Originally Posted By: AWSI've had a little experience with a SpringBar tent, my nephew has one and he has brought it on a few of our hunting trips and convention hunts. They might be nice for desert camping but I wouldn't want one anywhere it rains, we had to take it down in the wet snow of the last convention. I lived in a canvas tent for three years and spent more than a couple winters running traplines out of a canvas wall tent in Northern MN and WI. I have a little synthetic double wall tent that I carry on the MC or canoe and it can be put away wet, is lightweight and a 1/4 the price of a Sringbar.
Stoves are a pain, my old white gas stove lasted many years but the newer propane ones not so much. I've gone to single burner ones that pack in a box the size of my fist and are dual fuel propane/butane. I have one permanently mounted in my van and another in my food box on the MC.
well I would disagree. watch this video. This was years ago after 5 days of rain, then a dumping of snow, howling wind, at nearly 11000 feet on a mountain. If I am going to be seeing wind snow and rain. short of a dedicated heavy canvas wall tent. There is no other tent I would take than a springbar/kodiak.
Not one drop in either of those tents in the video BTW. [/video]