wild camping/stealth mode in such a tiny tent is really appealing but not sure i could last a night in such a small space. Anyway love your content and 100% you should review camping food. Overly expensive and so much cheaper just pre cooking stuff before you go roaming, that said watching you eat those pouches is great entertainment 😂

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 29 dny +3

      Thanks. Think I’m going to read the labels more carefully before buying next time? 😂

  • @jillsjakes2519
    @jillsjakes2519 Před 23 dny +1

    Outdoor Research has several hooped bivvies as well, and the Alpine is probably closest to the Ridge Raider. You don't crawl through the end though, you just zip across the middle and down the side like a sleeping bag so you can just stand up. The kicker is that it also has a bug net and only weighs ~530g.
    That's mostly material savings as they use Pertex, like their jackets, and doesn't have as many staking points, but being low to the ground it's still pretty stormproof. You still can't stand up in it but it fixes most other problems.

  • @sarah.w1683
    @sarah.w1683 Před 16 dny +1

    It would be better if it had top entry. Similar to how you get into a kayak. Then it would be a step in, sit and shimmy down. You could also then use the tarp as a roof. Giving you a place to sit. And also allow the window to remain open when sleeping.

  • @Shewie01
    @Shewie01 Před měsícem +5

    Love a bivvy camp, think I have 9 last time I counted, biggest wins for me are they pitch anywhere, stealthy and are totally bomber. Camped in the LD one year in my TN Saturn bivvy, got hammered by crazy winds all night, I got rolled about but slept through most of it, woke up to pals packing away their broken Quasar and Nallo. Autumn into the first frosts are my fave time for a bivvy
    Another fine vid 👌
    Try the micro tarp near the door so you have a space to cook and store gear

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +3

      See I'd. never sleep in those conditions. I think some people are better wired to bivvi camping

  • @andrewmarkhamiltons
    @andrewmarkhamiltons Před 13 dny

    I enjoyed that having just spent 2 nights with a bivvy tent paddleboarding the river Wye.
    The Rab was huge compared to mine.

  • @greyhikes5236
    @greyhikes5236 Před měsícem +3

    I loved my first Bivvi bag. Original Gortex. I remember spending 9 days up in the Sperrins in the winter with nothing to attach a tarp to. Loved it! Have another Bivvi now absolute rubbish, haven't used it in 2 years. Great stuff as always Stephen 👍

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +1

      Thanks! My first wild camp was just a bivvi and a tarp with a cheap but massive army surplus winter sleeping bag

    • @greyhikes5236
      @greyhikes5236 Před měsícem +1

      @@StephenJReid I had the same bag Stephen but mine was issued 😉

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +2

      @@greyhikes5236 maybe I wound up with yours 😂 it wasn’t in the best condition when I got it.

    • @greyhikes5236
      @greyhikes5236 Před měsícem +3

      @@StephenJReid 🤣 you might be right there Stephen 🤣

  • @steveb1972
    @steveb1972 Před 25 dny +3

    14:46 Stephen being reborn!!!!😂

  • @jamescostello2558
    @jamescostello2558 Před 14 dny +1

    I have a Outdoor research Bivy I use here in Australia and winter or summer and its awesome for 1-2 night trips. It's also a lot warmer than my tent i guess because the volume is less in the bivy so your body heat warms the surrounding air quicker.I have used it in the blue mountains in spring when it's reasonably cold at night 8-10C with a 2-3 season sleeping bag and have been too hot and had to sleep outside the sleeping bag. The only real concern i have is keeping things dry if it rains at night so once i'm set up i stuff all my gear and pack in a bin liner.

  • @GaryB_OutandAbout
    @GaryB_OutandAbout Před 15 dny +1

    I’ve always wanted a Ridge Raider, and I still do. Also chocolate, I want that chocolate 😁👍🏼
    Cheers,
    Gary B

  • @andsterlastname7905
    @andsterlastname7905 Před 17 dny +1

    Your realization of what your dinner was made up of made me laugh so hard I woke up my wife!

  • @chasenhorizons
    @chasenhorizons Před 22 dny +3

    Found your channel looking at bivy and left your video laughing at the thought of eating beans and cabbage before entering it 😂. Amazing. Subscribed man!

