First Night Camping in WW2 Officers Tent - Heavy Rain

2023 ж. 16 Қаз.
437 202 Рет қаралды

Join me on a solo overnight camping trip as I spend the first night camping in a WW2 British Army Officers Tent. This heavy duty canvas tent is great for winter camping and I took it out for a test camp so I get used to using it. I setup a raised bed inside and cook some food in a cast iron dutch oven over the fire.
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  • My dad and six of his brothers served in WWII in every theater. He and I (the youngest of four siblings) spent a great deal of time camping in the Adirondacks just like this. He taught me many survival skills including foraging. Pine pitch makes excellent gum to chew on and clean your teeth is something I still use when in the woods. I miss my dad so much. Thank you for bringing back to me the fondest memories I have of my growing up years.

    @nalonabrato8900@nalonabrato89006 ай бұрын
    • I hope that you're still camping and having fun in the wilderness :)

      @DiabloOutdoors@DiabloOutdoors6 ай бұрын
    • @@DiabloOutdoorsI do! 😁

      @nalonabrato8900@nalonabrato89006 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for commenting and telling your story!

      @TAOutdoors@TAOutdoors6 ай бұрын
    • @@nalonabrato8900 Then that`s great. His legacy is in goods hands! 🐻

      @DiabloOutdoors@DiabloOutdoors6 ай бұрын
    • I grew up in the Adirondacks

      @joshuabennett7334@joshuabennett73346 ай бұрын
  • When I as a Guide we were taught to roll the tent flaps inwards to prevent rain getting on the reverse side, so when you close for the night it isn't wet in the tent. And no sleeping bags. We learnt to make and roll a swag

    @damarisparker7348@damarisparker73487 ай бұрын
  • My Dad was an officer stationed in India during WW2. Brought back his equipment tent, cot etc which we used for camping as kids. Brings back fond memories

    @imminentdisaster@imminentdisaster7 ай бұрын
  • Hey Mike! My name is Dominic and I'm 11 years old. I really enjoy watching your bushcraft videos! You were kind of like an inspiration for me. In my woods, I have created what I call 7 Acres. It is a village of forts. So far I have built four freestanding forts, three lean to's, and two a- frames. I also just built my first Fire with flint and steel! I would really appriciate a response and some more bushcraft tips. - Dominic

    @USAMUSIC876@USAMUSIC8766 ай бұрын
    • Hey Dominic, that’s awesome to hear! Thanks so much for the kind feedback. I’m glad you have been inspired. My favourite type of fire lighting skill is Flint & Steel. It’s such a satisfying process. As for camping and Bushcraft tips, there are over 20 videos packed full of tips in my wilderness survival skills playlist on my KZhead channel. I’m working on the next Bushcraft tips film which will hopefully be out soon :)

      @TAOutdoors@TAOutdoors6 ай бұрын
    • very inspiring. ive been at this for about 3 years now and i havent had the chance to build more than tent/tarp set ups. maybe some day.......

      @Roddheel-ih5ki@Roddheel-ih5ki6 ай бұрын
    • i am 12 years old and als inspired by youtubers like ta outdoors and fishing, but i dont have the permition or money to go camping or any of the stuff that you do

      @ben_nerf_lego@ben_nerf_lego6 ай бұрын
    • hey! Im glad that there are other kids my age that are are interested in stuff like this!@@ben_nerf_lego

      @USAMUSIC876@USAMUSIC8766 ай бұрын
    • I also just checked out ur channel and I love legos and nerf guns too!@@ben_nerf_lego

      @USAMUSIC876@USAMUSIC8766 ай бұрын
  • I’m 74 years old and in my Boy Scout days when I was 10 or 12 years old that’s the kind of tents we used. There were no light weight nylon backpacking/hiking tents. Consequently we did not do a lot of backpacking and hiking, we camped out of cars where you could load your tent in the back and haul it to the woods and set it up. They were durable, they were waterproof, unless you touched the inside in a hard rain. You learned that lesson really quick. Thanks for the memories.

    @Bubba4168@Bubba41686 ай бұрын
    • we used the same tents when I was in the Scouts. Those poles were heavy too.

      @RoamingRyan@RoamingRyan6 ай бұрын
    • We used the same tents in scouts about 8 years ago now. There all still holding up great!

