"Fue el mejor de los tiempos, fue el peor de los tiempos", escribió Charles Dickens en "Historia de dos ciudades". Y por "eso" fácilmente podría haber querido decir acampar . ¿ Ver la aurora boreal golpear el cielo nocturno? El mejor de los tiempos. ¿ Dormir en una colchoneta de espuma de un cuarto de pulgada sobre suelo helado? El peor de los tiempos.
Pero, ¿y si hubiera traído un colchón de aire cómodo en lugar de una almohadilla de espuma delgada? De hecho, ¿qué pasaría si hubiera empacado una cafetera , una ducha portátil y un cargador solar para su teléfono inteligente, para poder tomar un video de esas luces verdes girando en el cielo nocturno? Estos pequeños extras pueden no parecer mucho cuando estás acostado en el sofá de tu casa deseando que tu control remoto estuviera más cerca de tu mano. Pero en el desierto, parecen los mayores lujos jamás creados.
- Sistema de Café
- ducha solar
- Ático de la tienda
- Equipo de vino
- LED de línea de tienda
- Cargador solar
- silla de campamento
- Almohada para acampar
- Calentadores de manos
- Aplicaciones para acampar
- 10 comodidades para acampar que tal vez quieras llevar
10: Sistema de café
Algunas personas simplemente no pueden continuar sin una taza de café . Por suerte para ti, hay algunos aparatos geniales para hacer café al aire libre.
- Cafetera portátil Brunton Flip-n-Drip : la Flip-n-Drip se parece a esas cápsulas de autoservicio en el banco, solo que con tres cámaras: una para hervir agua, otra para café molido y otra que se convierte en su taza . Hierve agua en el fondo y luego dale la vuelta: el agua caliente se filtra a través del suelo y entra en la taza. Pesa 1 libra y 4 onzas, por lo que es bastante liviano pero no ultraligero.
- Cafetera de propano portátil Coleman: esta cafetera utiliza propano bueno y antiguo para hacer 10 tazas de café, simple y llanamente. Dado que pesa 9 libras (0,45 kilogramos), es mejor para acampar en el automóvil que para ir de mochilero.
- GSI Outdoors Ultralight Java Drip: si se dirige al campo, querrá una cafetera súper liviana y compacta como esta, que pesa solo 0.4 onzas. Básicamente, es un filtro de nailon que llenas con café molido y pasas agua caliente por la taza (que tendrás que comprar por separado).
- Jetboil Flash Java Kit: dos tazas en dos minutos, ¿necesitamos decir más? Y el recipiente de combustible funciona bien con otras estufas Jetboil, lo que le permite obtener su avena minutos después de preparar su café.
9: Ducha solar
Cualquiera puede colgar una bolsa llena de agua de un árbol y usarla para ducharse. Pero, ¿no sería mucho más maravilloso una ducha caliente? Puede optar por una ducha con generador o dejar que la Madre Naturaleza se encargue de la calefacción:
- Stearns Sun Shower: Este es un sistema económico y básico de ducha con bolsa y manguera . Llénalo, cuélgalo al sol y disfruta de una ducha caliente después de un largo día de caminata.
- Paha Que Tepee Shower and Outhouse: ¿Sin privacidad? ¡Ya no! Ahora puede ducharse y hacer sus necesidades en la privacidad de su propia estructura portátil similar a una tienda de campaña.
- Coleman Hot Water on Demand: si sus necesidades han evolucionado más allá de una pequeña bolsa colgada de un árbol, elija un sistema de agua caliente que produzca 40 galones de agua caliente con una sola carga.
8: Ático de la tienda
Inevitablemente, si acampas , eventualmente acamparás bajo la lluvia, y luego llegarás a conocer un nuevo tipo de sufrimiento. La ropa mojada debe secarse. Si se los deja puestos, es más probable que sufra hipotermia y, además, los calcetines mojados le provocarán ampollas en los pies. Tendrás que colgar tu ropa mojada para que se seque, pero si está lloviendo, colgar tu ropa mojada afuera es un poco contraproducente.
