Trad Gang
Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: mrgreenhead on June 12, 2010, 05:06:00 PM
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I want one but know wich one to buy any put would be great. Whos got the best one
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I've got one of the pyramid type made by Dave Ellis (google Dave Ellis Tent and you'll get a bunch of hits). I love mine-it's a 12'x12' which offers a lot of room inside. I think it all depends on what exactly you want out of the tent.
How are you going to be camping? Will you have the ability to take in all the frame poles for the wall tent or will you need a little lighter setup? Do you want something with an enclosed floor (which I got mine with)? How many people do you plan on sleeping in it? Do you want it to be cylinder stove compatible (seen both tents able to do it, but think the wall tent would be better set up for that)?
Anyway, I'm really enjoying mine for camping and it should do great for me this fall for hunting. Super easy to set up and stands up to the weather pretty nice, too.
Jeremy
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They each have their own advantages. Actually, I just gave Tom Colstad of Trad Archers World an article I wrote about this exact subject. Hope he likes it and it may be in the fall issue.
There are a number of factors to consider, and some of it depends on how you wish to use your tent. Personally, I have the pyramid and love it, and most people that have stayed in it feel the same way.
Pyramids set up easily, are great in high wind and rain, and are just really cool looking! :cool:
Wall tents make great use of available floor space. If you might camp with more than 3 people in the tent the wall is going to be more comfortable and can be had in larger sizes.
There are lots more factors to consider, but again, it would help to know exactly what you might use it for.
Feel free to give me a call anytime. Are you going to Compton or Denton Hill? I will have mine there. Also check out the canvas tents on my website from the link below.
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well i hunt mostly with myself and sometime a guest but stove is needed always rains . as for pole i like to cut them in the woods but i can carry them in if need be . I also will use in the adk when im trapping so i might need to put in the canoe . Im leaning towards the pramid but not sure where im going to get it from .Im having a stove being built .
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I'll pick the pyramid every time!
I've owned a few over the years and my favorite was a 14x14 that I had two doors sewn in.
I could put canopies on each side. The front was like a family area and the back was the kitchen/cooking area.
God bless,Mudd
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I have a 10x10 pyramid by panther primitives great for me a cot my gear I sometimes take my son and we make out alright but a 12x12 would be my choice if I did it over but I got the smaller on for weight reasons.for one man it is really great and I am very happy with panther.
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I have a 10x10 pyramid by panther primitives great for me a cot my gear I sometimes take my son and we make out alright but a 12x12 would be my choice if I did it over but I got the smaller on for weight reasons.for one man it is really great and I am very happy with panther.
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Once nice thing for you packing a tent in, with a pyramid you wouldn't have to cut poles or anything. As long as you have a tree around, take some rope, attach to the apex, and toss it over a limb. I got some of those Army tent stakes at a surplus store which have worked great (and cheap). Easy packing, especially if in a canoe like you're talking about. Just my $.02.
Jeremy
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For two people a 12x12 makes a great camp. Still plenty of room for a stove, and even cots if you want them. Like gudspelr said, a pyramid can be set with no poles, so that not only saves having to cut a tree, it also frees up floor space in the center of the tent.
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What the advantages of the t pee door vs the plain door in a pyramid? Whip are you left handed . Ive got a few lefthanded custom flint rifles for a tent .
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No I'm not left handed. Probably a good thing too, because I would be sorely tempted. Been kind of thinking a smooth bore needs a spot in my gun cabinet. ;)
I like the tipi door better myself because it sheds rain better than a standard door. (I've not tried the standard door myself, so that is just my theory anyway)
With the tipi door you just lift it up and step in and it drops back into place. It has pockets sewn in which you put sticks in to act as stiffeners.
With the standard door I'm thinking you would need to tie and untie it all the time if you want it closed completely during colder weather.
Another question I am often asked is whether the second door is necessary. I have a second door in my tent and very rarely use it. Normally end up with a cot set up in front of it.
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This is an interesting discussion from a guy who has always used wall tents (and loved every minute of it), but never a pyramid.