      @gabegrasse9139@gabegrasse91393 ай бұрын
  • Wauw that takes me back 30 years to my scouting days. These tents are beasts. Very heavy but so versatile. The type we had you could roll up the doors and the sides leaving you with just the roof to really air it out. Much easier to put up with one person holding the pools up while standing in the tent as it’s being put up.

    @robholland5925@robholland59257 ай бұрын
    • Was going to make exactly the same comment. Many memories and they were definitely waterproof as many a rainy scout camp proved!

      @WalksInCamera@WalksInCamera7 ай бұрын
    • same here, same tents, my scout group in the 1980's was 3rd Kingston

      @ThurstanDavies@ThurstanDavies7 ай бұрын
    • That's what the officers had privates for, to hold the poles haha :D

      @PastramiStaven@PastramiStaven7 ай бұрын
    • I started my scouting days under one of these canvas. Until we moved over to using aluminium framed mess tents

      @Fudgie05@Fudgie057 ай бұрын
    • Yes! 70’s & 80’s scout tents, remember them being a bit greener though and very heavy to carry. Middlewood scout camp if anyone remembers!

      @ajm6971@ajm69717 ай бұрын
  • Dutch Lacing. That's what the loop and eye system is called. We use it on traditional marquees and big top tents.

    @JupiterLune@JupiterLune7 ай бұрын
  • Hi Mike! The mushrooms look like young puffballs (Lycoperdon perlatum). They're a saprobic species, meaning that their role in the woodland is to break down organic matter - also they're a good edible mushroom, harvested young before the spores develop. (If anyone reading this is encouraged to forage edible mushrooms, please do a lot of research first.)

    @shaun123w@shaun123w7 ай бұрын
    • Yes, those are puffballs. And like you already wrote, they're edible only when they're young.

      @saffeld@saffeld7 ай бұрын
    • Not Puffballs, sorry. Puffballs have NO stem, savvy? This is easy to look up, don't poison yourself.

      @reesetorwad8346@reesetorwad83466 ай бұрын
    • This was the comment im here for

      @aaroncutmore586@aaroncutmore5866 ай бұрын
  • My father had a tent like that when I was a kid growing up just north of Toronto, Canada. It was an actual British Army surplus tent from WWII. The poles were starting to rot, and I was always afraid the top one would collapse and fall on us while we slept 😂 when I was a teenager, we'd set the tent up in the yard and have a party. Whoever was too drunk to go home just stayed in the tent 😊 you'd be amazed how many drunk teenagers would fit in it. Just don't tell your kids 😉

    @musingwithreba9667@musingwithreba96676 ай бұрын
  • As a scout who uses these types of tents quite often and I am very impressed that you set that up by yourself

    @dominicalexa5852@dominicalexa58527 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, most need at least two people to set them up lol

      @robmarshallofficial@robmarshallofficial6 ай бұрын
    • True, very difficult indeed!

      @jameslast3192@jameslast31926 ай бұрын
    • @ministryofpeacekmk@ministryofpeacekmk6 ай бұрын
  • Hi, I am seventy-two years old and apart from a stint in the navy have spent all my life in the UK, but this is the first time I have heard a muntjac. I am sorry if I have butchered the name of this bird or animal. I have a caravan in the Hamsterley forest and slept outside as much as possible, it just goes to show you are never too old to learn something.

    @johnfithian-franks8276@johnfithian-franks82767 ай бұрын
    • They're quite tasty!

      @howardchambers9679@howardchambers96797 ай бұрын
    • They are a species of small imported deer that ran wild, like grey squirrels.

      @StevenKeery@StevenKeery6 ай бұрын
    • They are protected now

      @ailienmeyer3892@ailienmeyer38926 ай бұрын
    • thankyou for the info@@StevenKeery

      @johnfithian-franks8276@johnfithian-franks82766 ай бұрын
  • We used these tents in the Scout group I belonged to. We had two and a flysheet and would set them up in a line, the flysheet inbetween the two tents to make one really big living space. We would lift one side of the flysheet using two extra poles and the middle would be our kitchen, living area. In the winter we could put four pallets in each tent to create a wooden floor. The lower sides could also be rolled up to allow ventilation in the summer and let smelly boy stink blow away.

