Lets see your campsite pics, I like seeing how people organize their home away from home and it gives me ideas for my own setup.
Lets see your campsite pics, I like seeing how people organize their home away from home and it gives me ideas for my own setup.
I go for the KISS approach - the less that's out, the later I can sleep in.
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BKCowGod - Northern, CA
'93 Range Rover LWB - Finally...
'92 Audi S4 - For when I want to sip, rather than chug.
This is my best set up yet. But it's for a longer stay in one place which I normally don't like to do.
That's my buddy Jerry and his stock Zuk.
So...it goes.....
My truck.........
Jerry's Day Screen with tarp floor......
Jerry's Tent.......
Jerry's Zuk.........
I sleep in my truck so I pull it up just under the edge of the day screen to help keep the dew or rain out of my truck. My tailgate becomes a table for the day screen area.
This is way too overdone for me. Normally I just stop at the end of the day at the best place I can find....sleep in my truck....then head out the next morning when I'm ready. But because of this...I can pack up and be off in under 5 min.
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This is my medium set up..........
and this is my travel lite mode..........
I now have matching silver tarp baby!.....![]()
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This is excellent.Originally Posted by BKCowGod
2006 Toyota Tacoma
Can you tell I'm a fan of simplicity?![]()
-Seth
Last edited by seth_js; 05-21-2012 at 06:57 AM.
Here are a few shots.
One is from a wet 3 day stay on the Pacific coast (Queen Charlotte Islands), with poly tarp over a tent, and Kelty 'Sunshade' over the table. More recently I've been using a Kelty Noah 12 tarp (diamond wing) over the dining area.
Another is from a forest service site above Telluride (Alta Lakes), again, rainy weather. In this case the 2 of us slept in the Element, and I rigged a wing tarp (MSR Vista Wing) over the adjacent table. I have also used a Kelty 'Carport' awning over the side of the Element.
The third is from a multiday stay in the Bella Coola valley of BC. Here I used a large 4 man tent for sleeping, and large tarp (Walrus Aerotarp 150) over the dining area. In this case, the tarp served more to keep needles out of the food, rather than keeping rain out. This was our base camp, with day trips up lightly used forestry roads into the surrounding mountains.
The fourth is from a forest service camp at Harts Pass in Washington. This site had just been reopened after a forest fire a couple of years ago. With clear, bug free weather, camp setup was minimal - just cooking gear on the table during meals, and sleeping in the car. The Element served as a nice deer watching blind in the morning.
I try to keep the kitchen gear simple and compact. One 8 gal Rubbermaid box holds the stove set (Trangia alcohol) and pans, and other gear. Another box holds food, mostly dry and canned. A small cooler holds mostly lunch stuff. Sometimes I'll add another Rubbermaid with a small dutch oven and related gear. At night this all gets stashed back in the car, or on the roof rack.
paulj
Last edited by paulj; 06-13-2006 at 06:14 AM.
Setting up day camp near some dunes in Moab:
And my oldest boy near our `secret' camp spot, with soft sand and inside a wide slot:
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Last edited by pskhaat; 02-24-2010 at 11:09 PM.
Pskhaat (Scott)
UZJ100 "Mama Kuiser" built to look cool for the soccer mom
FZJ80 über rare "Geen", cloth'd & locked
Going to be a little better now with a roof top tent..![]()
Joel
2004 Limited 4WD V8
Fridge.