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travel / gear / the genuine article

The Genuine Article
In tents (page 2)

A quality tent also has features that can make a big difference to comfort and utility, including “shock-corded” poles with thin bungee cords threaded through them to keep the poles together, colour-coded poles and webbing, mesh pockets on the inner wall for glasses, flashlights and other small items, mesh panels called gear lofts that clip to fabric loops on the ceiling, clear plastic windows on vestibules and roomy sacks in which you can pack the tent, poles and fly relatively easily, even when they’re wet.


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BEARING ALL THIS in mind, here are three tents that will keep you dry, comfortable and sane. All are durable and easy to set up. In ideal conditions — with two or more people to help, no wind or rain and on flat ground with enough soil to drive stakes into — it shouldn’t take longer than 10 minutes to set up any of these tents. As for height, when standing below the tallest part of the tent, a six-foot adult will have to bend his or her legs or stoop over slightly in each of these tents.


Popular with paddlers, MEC’s Wanderer 4 offers generous height and living space. Large doors on each end let in plenty of air and light.
The Wanderer 4 ($264) from Mountain Equipment Co-op is a solid bet for those on a budget. Set-up is quick, thanks to a frame of four aluminum main poles radiating from a hub. At 5.46 square metres, there’s just enough floor space for two adults and two children. It also has two doors and a plastic window on the front vestibule. An optional vestibule doubles the storage space. At just under five kilograms, the Wanderer 4 is light and compact enough for canoe camping.
www.mec.ca




With its fly removed in clear weather, the Marmot Halo 4P has a transparent top that’s great for stargazing. The innovative pole structure provides ample headroom.
The Marmot Halo 4P ($350) has two doors and a slightly larger floor than the Wanderer, a generous fly and vestibule and an innovative four-pole structure that maximizes headroom. There are giant pockets on each side of its two doors and long, slitlike mesh vents on the canopy walls that can be zipped open and shut. The tent has a satisfyingly solid feel once pitched.
www.marmot.com




Sierra Designs’ Bedouin Annex 4+2 includes a mesh room to thwart bugs and give kids a sheltered play space.
The Sierra Designs Bedouin Annex 4+2 ($500) has the footprint of a small SUV, and its hefty 8.5-kilogram package would be a nightmare to portage. But once it’s built, it’s a palace. The main interior area is comparable to the Halo and the Wanderer, but the difference is a mosquito-netted front annex with a floor — an extra room that is attached to, but separated from, the main canopy by a zipped door. Think parents in the main bedroom, kids in the annex. Beautiful. The ingenious fly adds a vestibule at the rear and can be rolled up over the annex to improve ventilation.
www.sierradesigns.com


Kingston-based writer Alec Ross has solo paddled a canoe across Canada and hiked extensively in North America and Asia.

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