  • @Lisa-ih7fk
    @Lisa-ih7fk Před 15 dny +1

    I'm shocked it weighs 1kg! I've had fellas mock me a little for taking my "massive" tent up the Mournes but it only weighs 1.3kg and you have so much more space!

  • @bikegeist
    @bikegeist Před měsícem +11

    Rrrrrriiiiidge Raaaaaaiderrrr!!!!!
    3 people will get this attempt at humour.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +1

      Braveheart?

    • @bikegeist
      @bikegeist Před měsícem +1

      @@StephenJReid No, you beautiful, silly man....no. 😆

    • @ElBeatle1
      @ElBeatle1 Před měsícem +3

      Ridge Racer ??

    • @bikegeist
      @bikegeist Před měsícem +3

      @@ElBeatle1 🏆🏁

    • @Redskies453
      @Redskies453 Před 18 dny +2

      Ha we used to go to Toys R US and play their demo Playstation after school, always had Ridge Racer in it.

  • @tomahawwke
    @tomahawwke Před 23 dny +1

    I love my Tentroll (think cowboy bedroll but modernized) it's the closest setup I've found to mimicking the functionality of a typical bed without sacrificing on pack-ability and weight.
    The Rig: Canvascutter V1 Summit Bedroll, Zenbivvy Core Bed and Core Quilt, Nemo Tensor Wide Insulated, Nemo Fillo Pillow.

  • @BinManSays
    @BinManSays Před 15 dny +1

    I've got the laser compact AS and I honestly love it (granted my other tents a Vango force ten mk1 FW) but if you can hold off I found it at a steal on some silly flash sale around Christmas time from a random outdoor shop online

  • @user-qi6vp3gj4w
    @user-qi6vp3gj4w Před 20 dny +1

    You actually had a pleasent entry to your tent there. I had wet muddy undergrounds in the woods and after doing anything with heavy hiking boots in front of your Rad the soil just turns muddy. And then you circle your body into that thing without getting mud all over you. You use a garbage bag and after 2 times getting in and out its sure to have mud on the nice side as well. Also I have an older version but mine seems to come without the nice high little are for your feet. I tried to stick down that part with all my weight and it just didnt creat an area where I could put my feet up right without them touching the tent wall. I had to resort to sleeping on my stomage wich I usually never do.

  • @Bee-qe5hm
    @Bee-qe5hm Před 25 dny +2

    Looks like a butterfly cocoon!

  • @Zaiqukaj
    @Zaiqukaj Před 10 dny

    It looks so hard to get into that thing without bringing in a lot of wet and dirt. Absolutely beautiful trip. That was a great surprise from clicking on this

  • @cynthiaberry2019
    @cynthiaberry2019 Před 20 dny +1

    You getting out again to get your camera was so funny.😆

  • @uhhuuhhuhuhhh
    @uhhuuhhuhuhhh Před 15 dny +1

    Flatulence nightmare- that one got me. 😂 ☠️

  • @Revup1
    @Revup1 Před měsícem +2

    Ahh, my favourite place on earth. Slieve Binnian. Can't beat the Mournes. As to Bivi camping, I started having to do it as a career related hazard. Then I grew to enjoy it with a few comforts...like a hooped Bivi instead of a bag, and a proper Tarp to provide the 'living' space, I also carry a little fold up mat for stepping in and out, and sitting on. The things I hate about Bivi's.....1. Choosing between ventilation or midges on a warm day! 2. Waking up in a panic until I realise I'm not in a coffin (I still do that after all these years!) Things I love about my Bivi.....1. I don't slide off my sleeping mat. 2. Its so simple to pitch, or indeed not pitch. 3. I don't have to put up with anyone else's snoring....or flatulence!

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +1

      That ridge along Binnian is one of the most interesting parts of the mournes. So much to explore. I've done proper bivvi camping a few times with a tarp and I think it's more enjoyable than this as you get the outdoors experience and can see the stars. I still hate getting out to go pee though.

  • @bashisobsolete.pythonismyn6321

    i like these forays but the 2 berth dome/tunnel is popular and affordable for a reason.