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i have a panther primitive, what you guys are calling pyramids we always just called one polers. i like them the best they are easy to set up and i also drilled a few holes in the pole for placement of pegs for hanging things. mine also has a nice awning attached to the front that can be set up with two more small poles or by tieing them off to nearby tree branches.there have been times when ive camped by myself i only pegged down the corners and set the pole.
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Groundpounder brings up another good subject to consider - the fly. Flys are are great addition to a tent, both pyramid or wall. They provide a place to cook without being inside the tent (not recommended in bear country), a dry place to store gear, and a dry/shady spot to hang out during the day without having to be cooped up inside the tent. I spend more time under my fly than I do inside the tent on just about every trip.
For a pyramid there are two types of flys to consider. The one that is normally listed as an option with the tent ties directly to the tent above the door and is staked out with two poles on the outside corners. It does provide some shelter just outside the door and is quick to set up.
The type I prefer is a full size dining fly that is set using a ridge pole and side stakes. The tent needs to be ordered with a hole above the door to accomodate the ridge pole which then slides through the hole and ties in to the center support. This type of fly gives you a much larger protected area out front. The downside is more poles and longer set up time, but in my mind if I will be at the spot for more than a day or two is well worth the extra effort.
Here are pictures of both types.
This is my home away from home.
(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y80/Jlasch/2009%20Western%20Hunts/CONM2009C003.jpg)
The standard hunter tent fly.
(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y80/Jlasch/Tents%20and%20Stoves/pacificrendezvous002.jpg)
A wall tent with a dining fly attached.
(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y80/Jlasch/Tents%20and%20Stoves/croppedminiwalltownpg104.jpg)
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whip i sent you some eye candy
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I used the word "canopy" in place of"fly" in my 1st reply. I intentionally struggled to come up with it because I was afraid that there would be folks reading that wouldn't know what I was talking about if I used the common rendezvous name for it.
I also might have gotten accused of drawing flies..lol
I used both of my doors(Tipi style) in the heat of summer to allow air movement through the lodge. I found it very helpful in getting a better sleep on hot, muggy nights.
Groundpounder is absolutely correct! The center pole is an excellent way of getting some stuff up and out of the way. Pegs and lantern holders place way up the pole gives you a good spot to hang stuff you want to dry out quickly since that's where most of your heat is and over head light is very beneficial plus you don't have to worry about knocking it over and setting your home on fire. If you have small children in your camp as I often did,this becomes even more important. (IMHO)
God bless,Mudd
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Are the flies sewn on or tied on or.... I have a pyramid type tent that I'd like to add one on. Thanks.
Magnus
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The style that I use (in the first picture) goes over a ridge pole. You need a hole sewn into the tent above the door in which to insert the ridge pole.
The second style ties on above the door and needs a flap and ties sewn into the tent.
If your tent is not set up for either option you can have it done at any place that sews canvas. Check for places that do boat covers, awnings, etc. and they should be able to fix you up.
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Thanks Whip! I'll check into that. Hopefully they have white canvas too.
Magnus
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Panther will sell canvas by the yard if they don't have what you need.
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(http://i1010.photobucket.com/albums/af230/mtnman433/Tent/Tent5.jpg)this is after shoveling 2&1/2 feet of snow from around the tent on take down day. I'd think all that snow would lay on the sides of the pyrimid,JMO.Also consider weight,mine's canvas & it's mighty heavy from sitting in the adirondacks all season.
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I haven't been in 2 1/2' of snow (thankfully!) but I have had mine up in smaller snowstorms. Accumulation on the sides has not been an issue because the sides are so steep it slides right off for the most part, and is easy to knock off from the inside. The dining fly does accumulate snow pretty good, and I have to knock it off there from time to time during a storm.
Last February in Texas (Of all places! :eek: )
(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y80/Jlasch/PigGig%202010/PigGig2010016.jpg)
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Snow in Texas?...nice!
great pic.
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I don't have a large fly like Whip's got, just a small "dormer" type of thing that I can either zip or leave open. Also have a screen door and window on the opposite side for good air movement. Hopefully going camping this coming weekend and plan on trying a modified version of what Whip showed. Gonna tie some parachute cord to the apex of my poles (they go on the outside of my tent) and stretch it out to a tree. Toss my tarp over it and tie the edges out for some cover to sit under and some nice shade. Since mine has the dormer sewed on, rain won't go into the tent, even with the door open.
