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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: Trapper55]
 #286219 08/06/07 03:24 PM
08/06/07 03:24 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 SW Alaska
otterman
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2006
 SW Alaska
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I have also spent alot of AK winters or portions of in wall tents over the years. We used a good tarp on the floor and roof and instead of a cot or air mattress under you we always used spruce bows was comfy and beat having all that cold air come up under neath you to cool you down. Like White 17 and others said smaller is better even with 4 guys we only had a 12X14 the one year and it worked fine you just gotta think how it will work and keep clean as possible.I also think you may want to consider differnt places to move camp to when the surrounding fur gets the surpluss cleaned up. You may want to do this next year and 3 or 4 months in one location will really put a dent in populations of certain types of critters unless you know what you have and take care of it. I bet white17 can shed a little more light on that and how it works for him.
 
Last edited by otterman; 08/06/07 03:26 PM.
 
 We get out of life only as much as we really want and work hard enough to achieve
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: otterman]
 #286297 08/06/07 04:27 PM
08/06/07 04:27 PM
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| Joined:  Mar 2007 Alberta, Canada
parlecoup
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Mar 2007
 Alberta, Canada
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Trapper 55 Where the heck are you planning on setting up? I would be surprized you had a visit of any kind except for a fish and wildlife officer. Marten   yes
 Squirrel yes
 Whisky Jacks  Yes
 Mice  yes
 And last snow fleas! Just joking. I don,t think you have a thing to worry about , First off bears are generally hibernating in the winter and if a wolf ever came within 25 ft of your tent , call me I,ll bring you some valium ! Are you really serious about wolf problems?
 Get a tent for skinning , not too big and one to live in 12x14
 or vice versa. Forget the preditors they are scared spittless of you . except for spring Beaver trapping , then MAYBE  a curious bruin will check you out , But by that time you will smell so rank , you,ll be scared of yourself !LOL
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: parlecoup]
 #286494 08/06/07 06:45 PM
08/06/07 06:45 PM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 west michigan, 
johnd
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2006
 west michigan,
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this is my tent. all my winter pics are on prints, so this is all i have. it's 10x12 with a 10x10 awning. one or both sides of the awning can be dropped down in bad weather. the tent is about twenty pounds and only takes a ridge pole and two upright poles. the awning overlaps the tent a ways. i have a fiberglass vent flashing out the back door flap. but they will put it wherever you want it. no floor, i just throw a piece of canvas down to keep grass out of the sleeping bag, but it doesn't take to long for the woodstove to dry the ground out if you shovel the snow off first. i've camped at twelve degreese and sit in the tent in a t-shirt. this pic makes it look smaller than it is. i'm 6 foot tall and i can stand upright in the center and just have seats to the side. enough room for two and easy for one person to set up and take down.  it's an RK a-frame lodge but they make a lot of different tents. good quality and fair price. http://www.rklodges.com/Lodges/index.html
Last edited by johnd; 08/06/07 08:02 PM.
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: Trapper55]
 #286643 08/06/07 08:26 PM
08/06/07 08:26 PM
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| Joined:  May 2007 Southern New England
bigbore442001
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 Joined:  May 2007
 Southern New England
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My advice is to get this book. http://www.northwoodsways.com/media/books.html I have the first edition of this book and it is wonderful. It covers many things about living in a traditional canvas tent during the winter.  Second. Make a promise to do this and not wait. You may find yourself married and with a family. Those responsibilities may not allow you to do something that few are able to do. |  |  |  
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: Trapper55]
 #286883 08/06/07 10:25 PM
08/06/07 10:25 PM
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| 2poor Unregistered
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| 2poor Unregistered
 
 
 
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 Inflatable mattress beats the heck out of a cot or a thermal pad.
 The air provides great insulation !
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: ]
 #286905 08/06/07 10:40 PM
08/06/07 10:40 PM
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| BuckNE Unregistered
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| BuckNE Unregistered
 
 
 
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Get a self-inflating air mattress.  Benefits of both an inflatable mattress, and a close cell foam pad.
 Don't use a down sleeping bag.  When they get wet, you might as well be sleeping in a sheet.  Get a good bag with qualofill or something similar.
 