  • @glenblaven
    @glenblaven Před 25 dny +3

    Stephen. Love your videos. I’ve got a wee terra nova equivalent but never used it yet. Must give it a try in the wild but defo felt the claustrophobia when I tested in the house!! Anyway. Keep the videos coming! Brilliant!

  • @thebeast88_
    @thebeast88_ Před 11 dny

    2:07 first non gimmick and best overall use of a 360 camera i've seen. congratulations

  • @p82d
    @p82d Před 27 dny +1

    I looked away at 21:00 minutes and given the echo I wasn half expecting to see the view from your toilet when I looked back at the screen given the beans and cabbage information!

  • @user-hn1ph6ry8l
    @user-hn1ph6ry8l Před 21 dnem +13

    This is actually a strange thing-this "coffin"-type tent. For my POV, you can't sleep well in this tent, and for 3-4 nights, you will feel totally exhausted. This will slow you; it's a high point for error and failure; it's unsafe; it's angry. I prefer to get more volume and weight to get good sleep, rest well, and get more energy and a good mood. Maybe it has a short track, but at least it still reasonably gets slightly more living space.

  • @dippyfish
    @dippyfish Před 27 dny +3

    10 minutes after getting into a tent like that I would need to go for a wee. Sod’s Law.

  • @stallonecham
    @stallonecham Před měsícem +2

    Rab Ridge Raider is on my wishlist. Just love it so small

  • @AndreSB43
    @AndreSB43 Před 5 dny

    And here I thought my tent, the Vaude space lightweight 1-2 person tent was a small tent, but 1 x 2,15m floor space and 1 m of ceiling height is lots of space compared with this. And I'm happy to carry a 1,6 kg tent for the added space and comfort.

  • @JustinColavita
    @JustinColavita Před 10 dny +1

    I CANNOT for life of me place your accent HAHA. I feel like it changes between 6 different accents in this video haha. Great video.

  • @poerava
    @poerava Před 17 dny +2

    Was this in Scotland?
    What amazing editing and drone work.
    So professional and well done
    Thank you

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 17 dny +1

      Mourne Mountains, Northern Ireland. And thanks 🙂

  • @damedavidfrith55
    @damedavidfrith55 Před měsícem +2

    We come to these vids to learn all sorts of things 😊thank you for sharing this

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +1

      Thanks! Glad you learned something 🙂

  • @ralphkruger9996
    @ralphkruger9996 Před 20 dny

    If you use it as a bivy and don't stake it, it is no different than sleeping in a sleeping bag with the benefit of weatherproofing and netting. You can sit on top of it and put your legs in and wiggle in, instead of crawling in and out of a tunnel. With a tarp, you can poke the lower section out from under the tarp, using the tarp to more effectively cover your head if you don't want to completely zip in. My gortex bivy only weighs one lb and a large 10x10 tarp another lb.

  • @peterdavidroux9152
    @peterdavidroux9152 Před 24 dny +1

    Video is so peaceful and entertaining with great views of nature, thank you so much for sharing

  • @lesliefranklin1870
    @lesliefranklin1870 Před 11 dny

    Who would have thought that a twig was the tasty part of a bean and cabbage meal? LOL!
    Also, when chocolate is tempered, it becomes brittle and shiny.

  • @ericb.4358
    @ericb.4358 Před 6 dny

    I have a Tarptent Notch Li solo double wall tent. VERY narrow but a lot bigger than your tiny bivy "tent". Because it is made of Dyneema (DCF) and weighs about the same as your bivy "tent". But at least I can sit up in it! Plus it has 2 doors and 2 vestibules, handy for pack storage in one and storm cooking in the other vestibule. The Notch model, whether of silnylon or DCF uses your 2 hiking poles and 2 guy lines to hold it up in even heavy winds. PROBLEM: The DCF version costs US $600. Buy hey, I'm not leaving money for my well off daughters!

