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#21
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OSH Sleeping
AirVenture is littered with "WalMart" tents after a big wind and rain.
The problems are the fiberglass poles and partial rain-flys. First of all, you will want a tent with a full rain-fly... one that goes all the way from the top to the ground. Second, you will want to affix additional guy-lines to stabilize the weak poles. As for sleeping, a good Thermarest pad, a 40-degree sleeping bag, and a 300-weight fleece blanket will keep you warm the coldest OSH nights. Total weight will be less than 5-pounds. |
#22
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OSH Sleeping
"RST Engineering" wrote in message m... Of all the things you are NOT going to have to worry about, sleeping at Oshkosh during The Show in sub-zero is very high on the list. Yeah, I WANT to get cold at night, at OSH. That way, after averaging in the days, I will be comfortable. ! g -- Jim in NC |
#23
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OSH Sleeping
"John Smith" wrote in message ... AirVenture is littered with "WalMart" tents after a big wind and rain. The problems are the fiberglass poles and partial rain-flys. First of all, you will want a tent with a full rain-fly... one that goes all the way from the top to the ground. Second, you will want to affix additional guy-lines to stabilize the weak poles. As for sleeping, a good Thermarest pad, a 40-degree sleeping bag, and a 300-weight fleece blanket will keep you warm the coldest OSH nights. Total weight will be less than 5-pounds. I've learned to leave the sleeping bag at home. My sleeping gear is a Thermarest, covered with a "sock" I custom made from an old sheet. Kelly has the identical set-up, and we bring two top sheets and two lightweight fleece blankets to go over us. This is a lightweight set-up and allows us to add or subtract layers to suit the conditions. Also, it eliminates the bother of a sleeping bag. I flip and flop several times a night, and find a sleeping bag confining. |
#24
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OSH Sleeping
If you have a good quality tent, you will be neither too hot at night, nor
wet when it rains. Add a good quality air bed (the kind that put you up on 10" of air), and I will put the quality of sleep at Oshkosh up against any night's sleep you've ever had. I disagree with that. The best pads are about 1" deep. The higher you sit and the more air in the pad the more heat transfer you're going to lose. I would recommend spending the $120 at REI on a good terma-rest pad. I've camped sub-zero many times without problems. The tent isn't going to keep you warn because its too much mass. Keeping warm is 75% about the pad and 25% about the bag. Trust me -- the last thing you care about at OSH are "heat transfer" problems. The 10" air bed is the single most important improvement in OSH camping we've experienced. In 25 years, I've been "cold" at OSH precisely once -- and that was during the day. I actually bought a sweatshirt that year. Most years, if it gets below 70 at night, count your blessings. The cool night air feels good on the fresh sunburn... ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 Ercoupe N94856 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#25
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OSH Sleeping
On Jul 14, 9:10*pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote:
Most years, if it gets below 70 at night, count your blessings. *The cool night air feels good on the fresh sunburn... I'm more familar with camping in the Sierras where the days are 90F and the nights are 20F. However, I do remember trying to sleep in the dorm dripping wet (I got lucky with the dorm without A/C). I'm sure the guys from the SE feel right at home but for those of us from the SW this is not fun. Drying off after a shower was fruitless. Everyone ran over to the Walmart and bought fans. Litterally hundreds of fans were sold. We all left them in the dorm (since its not worth taking a $20 Walmart fan home). I always wondered what they do with them all. -Robert |
#26
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OSH Sleeping
Robert...
Quite frankly we don't give a hairy rat's ass about your experience about camping in the Sierra. (Sierra IS singular, by the way, look it up). After 35 years of Oshkosh, camping, dorming, and sleeping in the airplane, in all that time I've been cold ONCE for ONE night. Lessee now, that's 35 times seven inverse ... less than one half of one percent. PLEASE take your camping experience in the Sierra and stuff it. Listen to those who have been there for a few dozen years. And I trump your assistant scoutmaster as a merit badge consultant for 30+ years through the Sacramento Council down by Sac State. Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ... On Jul 14, 9:10 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote: Most years, if it gets below 70 at night, count your blessings. The cool night air feels good on the fresh sunburn... I'm more familar with camping in the Sierras |
#27
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OSH Sleeping
"Robert M. Gary" wrote I'm more familar with camping in the Sierras where the days are 90F and the nights are 20F. However, I do remember trying to sleep in the dorm dripping wet (I got lucky with the dorm without A/C). I'm sure the guys from the SE feel right at home but for those of us from the SW this is not fun. Drying off after a shower was fruitless. Everyone ran over to the Walmart and bought fans. Litterally hundreds of fans were sold. We all left them in the dorm (since its not worth taking a $20 Walmart fan home). I always wondered what they do with them all. ******************** New post begins he Not any 20F nights at OSH, unless you want to wait a few months! g Jay was right. Sleeping cool on top of an air mattress is what the doctor ordered. As far as drying off after a shower being useless, that is why my favorite time to get a shower at OSH is 11PM or later. The shower room is about empty, and the water really refreshes. It is great to wash the stink off and crawl into a nice cool bed! A well ventilated tent has to be cooler than a hot dorm room, any day! -- Jim in NC |
#28
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OSH Sleeping
On Jul 14, 10:01*pm, "RST Engineering"
wrote: Robert... \ PLEASE take your camping experience in the Sierra and stuff it. *Listen to those who have been there for a few dozen years. Please quote somewhere where I said it got cold at OSH. I never disagreed with that. Frankly I'm not sure where this pure rage is coming from with you. Makes me think you're either reading another post or just lost your dog. And I trump your assistant scoutmaster as a merit badge consultant for 30+ years through the Sacramento Council down by Sac State. Hehehe, no a merit badge counselor does not trump an ASM. How many training courses did you go to? How many over night classes have you gone to? Have you even been to the 2 week wood badge training? Its like saying being a parking attendant for 30 years trumps a police chief. -Robert |
#29
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OSH Sleeping
Robert M. Gary wrote:
On Jul 14, 10:01 pm, "RST Engineering" wrote: Robert... \ PLEASE take your camping experience in the Sierra and stuff it. Listen to those who have been there for a few dozen years. Please quote somewhere where I said it got cold at OSH. I never disagreed with that. Frankly I'm not sure where this pure rage is coming from with you. Makes me think you're either reading another post or just lost your dog. And I trump your assistant scoutmaster as a merit badge consultant for 30+ years through the Sacramento Council down by Sac State. Hehehe, no a merit badge counselor does not trump an ASM. How many training courses did you go to? How many over night classes have you gone to? Have you even been to the 2 week wood badge training? Its like saying being a parking attendant for 30 years trumps a police chief. -Robert Now, now, boys. Let's be civil here. Would real Boy Scouts act like this? It is usually the grown-up that make the trouble.... -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI |
#30
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OSH Sleeping
On Jul 15, 9:24*am, Ross wrote:
Now, now, boys. Let's be civil here. Would real Boy Scouts act like this? It is usually the grown-up that make the trouble.... hehehe; good point. |
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