Instead, bring along a tent attic, which is a mesh "shelf" that you can suspend from the domed ceiling of your tent. Lay your wet socks, shirts, gloves and other wet items on the "shelf" to allow them to dry. When it's not raining, you can still use the tent attic as a nice place to store your clothes so they're easy to reach. Popular tent attics include the Black Diamond Tent Attic, the Eureka Gear Loft, the Sierra Designs Portable Attic, and the North Face Tent Gear Loft.
7: Wine Gear
Opposite the necessity for camping coffee is the necessity for camping booze (which, truth be told, can create the necessity for camping coffee). If you're going with liquor, a flask will work just fine. If you're going with beer , you can always keep it cool in a cold stream. But if you're going wine, perhaps you could enhance the experience with the following wine gear:
- Sea to Summit 2-liter Pack Tap: Pour a bottle of wine into a bomber, soft-shell bag with leak-proof spout, and it won't shatter when you drop it. Genius!
- GSI Outdoors Stemless Wine Glasses: Made from BPA-free polyester resin, these won't break.
- Goatskin Wine Bota: Modern world got you down? Instead of synthetics, polymers and high-tech gadgetry, consider the traditional Spanish wine bota made of goatskin.
- Box Wine: Whoever first considered placing wine in a tough cardboard box, complete with its own spigot, was a smart person. It's not the lightest or the least bulky option, but for car camping, it works.
6: Tent Line LEDs
You know how it works: You're groping around blindly in the dark for your tent zipper when your foot catches your tent line and you go down hard on a log with broken, protruding branches. It hurts. In fact, it really, really hurts. You don't want something like this to happen to you in the middle of the woods.
Enter clip-on LED lights . You can mark those death cords around your tent -- and any other dangerous stumps, sticks or lines for that matter -- with these small lights, so you won't trip over anything in the middle of the night.
5: Solar Charger
Just because you've decided to unplug from the modern world for the weekend doesn't mean you have to, well, literally unplug. The only problem is that keeping necessities like your laptop, tablet, smartphone, MP3 player or portable DVD player running takes some serious juice. Sure, you can use a gas-powered generator , but that's really contrary to the spirit of roughing it. Instead, consider one of these solar-powered chargers :
- Goal Zero Guide 10 Plus Adventure Kit Solar Charger: The tri-fold carrying case opens up to the sun, recharging, for example, your GPS system so that you can find your way in a snowstorm or to the nearest picturesque waterfall.
- Eton Mobius iPhone Solar Charger: If the only technology you need to survive a weekend in the wilderness is your iPhone, then this nifty little solar charger that clips to the face of your phone is all you'll need.
- Solio Classic Solar Charger with LED: Sixty minutes of sunshine equals 10 minutes of talk time on most cell phones, according to the manufacturer of this three-panel charging system [source: Solio.com].
4: Camp Chair
It's much more comfortable to sit around a campfire than it is to stand around a campfire, right? And while a rock or log can provide a nice spot to take a load off, they're not near as soft or as comfortable as a camp chair.
When choosing a camp chair, think carefully about what you plan to do in it. For example, do you plan to sit in it for endless hours on the bank of a glassy lake in the sun? If so, consider a chair with a sun canopy attachment, drink holder, side table and arm and leg rests. On the other hand, if you're backpacking , a chair is a luxury item, and you'll obviously need one that's as light as possible. A small fold-out stool may be the best choice, and even though it doesn't have a cup holder, you'll be happy to have it.
3: Camping Pillow
If you're backpacking , it doesn't make much sense to stuff a bulky pillow into your pack, when your fleece pullover could easily double as a one. But some people just can't sleep unless their heads are resting on a fluffy cloud of polyester cushioning. If you're one of those people, you might as well pack a camping pillow. If you're car camping , you don't have to worry as much about it taking up space in your pack. But if you're backpacking, you'll be happy to know that many camping pillows on the market are light (about 12 ounces) and that they often come with stuff sacks. Stuffing the pillow in the sack will make it compact and also keep it dry.