    @stevegrim@stevegrim6 ай бұрын
  • I taught so many guides how to put these and 6 person patrol tents up. It is easier to put up a 2 man on your own if you have 2 guy ropes on a dolly at each end and storm set the guys. Also, unfolding the tent and laying the poles in position with the upright poles foot where you want it to end up (knock in a small peg straight down as well to mark your ideal pole foot position). Small pegs should go straight down not angled, then the walls hang straight down. To maintain health of the tent the walls should be looped each morning to allow the hessian to dry and once dry can be rolled to allow the tent to air and give shade on a hot day. Always roll doors under not over so when it rains and you undo them, you don't end up soaked (learnt that the hard way!). When you undo the lacing on the back door, pay attention to the threading as it is very secure and keeps draughts out a little.

    @emkav551@emkav5517 ай бұрын
  • My parents where campers and so we kids where too. I once spend 6 weeks in such a tend in the dunes of the North Sea. I loved the sound of the rain and no heavy wind could harm me. I loved the smell of the mornings and I loved the sound of the sea from over the dunes. I loved all about it. When we went back to our house I felt sad and lost. Thank you for bringing back my memories.

    @eucitizen78@eucitizen786 ай бұрын
  • Proper 1980's scout's memories are flooding back! 😊

    @GavinWhyman@GavinWhyman7 ай бұрын
  • I’ve had an Officers Tent (WW2 re-enactment) for over 3 years now, it’s stood up to storms, heavy rain and glorious sunny days. I’ve not treated it in any way except as you said about hosing it down when I first got it. , As the tent is 6x6 I place my bed across the back, then it acts as a nice seat for looking out. And yes, you do do it up the way you did with the loops

    @TK-Will.@TK-Will.7 ай бұрын
  • Ahh yes the good old British baptism of fire - the rain!

    @Nyctophora@Nyctophora7 ай бұрын
  • Now you know why Officers never put up their own tents. There is an art to stitching the tent flaps together.

    @johnsockett7458@johnsockett74587 ай бұрын
  • My dad served in WWII and he brought one of the tents home. It must have been a mess tent because it would make 3 of yours. Every summer he would set that tent up in the backyard and bring out his 5 army cots. Us kids had a wonderful time playing in that tent for many many years. My dad died in 1976 and nobody knows where that tent went to. But gosh was it fun and it never got old.

    @momrobare@momrobare6 ай бұрын
  • When I was kid growing up in Los Angeles, my dad would rent a big canvas tent from the local Army-Navy surplus store and once we arrived at our campsite, it would take him and my mom an hour or so to put the tent up. I remember the process seemed to involve a lot of shouting and swearing, especially during the part when my dad had to crawl inside the deflated tent with the center pole that held up the ridge pole. Us kids would sit on the picnic table watching, when in fact we were supposed to be out scrounging for firewood, but watching our dad set up the tent was way more entertaining. Once I was grown and moved away from home, my own solo camping trips led me thru an evolution of tents, my first being a simple 20'x8' clear plastic sheet, clothesline, and clothespins. I'd string a line between 2 trees about chest high, spread the tarp out on the ground under it, then toss the tarp over the line, anchoring the bottoms of the tarp with gear and whatever rocks were at hand, then use the clothespins to anchor the tarp to the line to prevent it from sliding down the line. While the resulting tent was open at both ends, being clear it also allowed me to see the night sky and my campfire. I used this tent for many years, thru all kinds of weather, including snow, and it always kept me perfectly dry. My next tent was a "borrowed" one-person pup tent which it's owner ended up gifting to me, as he had never used it and I was "borrowing" it 2-3 x a year for several years. I used that tent until it started to fall apart, maybe 10 years, before I finally broke down and bought myself new tent, which was a large 3-room tent. And while I loved the space the new tent afforded me, it was a cheap tent and leaked like a sieve in wet weather. It also was a royal pain to set up and required 2 people...solo camping was no longer possible. Still, my friends and I, and later my son and his family, got good use out of the tent for at least a decade. But after an especially bad weather experience, I decided it was time for yet another new tent. This time I did my research and had very strict criteria: I had to be able to set it up quickly my myself, it had to provide full head room at the center of the tent, had to be watertight and wind resistant, had to pack small and fairly light, and had to come down quickly. I ended up with a 10x10 Coleman tent with corner poles sewn into the tent which telescope, which enable the tent to be set up in about 60 seconds. Straight out of the box, brand new, it took me 1 min 45 seconds to have up (my roommate timed me). It takes about 2 1/2 minutes to take down, mostly due to having to press air out of the tent. I've only used it 1x in wet weather and it did leak a bit, but that's mostly because I forgot to bring the rain fly. It weighs about 25 lbs, which is a bit heavy for me (elderly woman w/bad back and hips), but I don't backpack, I car camp, and even solo I can manage to lug the carrying case from the car to the tent site. It wasn't an inexpensive tent but I am very happy with it, feel that it was worth the money spent, especially as it's likely to be the last tent I ever buy or use.

