Canoe & Kayak Magazine

Gimme Shelter

By Alan S. Kesselheim
This article first appeared in Canoe & Kayak June 06

Seven tents you should consider.

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The desire for adequate shelter is damned near primordial, a holdover from the cave days, when warm, dry, and secure lodging was up there with food and fire on the priority list. On a paddling trip, a dependable, functional, and even luxurious tent ranks alongside a sweet boat and good company.

When a tent-door zipper blows out or the roof leaks, what seeps in, besides the elements, is a tendency toward desolation, a temptation to call the whole thing off, an instant sense of naked vulnerability. By the same token, shelter that stands up to a two-day downpour, shrugs off 40-mph gusts, and keeps no-see-ums where they belong is as reassuring as a really good cave must have been for the Neanderthals.

Paddlers need protection from the elements, sometimes for days at a stretch. A tent that is roomy, cheerful, and thoughtfully accessorized, while providing daylight and a view, is key.

While weight is an important consideration, your boat carries the load most of the time. Choosing a tent that adds a few ounces in return for "livability characteristics" is, in this case, a good bargain.

Each of the tents in this review fits the bill. A couple of them are a bit untraditional, and we cover the spectrum from beefy, expedition-style models to lightweight desert tents, but all of them offer solid protection, careful design, and strong overall quality.

MY CRITERIA (5-star rating system):
Ease of Setup: It's best when one person can efficiently set up the tent alone. When conditions turn crappy, a tent that goes up quickly and without confusion is critical.

Stormworthiness: A carefully situated and properly secured tent worth its ripstop will withstand wind squalls, downpours, all-day drizzle, and the occasional howling blizzard without leaking, collapsing, or otherwise unraveling.

Read the tent reviews

Morpho
Mutha Hubba
Megamid and Mega Bug
Parkview 3
Papagayo
Nallo 3 GT
Andromeda

Livability: Being stormbound is much, much nicer in a tent that has adequate space, headroom, some daylight, a window to peer out of, storage/cooking vestibules, and easy entry.

Worthwhile Accessories: Some bells and whistles are just that, window dressing that only adds to the price tag. Some, however, truly make a tent sing when it comes to function. Mesh storage pockets, for example, or clothes-drying cords, glow-in-the-dark zipper pulls, sensible guy points, and stabilizing Velcro closures to secure the fly.

Durability: When you sink this kind of money into a piece of gear, you want it to last. More important, you want a tent that hangs in for the duration, not a shelter that gives out two weeks into a five-week expedition. Let's scrutinize materials, zipper construction, stress points, and pole components, with an eye for weak spots.

Reader Comments
Posted on Thu Sep24, 2009, 10:30 AM by John
I just hate this type of review. Very expensive tents when a 50 dollar coleman will serve just as well. So what if it wears out after a few seasons..but a new one! For a bit better tent you can step up to 150 bucks. 500 bucks for a tent is just robbery!!

Posted on Fri Oct 2, 2009, 6:13 PM by Kerry
Wow John, I couldn't disagree more. Get caught in a major wind and rain storm or lug that tub of a tent you bought for 50 bucks across a 2500 yard portage and believe me you'll be happy to part with the extra 3 hundred bucks. I bought a Mutha Hubba and spent 16 days in Algonquin in late August. Fantastic tent, plenty of room for me and the missus and we were dry in the worst kind of weather (our paddling mates couldn't say the same.) Trust me, you get what you pay for. And besides isn't it time to stop living in a throwaway culture. The world doesn't need more land fill courtesy of Coleman.


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