2: Hand Warmers
Ever notice how hard it is to do simple things with your hands when your fingers are cold? For example, striking a match: very difficult to do when your digits are freezing .
Here's your solution: hand warmers. Hand warmers are little packages of ingredients -- iron , water , cellulose, vermiculite, activated carbon and salt -- that, when exposed to the air, undergo a chemical reaction and heat up and stay hot for 11 to 12 hours. In fact, they can remain as hot as 135 to 155 degrees Fahrenheit (57 to 68 degrees Celsius). If you have mittens, you can stuff them inside your mittens to warm your hands up. Or, you can put the warmers in the bottom of your sleeping bag to keep your bed warm and cozy all night.
1: Camping Apps
Today's Swiss Army knife or Leatherman is the smartphone , loaded up with camping and backpacking apps that'll tell you everything from how to shelter from the rain, sleet and snow to how to cook your dinner. And since you've brought your solar charger along, you can use these apps as you please. Here are some examples:
- Coleman Camping Cookbook: This one's heavy on comfort food, so it's not the healthiest, but it's camp friendly nonetheless.
- Survival Guide: This app is packed with useful survival knowledge, should you get lost and/or run out of supplies.
- Tree Guide: It's somewhat pricey at $7, but this app will help you discover the difference between a Ponderosa pine and Douglas fir, and any other trees on the trail.
- Park Maps: GPS maps of more than 250 national parks and recreation spots
- Knot Guide: How should you tighten your tent lines? A trucker's hitch. How should you anchor a clothesline to a tree? A bowline. How should you join rope ends together? A water knot. These knots and the outdoor expertise they imply can be yours for $3.99 at the app store.
[sources: GeekSugar, Adventure Journal, Boing Boing]
Author's Note: 10 Camping Comforts You Might Want to Bring
I grew up camping in my parents' green, pop-top VW Bus and backpacking the Cascades. Now I'm in the process of inflicting nature on the next generation -- my 3-year-old and 5-year-old kids (and at times our Labradors). We enjoy camping in the Boulder, Colo., area. Writing this article, I was surprised to see how many modern recommendations for camping gear include technology. Opposite these techno-centered recommendations was a reader comment that suggested the best camping companion for an iPhone is a hammer. I'm not quite sure which camp I fall into -- the high- or the low-tech one. But I'm sure in the coming years I'll figure that out.
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Sources
- Casimiro, Steve. "2011 best outdoor iPhone apps." Adventure Journal. July 25, 2011. (Feb. 27, 2012) http://www.adventure-journal.com/2011-best-outdoor-iphone-apps-%E2%80%94-best-camping-apps/
- Coxworth, Ben. "Gozmag's top ten camping gadgets." Gizmag. June 10, 2010. (Feb. 27, 2012) http://www.gizmag.com/top-ten-camping-gadgets/15339/
- Geeksugar. "Camping Apps for Your Next Nature Retreat." (Feb. 27, 2012)http://www.geeksugar.com/Useful-Apps-Camping-11169356?slide=2
- Hostetter, Kristin. "Couples Camping 101: Wine & Dine." Backpacker Magazine. (Feb. 27, 2012) http://www.backpacker.com/gear-zone-couples-camping-101-wine-dine/gear/15212
- Leckart, Steven. "8 aplicaciones de iPhone para acampar". Boing Boing. 23 de julio de 2009. (27 de febrero de 2012) http://gadgets.boingboing.net/2009/06/23/8-iphone-apps-for-ca.html
- Solío. "Cargadores solares". (27 de febrero de 2012) http://store.solio.com/Solio-Store/Solar-Chargers/Solio-Bolt-Solar-Charger-S620-AH1RW