    @loragunning5394@loragunning53946 ай бұрын
  • I remember these old tents. (Respectful reproduction.) Excellent for weather protection, but a hell of job to wax. If I recall correctly, we dug out the floor to make the inside seem taller, because my uncle was 6'6''. Thank goodness you managed to salvage this video. Brought back some great memories.

    @tardismole@tardismole7 ай бұрын
  • Good seeing you back on I hope you have more content. I’m sure the officers had some poor soul to set those tents up. Looks like a lot of work for one man. Good job.

    @explosive821@explosive8217 ай бұрын
    • Yes explosive I can't see officers setting that up lol I think you're right

      @Bennybushcraft@Bennybushcraft7 ай бұрын
    • They were delivered a set up by a couple of squaddies. We had a larger one that one of our gangs dad gave us. I was ten or eleven and we went camping in it. We linked the poles together and slung the tent and equipment under it..

      @georgelowles5077@georgelowles50776 ай бұрын
  • I can just picture one of those half way across Normandy with a little writing table. I actually like the old military camp beds. Quick and easy to put up.

    @SimonAmazingClarke@SimonAmazingClarke6 ай бұрын
  • This might be a good addition to your vw camper van if you find some space to store it in the van.

    @kjeldtmc2530@kjeldtmc25307 ай бұрын
  • You did pretty well considering no help or instructions. We used these tents in the 70s in our guide troop camps. Younger guides in Bell tents progressing to (what I now realise having watched your video) were actual army surplus ww2officers' tents. Two things that might make the job easier: ensure the door is closed and peg out tge borrom before you start. Happy camping!

    @sewnonny2721@sewnonny27216 ай бұрын
  • The skirt normally goes under the groundsheet, takes me back to my youth. Thank you

    @colinredbird4570@colinredbird45707 ай бұрын
  • Be cool to see you do a night's camping with the full gear of a ww2 soldier.

    @bottlecaps2741@bottlecaps27417 ай бұрын
    • Did one of those on my channel a few years ago: kzhead.info/sun/hraYotqPmZGomIk/bejne.htmlsi=Fiw5g7bldLkqaZA5 not all the gear but most of it 😁

      @TAOutdoors@TAOutdoors7 ай бұрын
  • About to watch and I already know it's going to be good, always nice to see a video from Mike/TA Outdoors pop up in my feed!

    @Joannah11@Joannah117 ай бұрын
    • I agree there joannah😊

      @Bennybushcraft@Bennybushcraft7 ай бұрын
  • I recently binged on Bear Grylls the island ,they would kill for that sleeping bag with screen especially the ones that sleep on the floor for ages 😂

    @What..a..shambles@What..a..shambles7 ай бұрын
  • A normal guy opening and setting up a WW2 tent, with no instructions, is probably going to make a disastrous mistake of a pitch-up, but this man has a natural talent when it comes to shelters and put the tent up with ease! .

    @23PNS12O@23PNS12O7 ай бұрын
    • The officers didn’t erect this tent, a crew did, usually working together on several tents, mess and kitchen, etc

      @robinrussell3705@robinrussell37056 ай бұрын
  • (The USA version at least one unit. Not sure about other units) Memory from the 1960s reminds me that many times there was a canvas floor or the soldiers would build a floor from whatever was available where the camp would be stationed for several weeks. The canvas floor version had pegs along the side holding it in place.

