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What is the best two person freestanding tent for around $125?
Tents are like cars -- there are many choices in most price ranges that are equally good performers so it is up to personal choice. I would recommend you check out the offerings at www.campmor.com. Everything they sell is decent quality or better and they have dozens of models with very good comparison tables on size, weight and featurs. On a budget, all of the Eurekas are an excellent and I have heard good things about the fairly new Big Agnes brand. They also tend to have specials like discontinued models. I've bought gear from them for about 20 years and have always been pleased with products and service. L.L. Bean's house brand tents are well made and designed too. For packing in a lot of rain and wind, I recommend getting a tent with a good sized vestibule fly -- it's really nice to have that sheltered space for cooking and gear storage. Also, a catenary angled roof, rather than a curved dome, can be better at shedding wind and hard rain, but a dome does give a more spacious feel inside which is preferable if you are stuck inside for a while. Again, it comes down to personal preference. Bargain tents that I would avoid are the house brands at Sears or Walmart. I would be careful of Coleman and Swiss Army too -- mostly made in China with flimsy materials.
How do I get tent stakes to hold in sand?
This is somewhat like some camping I've done in a place with barely a half inch of soil over bedrock. Obviously, stakes do not work there, either. In that case, we used stones to weigh down tent corners and guy wires. No matter where we stopped our canoes, we knew we could find plenty of stones. However, the beach may not supply that. I suggest that for each stake you would normally have, you bring a square of burlap, about a foot and a half on each side. Burlap is cheap and water goes right through it, while sand holds pretty well. It's nice and lightweight to carry in your tent pack, lighter than your stakes. Turn each square into a stone-sized sandbag by scooping a couple of handfuls of sand into the middle of the square of burlap, then tie it shut with a bit of twine. After you strike camp, just untie or cut the twine, dump out the sand, and you are good to go. It will probably survive a couple of camping trips before you need to replace it, but burlap is cheap and available at any fabric store.
Why do people always complain about the size of their tent?
It's been that way ever since I can remember with dome tents, if I go to buy one I always figure double the size I want and that works out!
Why are refugee tents white?
So they can be recognized as a refugee or noncombatant tent and (hopefully) not attacked