 You can make your own camp furniture with a saw and some twine for lashing.  Make sure you have something to pad your chair with.
 
 Get yourself a good water filter and an extra cartridge.  Mine is good for 1000 liters, is a 1 micron filter, and will filter our giardia.
 
 Stan Hawbaker's book has a list of supplies for exactly what you plan to do.  I suggest buying it, if for nothing other than the shopping lists.
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: mask bandit]
 #287175 08/07/07 10:16 AM
08/07/07 10:16 AM
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| BuckNE Unregistered
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| BuckNE Unregistered
 
 
 
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Here's another hint on winter camping.  If you buy or make a liner for your bag, you can lower the temperature rating of your bag by 20 degrees.  If your bag is big enough, you can make the liner from 2 wool blankets which, with a decent bag, will keep you toasty in the most extreme temperatures.  If your bag isn't that big, such as a mummy bag, a flannel liner is great.
 Carry plenty of matches in waterproof containers.  3 times as many as you think you will need, in several separate containers.  Also carry several butane lighters.  Just keep in mind that butane lighters will not light above 32 degrees F (0 deg C), so you have to warm them up first by putting them in an inside pocket.  My first extreme weather trip alone, my matches all got wet, and I couldn't get the butane lighter lit because I didn't know about the 32 deg thing, and thought I was going to freeze to death in the mountains in a blizzard before I finally got a fire lit.
 
 If it was me, and I had the funds, I'd invest in a gps unit.  You get turned around out there somewhere and the snow is falling and everything looks the same cause you can't see 50 feet in front of you, it will help you get back to camp.
 
 Do NOT forget a good first aid kit.  You'll be alone.  There is no Rite Aid pharmacy down the road.  You are the doctor.  You need bandaids, gauze rolls, gauze pads, tweezers, tape (duct tape is good), aspirins, decongestants, tylenol, visine for snow glare, antibiotic ear drops for ear infections, a good general purpose antibiotic, antibiotic cream, and a mild pain killer such as codeine.  Ask your doctor for a prescription.  Tell him you will be alone for a few months.  At the first sign of infection or illness, go on the antibiotics and tylenol.  Some day I'll tell you a story about almost dying from a viral infection that almost killed me by closing up my throat so I couldn't swallow water, with no help around and a 2 day walk out to a road.  Maybe I should write a book about that ordeal.
 
 I love being in the deep woods alone, but I know from experience what kind of trouble you can get into.  The key is to plan ahead, and everything you do has to be done with the knowledge that you can't get help.  You are on your own.
 
Last edited by BuckNE; 08/07/07 10:31 AM.
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: white17]
 #287252 08/07/07 11:37 AM
08/07/07 11:37 AM
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| Joined:  Dec 2006 SW Alaska
otterman
   trapper
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|   trapper
 
 Joined:  Dec 2006
 SW Alaska
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I would not use an air materess if it gets very cold that air in the matteress will  get cold and you are sleeping on cold air.As far as a sleeping bag liner goes wool is one thing flannel is another. Last weeek after years of using good nylon bags with quallofill my wife and I spent the night in old flannel lined bags that had been in camp for a week when we crawled in them they were damp and it sucked took a half hour to get them warmed with our body heat to chase the damp out. Not something you want to do if you come in wet and cold and need to warm up you body so you can wake up in the morning
 
 We get out of life only as much as we really want and work hard enough to achieve
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|  Re: Winter Trapping From Wall Tent
[Re: otterman]
 #287261 08/07/07 11:48 AM
08/07/07 11:48 AM
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| BuckNE Unregistered
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| BuckNE Unregistered
 
 
 
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Otterman, I'm not talking about a built-in flannel liner.  I'm talking about a removable liner that you can put inside a quallofill bag.  You can buy them, or make them yourself.  They go in like a sock.  Add to the warmth of the bag, and keep the bag clean.  You can take out the liner to clean it.  
 The new self-inflating pads are basically a bed of closed cell foam, and then a layer of open cell foam that expands when a valve is opened.  Throw it in the tent, unroll it, open the valve, and half an hour later you've got a nice cushion and separation from the ground.  A regular air mattress gets to the same temperature as the air, and you'll freeze your butt off.  Because of the foam design of the self-inflating pads, they don't get cold.
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