    @jerryodell1168@jerryodell11687 ай бұрын
  • Lovin' the old style tent! Simple, no "fandangled" contraption to try and figure out when in a hurry.

    @davidr6585@davidr65857 ай бұрын
  • Used these tents at scout camp with pallets on the ground as a floor. 2 scouts per tent, and the leaders each had their own. Our troop used Eureka timberlines for our regular camp outs.

    @IAAporetic@IAAporetic7 ай бұрын
  • Another great video as always Mike! This tent design is very similar to the large patrol tents we use in the Scouts, the ones we use sleep up to 6-8 people, but pretty much exactly the same design. The hessian part is called a Sod Cloth, used to go under a ground sheet to stop water flowing under the canvas onto the ground sheet. Keep up the great work Mike! ❤

    @TheSingleTrackWoodsman@TheSingleTrackWoodsman7 ай бұрын
    • That's what I thought, you're supposed to put a canvas ground sheet over it.

      @ingeleonora-denouden6222@ingeleonora-denouden62227 ай бұрын
    • When I’m as in cubs we had 6-8 men and women tents but now in my scouts we have 2 men tents and when I went camping I slept in it on my own

      @guy-on-a-ch@guy-on-a-ch7 ай бұрын
    • That’s right and the damn stuff buckled up if it hadn’t been packed away right!

      @judithmatthews8460@judithmatthews84606 ай бұрын
  • I used to have a 8 man one of these. I had PTSD just watching you attempt to assemble it on your own. I always loved the toggle closing, so much more robust than any other way.

    @davenorth1265@davenorth12657 ай бұрын
  • wow, brought back a few childhood memories of my dad's tent from his WW2 days which we used as kids on our lawn. Many happy nights back then spent under canvas. Good to see you can still get them, wooden poles and all just like the one we had. Nice overnighter and great to hear the sound of the rain on canvas again.

    @razifmahathir2437@razifmahathir24376 ай бұрын
  • That sort of tent keeps the rain out fine as long as you don't touch the inside of the canvass. That brings it in.

    @MartinJames389@MartinJames3897 ай бұрын
  • My late dad loved Exchange and Mart magazine . He bought an ex army large tent plus the canvas beds . As a junior I ( I'm 72 now) can still smell that tent . Great family memories - so thanks from me .

    @mart872uk@mart872uk5 ай бұрын
  • I DO sleep outside of a tent often. I sleep on a cot and sliding around of my bedding is a problem. In my part of New Mexico, insects are rare. Still, the screen will help with breathing.

    @jamesellsworth9673@jamesellsworth96737 ай бұрын
  • Take me back to scouting days, we had a green Icelandic, solid tents great in winter/snow days, would make a good hot tent

    @weebryan@weebryan7 ай бұрын
  • It's wonderful to have your own woodland to camp in. Have you ever thought about a raised tent platform? Thanks again Mike, love your content... And I won't tell the wife.

    @glorfendell2967@glorfendell29677 ай бұрын
  • As a scout leader i have put a lot of patrol tents up over the years, just slightly bigger than that officers tent.

    @richardhookey3087@richardhookey30877 ай бұрын
  • steak in the 4 bottom corners then raise the frame inside and it should stand and you can adjust the lines then! Cheers looks awesome just right size. the short side walls can sometimes be rolled up for ventilation, skirt to outside, weighed down by rocks or sand bags. We spray ours with a hand pump sprayer and Thompsons water seal, (it is ment for wood on decks) you can treat the wooden poles with this also as well as the tent pegs, you can only spray it once so do a good job, get every seam and you will never have a leak.

    @NonSleeper_Occasional_Thinker@NonSleeper_Occasional_Thinker7 ай бұрын
  • You need to make two stiff leather patches a bit bigger than a 10p with a hole in them to tightly slip over the spikes to prevent them pulling back out out and ripping a hole in the fabric as you lift it up , had a similar tent in the 80's

    @Meibeon@Meibeon7 ай бұрын
  • I remember this style of tent in the cubs and scouts early 80's. Great to see you again Mike.

    @HayzeeHayes@HayzeeHayes7 ай бұрын
  • Really enjoyed this video remembering day gone by with the army cadets & the scouts.