  • @captinbunt
    @captinbunt Před 13 dny

    never seen your vids before but you did make me chuckle when you were talking about the beans and cabbage

  • @lindacondray7918
    @lindacondray7918 Před 6 dny

    I’m not someone who’s normally claustrophobic but MAN that’s all I could keep thinking while watching that. Lord help you if you’re doing more than a small overnight and have a real back pack to try to shove in there with you. Right at the start of the video, I noticed all the wind noise. I wasn’t thinking so much about the sides flapping against your bag/body but about the constant random NOISE. Also, having to have your stinky hiked in shoes right up there with your head; NOPE. THANKS for a great video. I’m not sure I could in good conscience sell it to someone else!!!! LOL

  • @matthewschultz3691
    @matthewschultz3691 Před 5 dny +1

    2:24 sets up camera, hiked up. What we don’t see is him coming back down and hiking up a second time. A lot of effort to get all those shots man, good on you.

  • @simonbecker748
    @simonbecker748 Před 17 dny +1

    I’ve got the alton walkabout swag bivy tent and it’s awesome. Openes at the top completely, so getting in is easy, it has a bug net over your head so you can stargaze, fits larger sleeping pads and a bagpack, has a breathable and watertight membrane and packs down into a tiny package. Ive taken this tent on a 3 day mountain hike and it performed flawlessly. I love bivy tents, but the rab ridge raider is crap

  • @Hawkskull
    @Hawkskull Před 20 dny

    The laser pulse has a "little brother" called the zephyros. It's the same company, making the exact same tent for one third the price. The downside being that it weighs three times as much (1.6kg) because it's made of 3000HH polyester, not 7D nylon, the pegs are aluminium, not titanium etc.
    The reason that Terra Nova made the zephyros is they loved the design of the laser, but KNEW that someone would come along and make a heavier, cheaper version, so before they released the ultralight, they made the lightweight and released them at the same time.
    My Zephyros did me on a 9-week motorbike tour of Australia, never let me down, was always comfortable and I'd 100% recommend it to anyone if you don't mind the little bit of extra weight. It's as they say "small, light, cheap - pick 2"

  • @behemothahn9266
    @behemothahn9266 Před 17 dny +1

    its always funny imaging them setting up the camera shots of them waking up from the tent then climbing back in to fake it lol

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 17 dny +2

      I’m the best at the fake waking up shots. You gotta commit to the bit 🤪

  • @Callum38
    @Callum38 Před 9 dny

    I really like my bivi for UK use. I just put my sleeping bag, liner and mat inside and roll it up. Reduces setup time to 1 minute. Army surplus bivi, went with DPM for the UK. Idiotproof which means no faffing about with poles and pegs in bad weather. Easier to get in and out of than this bivi. Just stand into it and pull it up like you're pulling up a giant sock.
    For many other countries might use a tent, but I travel by foot and often set up camp wherever is hidden towards dusk when I'm knackered. I don't want being spotted to be playing on my mind, so something so low-profile and camouflaged puts my mind at ease.
    Also, it's CHEAP. You don't need expensive gear for 90% of the UK. The rain+ wind combo is risky, but cheaper options offer 75% of the comfort at 25% of the price. Don't be tricked into shelling out hundreds for the cool factor.

  • @SCK9-Feline
    @SCK9-Feline Před 18 dny +1

    lol,
    So precious saying hi to the sheep. A few more hikes and I’m sure that mouth’ll stay shut and you stay far back. Provoking a herding dog out there is wild bro, stay safe, recognize danger.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 18 dny

      What herding dog?

    • @SCK9-Feline
      @SCK9-Feline Před 12 dny +1

      @@StephenJReid the point t is that you are ignorant that those sheep belong to a herd, a person. We ranchers paint our sheep for identification and shade so our herding dogs can identify them easier.
      Getting between a herding dog and their flock is a potentially fatal overlook.

    • @SCK9-Feline
      @SCK9-Feline Před 12 dny

      @@StephenJReid it’s also a fact that you are a novice in whatever you may be preaching.
      Yeah, sometimes we have to retrieve a sheep or two that didn’t return and that may suck.
      You act like it’s some kind of frolicking journey.
      I sure as hell don’t want to intercept my neighbors flock.

