remogami wrote:
Hilleberg in tent care vlog is perfectly fine with stuffing tents (they stuff their own). They're just against compression bags.
I don’t compression bag our tents in canoe travel, the risk of bending a zipper or abrading screen seems too great, especially with some lightweight tents where the weight savings comes from less robust zippers and lots of mesh.
I do compression bag our tarp, sleeping bags and clothes. But only during a trip, I believe most gear is better stored at home loose and fluffy and able to “breathe”.
Sleeping bags get closet hung. Tent stays in its stuff bag (I’m a roller), but the pole bag & stake bags come out to make some breathing room and get attached to the tent bag drawstring so we can’t leave home without them. Many wrong pole stories on friend trips, fortunately none ours.
The tarp compression bags are large enough that I can un-compress them, leaving the tarp loosely stuffed within. No mesh or zippers at potential risk, I do stuff our tarps.
As far as tent wear and tear goes post-trip care and storage may be paramount. If we packed up even slightly damp on the last day everything gets hung to dry as soon as we get home. Even if it is raining out; we have a couple long outside lines (permanent eye bolts and sized lines with beeners atttached), but also two 30’ lines strung across the roof of the basement.
Four people coming off a rainy trip, we have had gear on every line inside and out.
In camp the usual ground sharps and excessive wind cautions. And other things; I have a friend who somehow finds it impossible to fully close his tent zippers. In windy conditions I watch the unzipped few inches flap around violently. He buys a new tent every few years, “The zipper is shot”.
I have mentioned the zipper wind flappage, more than once, but have given up.