    @canoecycle7005@canoecycle70056 ай бұрын
  • Watching you put this up by yourself gives me a real sense of appreciation for modern tents. Even the cheap ones.

    @zhaneranger@zhaneranger6 ай бұрын
  • Me and my mates used to camp in surplus army equipment from the 1950s and 1960s we are all in our 60s now we had good times. We used to camp on the sand dunes of Ainsdale in Merseyside or Lancashire as it was then in the 1960s.

    @wattyler9806@wattyler98066 ай бұрын
  • What an unforgettable lovely sound of the rain pounding on tent

    @tadpanasiewicz8077@tadpanasiewicz80776 ай бұрын
  • On this outing, I MISS your WWII Officer's costuming!

    @jamesellsworth9673@jamesellsworth96737 ай бұрын
  • Always good to see you back camping in the woods! Reminds me that I've not been out for a few months, the weathers perfect for it the now

    @kermitthepog7063@kermitthepog70637 ай бұрын
  • Loved the slow-mo, cinematic bits of the video. Nice touch!

    @AntStave@AntStave4 ай бұрын
  • A beautiful tent!😍 Thank you very much for the video!

    @tenjouin1@tenjouin16 ай бұрын
  • Loved this video - brought back memories of my scouting days in the eighties. The hessian skirt was used to go between the ground and the groundsheet that you would use - emulating the built in groundsheet of the hike tents while still allowing the sides to be tied up to air the tent during the day. Great job and thank you for the trip down memory lane.

    @druthedev7616@druthedev76166 ай бұрын
  • Thumbs up indeed Mike. Thank you. 😁👍🏼

    @BraxxJuventa@BraxxJuventa7 ай бұрын
  • loving this - brings back memories of the Icelandic Patrol Tents and Summer Camp with the Scouts!!!

    @Davidm1fcf@Davidm1fcf6 ай бұрын
  • Awesome content as always.Thanks for sharing and taking us along

    @taurota1554@taurota15546 ай бұрын
  • Our canvas bell tent had the same loop system on the door. It's an interesting loop system until you desperately need to get out for a festival pee at 3 in the morning.

    @Kradlum@Kradlum7 ай бұрын
  • For more permanent camps where you dont lug around the tent all the time these types of heavy and tall canvas tents are just the best. Sleeps better, more comfortable, stands up to the weather, standing headrom.. So much going for them.

    @rolfnilsen6385@rolfnilsen63857 ай бұрын
  • Eagle Scout back in 1979, did my fair share of canvas tenting-a smell that'll never leave your senses. Another great video TA Outdoors.

    @fstop6139@fstop61397 ай бұрын
    • Yes!!!! The smell. Canvas. Bug spray and old tackle boxes. Spot on

      @dellalderman8011@dellalderman80116 ай бұрын
  • in the states, we use that style of tent at the 19th century 'Westward Expansion' forts, and their re-enctments or rendezvous. However, the are 6 feet tall, and they use the side bar structure to support the walls. If my memory isn't swiss cheese today, you really want that canvas taut, to help keep the rain out of the tent. You should be able to bounce a coin off the roof of the tent. The flaps are known as 'sod flaps.' They are marketed as extra length on the wall for uneven ground levels to help keep the wind and weather out of your tent. During historic events, those flaps must be inside the tent for historic accuracy. Another cool camp, thanks for brining us along. I would also enjoy another camp with your Lavuu [sp?], turned into British Bell Tent.... with the longer center pole.

    @Objective-Observer@Objective-Observer7 ай бұрын
  • We used that sort of tent in the scouts, we knew it as a patrol tent and used to get 6 kids and kit inside it! Love them

    @peterford746@peterford7466 ай бұрын
  • Great sleeping bag! Thanks for sharing

    @Uncleroger1225@Uncleroger12257 ай бұрын
  • The sleepingbag is awesome! The Petromax Pot & the Feuerhand Light everything nice!!!

    @peterlustig7855@peterlustig785510 күн бұрын
  • Great tent,love that style and the set-up was good video. Thanks for sharing 👍 😊

    @larryshamlin5945@larryshamlin59456 ай бұрын
  • Common puffball, Lycoperdon perlatum. Very tasty. Just make sure they're white and firm all the way through.