Jeremy
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Whip, that first pic of your home away from is my idea of a cosy camp. Gotta have the fly/canopy, many uses, great "mud room".
Not you Mudd, the dirty footwear place....
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Our Cabela's Outfitter Tent has served us very well for a lot of years in every weather possible. It is a pyramid style tent with a single pole in the center and small rods in the corners. A bit "stake intensive" but that lends a lot of stability and wind resistance.
(http://i103.photobucket.com/albums/m150/OkKeith/campphoto.jpg)
This is what fell AFTER we crawled out. If I had been willing to crawl under the cedar trees to stake the the tent out properly, little or no snow would have accumulated on the sides.
(http://i103.photobucket.com/albums/m150/OkKeith/04152054.jpg)
This was a "quick camp" during turkey season.
Hot, cold, wet, dry; we have used this tent in it. Packs up small enough that the tent, poles, stakes and the tarp we use as a cook fly all go in a medium size locking tub. Works great for us.
OkKeith
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I've got a "herder tent" from Davis awing and tent. Kinda like a one poler, but has 4 corner poles. 5' walls and a 10' center height. Double doors and windows. Hate they didn't offer a fly for it, but working on a free standing fly.
The tent sets up easily by one person. Looks good, and is very functional.
I opted for this style, for the extra head room.
Packing it in is not a problem, mostly by truck and boat.
JAG
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OK. Now I'm interested!
Do the Pyramid tents have floors? Also, what about insect protection? Being from the Mosquito/Nasty biting fly capitol, I am most concerned about the bugs!
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I know its not canvas but the Cabelas Alaknak is the best of both worlds. Good wall height and a single pole in the middle creating the pyramid from the top of the walls.
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Good thread, are the pyramid type tents easy to set up?
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Our Cabela's tent is not canvas. The tent is waterproof nylon and the floor is waterproof oxford cloth. I can set it up alone in about ten min. or so without hurrying.
I would love to have a canvas tent but they are a little too expensive for me and if packed up wet will be ruined fast (at least that is what I have learned from my reading). They are also heavier than what I have now. I have also learned that they are more "breathable" than nylon and somewhat warmer in cold weather.
Everything is a trade off. We traded some breathability and warmth for less weight and easier handeling.
OkKeith
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maxwell, they are very easy to set up. I often set mine up alone, and it is a fairly large one. The one part that is helpful to have another set of hands is in setting up the dining fly.
Pete, they don't normally come with floors, although I do think some suppliers offer that as an option. I use the cheapest indoor/outdoor carpet I can find as a floor for mine. A painters tarp also works well. If you use a stove you will need to leave bare ground underneath and in front of it anyway, so a seperate floor works fine.
As far as bugs, we have plenty of those bloodsucking things flying around Wisconsin too. I don't know why, but it really hasn't been a big problem for us. No more than any other tent I have stayed in. I spent a week in a wall tent in Canada one spring when the bugs were fierce and they used the mosquito coils inside the tent and it worked fine.
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I agree with Whip-very easy to set up. Mine takes 4 stakes, one on each corner, then my exterior poles I cut into 3 pieces. There's a snap hook that goes on the apex loop and up it goes. It really takes just a few minutes to set up and is very sturdy.
From the outside (in my backyard...)
(http://i959.photobucket.com/albums/ae71/gudspelr/Tent%20Pics/FullPic.jpg)
And the inside
(http://i959.photobucket.com/albums/ae71/gudspelr/Tent%20Pics/InsideView.jpg)
Mine also came with the attached floor (waterproof). It collects whatever I bring in with it, which can get frustrating, but a little hand broom and some care on where I put my boots goes a long ways. I like it better than no waterproof floor... Whip's advice on having a stove inside along with a floor is a good one. I don't have a stove for mine, but if I did, I'd be finding some kind of barrier or other material to keep any of the burning stuff from hitting my sewn in floor. I think the stove would lend to more debris on the floor, too because of bringing in wood.
Jeremy