  • @apsynto
    @apsynto Před 27 dny +1

    I have a Carinthia Observer bivy and love it. It is a side entry shelter though technically you could enter it from the front too. Not sure why you would ever want to in a normal hiking situation. Yours looks like a nightmare to get into and out of.
    Personally i hate proper tents as they are too large, visible and unsuitable for most places i end up sleeping.
    Never had issues in any weather, including heavy snow and damned windy peaks, though in heavy rain an additional tarp is pretty much a must if you expect any comfort and to keep your gear dry.
    For me the positives outweigh the negatives by far
    + Small, inconspicuous and able to be set up anywhere you have space to lie down.
    +Totally weatherproof and breathable
    + Set up in 1 min and packed away in 2
    + Thanks to insect mesh above and in front you have almost 360° field of view without getting out of the shelter.
    - in heavy rain a tarp is almost a must for an admin area
    - too tight to have yourself and a rucksack larger than 40l in it

    • @ApocGuy
      @ApocGuy Před 25 dny +1

      Awesome bivy, expensive one too. But you get what you pay, worth every penny/cent.

  • @ghostyfellla
    @ghostyfellla Před 8 dny

    Aussie here, maybe check out Alton Goods swag. Wayyyy easier to get in and out of and most of the same benefits as the Rab

  • @alexmac513
    @alexmac513 Před 12 dny

    In my search for that chocolate I discovered a craft chocolate shop in Shoreditch London who are having a chocolate fair with tastings. So I booked it. I might not have wanted to learn about chocolate but I think it wins over that tent.

  • @ExploreAboveAndBelow
    @ExploreAboveAndBelow Před měsícem +2

    It looks like you had a good night anyway. My last camp was on the same mountain two weeks ago and I woke to very similar weather.
    I love the idea of the Ridge Rader as a summer tent but maybe not so much for our Irish summer's. Think I'll stick with my Laser Compact 1 for now though I've also been using the Abisko lite 2 this so called summer 🤔

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +1

      Didn't sleep much so wasn't the best night but I've slept worse! Laser compact 1 is great, though I sold mine earlier in the year and slightly regretting it.

  • @drytool
    @drytool Před 9 hodinami +1

    Enan or Tarptent moment might be a good replacement

  • @Gravattack
    @Gravattack Před 21 dnem +1

    First time watching your content, and I thought the video was great. I think you might take for granted just how good it looks, and how professional it looks. I wouldn't never do YT because I am not arty, and it really would look like rubbish. Again, your vid as great

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 21 dnem +1

      Thanks! Editing definitely helped. I cut out a lot of extra stuff

  • @hendrixinfinity3992
    @hendrixinfinity3992 Před 17 dny

    I don't why anyone goes for these. You could learn two knots and have a more versatile shelter in a 2.8/2.4 tarp. I've gotten really great nights sleep under a 2x1.3 in a bivvy bag, on a basic groundsheet carrying zero poles (just grabbing two sticks off the floor) 2 season bag and 1 season mat in 3 degrees. Whole system weight around 4kg.
    The coziness factor is there with the bivvy it's just the big open hole that's the issue. I use a headnet to keep bugs off me. I'm going to be modifying in a waterproof zip with outer storm flaps to my bivvy bag in the near future to eliminate the issue of getting in and out ( I tend to just get up and lower the bag to pee)
    Or you could spend a lot of money on an ultralight tent. Either way, coffin tents are beyond pointless.

  • @steveschnetzler5471
    @steveschnetzler5471 Před měsícem +1

    red, white and blue sheep, makes me homesick for the USA. Thanks.

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před měsícem +1

      The land of the free roaming red, white and blue sheep 😂

  • @enricohocho
    @enricohocho Před 4 dny

    I would combine this with a 3x3m tarp and make sort of a funnel 🔻with the tent at the tight end to have more space to sit and be sheltered

  • @ThatTouringBloke
    @ThatTouringBloke Před 29 dny +2

    Basically looks like a small version of our Australian swags

    • @StephenJReid
      @StephenJReid  Před 29 dny

      yup, but much lighter too. Aren't swags around 5kg+? I was looking into them at one point but I just couldn't get over the weight. But I think they are more designed for car or motorcycle camping rather than hiking?

    • @thewoodsmanshollow7007
      @thewoodsmanshollow7007 Před 28 dny +1

      Absolutely designed more for vehicle camping, I wouldn’t want to hike with my swag