    @JTRavers69@JTRavers697 ай бұрын
  • We used the same tent on family holidays the smell of the canvas on a warm summers day always bring back good memories

    @geoffpriestley7310@geoffpriestley73106 ай бұрын
  • really great episode. Very very chill one, camping is still ways away of the things I can afford to do, but it's still great to get a glimpse of what it can be through your videos.

    @TheLearthur@TheLearthur7 ай бұрын
  • That pack looks a little full there. 😂😂 these tents are awesome though, we have them for my scouts. It’s always fun to have them sleep under canvas for their first camps.

    @joeydr1497@joeydr14977 ай бұрын
    • Just a tad 🤣

      @TAOutdoors@TAOutdoors7 ай бұрын
  • Tie off the bottom of the front door, then peg out the corners to establish the footprint, then open the door and slide the ridge pole in set the rear pole inside insert the door pole into the ridge pole follow the ridge pole to the rear picking up the rear pole as you go and insert into the ridge pole then tie out the guy lines .P.S. if it is the old type of canvas, don't touch it when wet it will leak when you touch it.

    @williamirelan9332@williamirelan93327 ай бұрын
  • Really interesting to see - I'm (relatively) young and have only ever had the pleasure of using newer, modern tents - so props to you for showing this as well as (according to the below comments) you absolutely nailed it for a first go + by yourself. As always, thoroughly enjoying the content! Thanks for all your hard work.

    @alexpearce8159@alexpearce81596 ай бұрын
  • My brothers and i used to "camp" out in the backyard in one of those in the 1950s. Great memories. Mike from Maine.

    @mikecronin8825@mikecronin88257 ай бұрын
  • Good to see more of your videos

    @SwordOfPersona@SwordOfPersona6 ай бұрын
  • This brought back memories. I used my dad’s identical army tent as a teenager in 1972 it had the same wooden pegs and poles. Never let me down. I remember a massive wooden mallet as well. I that Took that tent everywhere.

    @Order4627@Order46276 ай бұрын
  • I've got a Grüezibag by myself. It's one of four sleeping bags i own and it is by far the best! Great range of temperature and soooo comfortable! 🥰

    @innerlight7018@innerlight70187 ай бұрын
    • I'm really impressed with it so far.

      @TAOutdoors@TAOutdoors7 ай бұрын
  • Oh wow memories from childhood. My parents had a similar family tent. It had a tent pretty much exactly like that at either end with a centre section that was basically a fly sheet between them forming a living cooking area, both tents also had fly sheets too. We were away once and saw a forecast for a strong storm. As kids we went around finding rocks to place on the hessian skirts. There were very few tents still standing by morning, frame tents were just becoming the thing to have and the storm flattened them. As a child I didn’t appreciate it all. Oh yes we had a couple of those difficult camp beds too but I was too young to attempt to fit them together.

    @dieselbushcraft1299@dieselbushcraft12996 ай бұрын
  • Great video. thank you for sharing.

    @Ravelinn@Ravelinn6 ай бұрын
  • Love that breathable foot box on the sleeping bag!

    @lauraweiss7875@lauraweiss78756 ай бұрын
  • Ah, love it. I just watched the £20 little tent vid and then this one. You're growing on me with your content. Been watching for a couple of weeks now and I like your style. Thank-you 😊

    @cawstongreenway@cawstongreenway6 ай бұрын
  • Mike, an excellent video, thanks. That tent is a smaller version of the traditional patrol tents we use in the Scouts. It's fiddly to put up, but very robust as you discovered. I'm tempted to get myself one, as it has more headroom than a traditional tent.

    @kristianmagnusson8735@kristianmagnusson87357 ай бұрын
  • Thank you ❤

    @thothtahuti5509@thothtahuti55096 ай бұрын
  • Love the rain on a tent or a caravan

    @jamieelliott5205@jamieelliott52057 ай бұрын
  • Memories of Boy Scouts summer camp. Camp Shin-Go-Beek in Waupaca WI had very similar tents in the late 1960s. Thanks for sharing this.

