Family Camping Tent
Taking the spouse and kids for an outdoor vacation in a family camping tent makes for a great vacation break
that is extremely affordable. And with a little planning your camping holiday can provide wonderful memories to be
savored for many years to come.
First up, you will need a family camping tent that is large enough to sleep all of you comfortably. This isn't
difficult, since family camping tents are made in sizes that will sleep four, six or eight
people with ease. Just check out your local camping equipment supply store and work out if a one-room,
two-room or three room family tent is going to suit all of you best.
I would suggest that a one-room family camping tent will only be suitable if your children are very young and are
still used to sleeping with mommy and daddy every night. If they are any older than that, the kids will love having
their own space, and you — the parents – will savor the little bit of privacy a separate room in the tent will
give you. But remember, the only wall you have is no thicker than a curtain. So every little noise anyone makes
will be heard by the whole group.
For noise and privacy reasons, some families elect to go family camping with two or more tents. That way, the kids
can sleep a little bit away from mom and dad... You will want them close enough to be safe but far enough away for
you and your partner to have some privacy.
When choosing which family camping tent to purchase, you should consider whether you'll be happy with a canvas tent
or a synthetic nylon-type of family tent. Both have their own advantages, but the canvas tents are heavier and tend
to last longer.
Tents made from synthetic cloth should have an inner tent of bug-proof netting for you to sleep in. This is covered
by an outer waterproof roof and wall part which keeps out wind and rain but allows air to circulate. This lets
water vapor escape, and prevents condensation.
Canvas camping tents allow water vapor to escape directly through the weave of the cloth. Falling rain swells the
canvas fibers, which prevents the rain from making you wet inside the tent.
It goes without saying that any tent you buy has to be able to keep you dry in the rain and allow you to sleep out
of any wind at night.
Before you leave home for your first camping trip, do take out your new family camping tent and set it up in your
own back yard or in some nearby park where the other people there won't mind. If you do it in a park, then be sure
to make it clear that you are just checking out your new tent, and that you do not intend to camp there! You might
get yourself arrested otherwise.
Once you are happy with the way the family tent goes together, take it apart carefully and pack it away for your
real camping trip. Don't lose any of the bits and pieces. You don't want to be miles from anywhere and find you are
missing a tent pole, some tent pegs or the rope guy-lines. That could spoil the whole camping
experience for the whole family.
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