How To Setup Your Tent

June 30, 2010 by  
Filed under Camping Tips

Setting up a tent can be a challenge especially if you buy a new type of tent that you have never tried to setup before.  Here’s some videos that might help the next time you get a new tent:

Camping And Snowmobiling In The Poconos

June 26, 2010 by Owen Jones  
Filed under Camping Tips

Do you like camping out in the winter? Have you ever tried camping in the Pocono Mountains with your tent on your back? Well, one thing is for certain, it is not a family style holiday! It is definitely an extreme sport for the hardened outdoor type. Whether you go traipsing through the snow on skis langlaufen style, use dogs and a sled or go by snowmobile, it is still an arduous enterprise. Issues from the cold such as frost bite and hypothermia are very real dangers.

Holidays such as these must certainly not be undertaken lightly. The days in the Pocono Mountains during the winter are cold enough, but at night the temperature just nosedives. If you have never tried such a holiday before, then you are not ready to take one on your own now. You will have to have specialized knowledge either from the military or from other such institution.

Planning and research are the two most important aspects. You will have to be conscious at all times of where the nearest help centres are. Places such as mountain rescue, hospitals, towns, shops, garages and first aid centres. You should also be conscious of the weather conditions and future weather predictions.

Staying overnight on such an arduous trip only increases the chances of encountering danger. Besides the cold there are wolves and bears. Wolves are not normally dangerous unless they are famished, but bears can be a problem. You will have to know how to maintain a clean camping site so as not to draw wild animals, but you will also have to know what to do if they do come poking about.

Thermal clothes are essential for any winter activity like snowmobiling and they are even more vital if you are going to sleep outdoors overnight. If you stay outdoors overnight you will also need a very warm sleeping bag. You will also have to take account of how long you will stay away and what provisions you will need to endure the length of time of your holiday. You will clearly have to eat, so suitable, nourishing food will have to be taken with you, unless you propose travelling from town to town.

Water will not be a problem with the snow available which is very handy for re-hydrating dried foodstuffs such as packet soups and drinking chocolate, both of which are very warming after travelling all day in sub-zero conditions.

Fuel will be a chief consideration for your snowmobile, but if you plan your journey well, you will be able to pick up a few tins of petrol every day. In this way, ten to fifteen gallons should be enough to see you through every day.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a lot of topics, but is presently involved with Poconos camping. If you are interested in a rental in the Poconos Mountains, please go to our website at Poconos Vacations

3 Top Tips To Help You Opt For The Right 12 Person Tent

June 6, 2010 by Jack Lords  
Filed under Family Camping Tents

Twelve people is a lot of people to be camping out together. How can you select the perfect 12 person tent?

When camping it is very important consider all the possible pitfalls before you actually go anywhere.

3 essential factors to consider for an ideal 12 person tent.

1. Have sufficient space to sleep comfortably. After looking at a few different tents you may realise that what some people describe as a 12 person tent is not anything like you were expecting. This is one of the circumstances in life when size really does matter, get a tent where everyone is cramped and you are likely to have a disastrous holiday. If a tent is truly for 12 people the description should say that it can sleep 12 people on cots.

2. Have enough head space to be able to stand up and get dressed without feeling like you are taking part in a game of twister. Head room is not the same thing as the height of the tent. You ought to be careful to avoid makes with inclined walls or else the people sleeping on the edges will find they’ve a considerably more difficult time than those whose cots are near the center! Look for vertical walls and good height throughout the whole tent.

3. Get a 3 season tent. If you are camping with twelve people you actually do want to be able to go when the weather is nice, 12 miserable, soaked people huddling in any tent wondering when the rain will stop and how they will ever dry their clothes is a nightmare. So go in good weather conditions, but you ought to still look at the 3 season tents. These tents are more sturdy and on the whole a little better made, so for the extra bucks you get a better tent which will last for more vacations.

Before you go out and get your 12 person tent make sure you read the feedback, you should always expect at least someone to have had a bad experience and to blame their holiday catastrophe on the tent, but the majority will be decent, so look at what the majority say.

It isn’t worth getting too caught up in getting separate rooms. First of all, with a large number of people you really do want to be spending your waking hours outside, so the tent ought to really be for sleeping. If you’re two families going there are two basic tried and tested ways to arrange the sleeping. Either place all the youngsters in a single compartment and the adults in the other, or keep the families together. If the youngsters are all going to bed around the same time, throwing them in together may be easy and simple option. If however there are different routine and requirements of each family you might be best to stick to what the youngsters are used to.

Remember that camping is about having fun, so get the right 12 person tent, the right weather conditions and the right friends and you’re set for the holiday of a lifetime.

Learn useful hints to creating the best 12 person tent vacation , and the pitfalls to avoid at http://12persontent.com/