    @bubbahogwallop9640@bubbahogwallop96406 ай бұрын
  • Brings back many years as a guider using this type of tent, the gadgets and bedding rolls, good days. Getting them dry after camp was the only downside

    @kimarmstrong1814@kimarmstrong18146 ай бұрын
  • I grew up camping in a tent just like that. So many memories. Eventually I graduated to modern tents and then RV's. Now that I am old I have switched back to canvas. I have a Kodiak Canvas truck tent that is great. Thanks for taking us with you on your adventure. Stay safe and God bless.

    @freezinweasle1@freezinweasle16 ай бұрын
  • That sleeping bag... Love it!

    @iberiksoderblom@iberiksoderblom6 ай бұрын
  • Another great vid thank you! THAT SLEEPING BAG IS SWEET!!!!!!

    @edshellard@edshellard6 ай бұрын
  • As an old biddy, I know from my ridge tent days to close the door first, peg the base out, put the front post in and then start to adjust the guide lines at the front. Put the ridge in, not forgetting the tent loop that's normally halfway along the ridge, then, while inside, add the rear pole. Adjust the rest of the guide lines. Smaller pegs for the base, larger pegs for the guide lines. Roll the tent door inwards, not outwards, to keep the inside of the door dry in case of rain. Don't forget to tie them with a quick release knot. I even learned in the guides how to properly sew up a tear in a canvas tent! I have an old army stretcher with wood poles in the sides that keep me a couple of inches off the ground. Great for camping by the car, but it's a bit too heavy to walk anywhere with it! Beautiful puffballs, perfectly edible while still firm inside. I teach foraging in Devon, so I know my stuff.

    @jackypearcejustme@jackypearcejustme29 күн бұрын
  • Wow mike I think that will make a great addition to your gear that you can use on your new plot of land.

    @TheMotorcop1967@TheMotorcop19676 ай бұрын
  • Nice retro tent experience.

    @brandonzayres@brandonzayres7 ай бұрын
  • I think the pocket on the inside of the sleeping bag is for heating pads to keep warm while sleeping in cold weather

    @ggdave6287@ggdave62876 ай бұрын
  • I remember my grandad having one of those tents. Only shame is it hasn't got the facility for hot tenting. Imagine how cosy you could be on a winters evening. Great vid, great location, great food

    @dazzbedford68@dazzbedford687 ай бұрын
    • GGMU 😏

      @TAOutdoors@TAOutdoors7 ай бұрын
  • My dad must have used this sort of tent. Thank you for this demonstration.

    @priscillawarren9979@priscillawarren99796 ай бұрын
  • Yeah, it looks like a really good tent! The floor inside was really dry. That's the way I was taught - to hose it off on a sunny day to allow the cotton thread to swell and fill the holes. Nice little trip.

    @thizizliz@thizizliz6 ай бұрын
  • As others have said, this is very similar to patrol tents used years ago by the Scouts - one thing I remember is that in rain you want to slightly slacken off the guy ropes (I'm assuming the rope used isn't nylon), as they'll swell with the rain and potentially could rip free of the canvas.

    @BlahDBlahDBlah@BlahDBlahDBlah6 ай бұрын
    • Yes I noted that. Remember getting wet going out to slacken off. We used to play rock paper scissors as to who went out!

      @judithmatthews8460@judithmatthews84606 ай бұрын
  • I TOTALLY agree with you about Scandi grinds and vegetable/meat slicing. I DO like Opinel and they are easy to carry along with a larger Scandi grind belt knife.

    @jamesellsworth9673@jamesellsworth96737 ай бұрын
  • Ah so nice, can't wait to go tenting again.

    @PastramiStaven@PastramiStaven7 ай бұрын
  • I kept saying that's cool all the way through the video. Great kit there.

    @davidcox2264@davidcox22646 ай бұрын
  • Dad got something similar for us kids in 1950 s ! He set it up in the garden for us to play in ! I remember the wooden pegs were beautifully made ,very slim like knives, think they were made from sweet chestnut timber ! The guy ropes needed constant adjusting to keep the tent in good order!

    @robertmeadows7508@robertmeadows75087 ай бұрын
  • Awesome, seen so many comments saying the same thing, , taking us back to our old cubs and scouting days... the old patrol tents, and them pegs, my got.. brilliant, cracking video... atb Ian

    @IansAnglesey@IansAnglesey7 ай бұрын
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