SFR Camping in the rain

For our honeymoon the wife and I decided on a 2 week late september camping road trip. First night in yakima, worked down to crescent city and then back up 101, last night in forks. Wife is from walla walla, myself from Bellingham. I was raised on weeklong rain fests in august, she was not.

We had our first marital spat over the 4 wall waterproof canopy I insisted on packing. It weighed about 70lbs and took up so much room we had to strap much of our gear to the roof of my xterra, Clampett style.

The weather was stunning. It was the tail end of the awful drought of 2015, and every time we made camp without using the canopy my lovely new bride was becoming increasingly aggressive with her feelings about it.

Our second to last stop was Cape disappointment on sept 30. Not a fucking cloud and I'll be honest, I was starting to feel the heat. Second guessing my westsider camping upbringing. I wondered had I actually once woken up to find my air mattress had become a boat? That accessing the tent door required paddles? I felt like being over prepared for rain when camping was the heart and soul of camping, but maybe I had been doing it wrong.

Last stop is forks. As we approach the sky begins to darken and I get giddy with the anticipation of my moment. After an hour or 2 in town getting food and whatnot, the skies have burst and the rain is coming down at about half an inch per hour.

We arrive to a nearly empty campground and start looking for a dry spot. After realizing the foolishness of that endeavour, we settled for finding one without actively running water. We find one, I analyze it for tree cover and a patch level enough for the canopy. Up goes the canopy with 2 walls. Big blue tarp off the roof over one of the open walls down to the ground, set the tent up under that. Arrange the canopy so it half covered the firepit, allowing for fire to burn and us to sit near it while dry.

We made it all 3 days and took almost 5" of rain during those days. As soon as you stepped out of the canopy you were in a cold shower, but we actually got the ground to dry out underneath it.

To this day i use it as my argument trump card. Not that it works mind you, but I still use it!
 
For our honeymoon the wife and I decided on a 2 week late september camping road trip. First night in yakima, worked down to crescent city and then back up 101, last night in forks. Wife is from walla walla, myself from Bellingham. I was raised on weeklong rain fests in august, she was not.

We had our first marital spat over the 4 wall waterproof canopy I insisted on packing. It weighed about 70lbs and took up so much room we had to strap much of our gear to the roof of my xterra, Clampett style.

The weather was stunning. It was the tail end of the awful drought of 2015, and every time we made camp without using the canopy my lovely new bride was becoming increasingly aggressive with her feelings about it.

Our second to last stop was Cape disappointment on sept 30. Not a fucking cloud and I'll be honest, I was starting to feel the heat. Second guessing my westsider camping upbringing. I wondered had I actually once woken up to find my air mattress had become a boat? That accessing the tent door required paddles? I felt like being over prepared for rain when camping was the heart and soul of camping, but maybe I had been doing it wrong.

Last stop is forks. As we approach the sky begins to darken and I get giddy with the anticipation of my moment. After an hour or 2 in town getting food and whatnot, the skies have burst and the rain is coming down at about half an inch per hour.

We arrive to a nearly empty campground and start looking for a dry spot. After realizing the foolishness of that endeavour, we settled for finding one without actively running water. We find one, I analyze it for tree cover and a patch level enough for the canopy. Up goes the canopy with 2 walls. Big blue tarp off the roof over one of the open walls down to the ground, set the tent up under that. Arrange the canopy so it half covered the firepit, allowing for fire to burn and us to sit near it while dry.

We made it all 3 days and took almost 5" of rain during those days. As soon as you stepped out of the canopy you were in a cold shower, but we actually got the ground to dry out underneath it.

To this day i use it as my argument trump card. Not that it works mind you, but I still use it!
Nice story . How does it feel to be right? I know it is a rarity, however your documentation will live in infamy… in your own noggin’ so don’t ever pull it out for leverage.
 
New to the blue tarp scene. Are they all 4 season and is it one per person?
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I went for a weekend 3 nights on the Yak at Big Pines . Decided i wouldd sleep on a air mattress in my Toyota pu . This was the second poor white trash camping i have done. I call it that because the second time i put a very large blue tarp over the canopy. I tied cords 3 to a side through the grommets and lassoed some rocks . Always a bit windy and or cold and or rainy. The first time at burning pram sans tent i did not use the tarp to keep heat in . It was an aluminum uninsulated canopy. It was about 20 degrees that night and windy. Summer weight sleeping bag. It mucho sucked . Second time the following year the third week of October (tradition)on the Yak i used the tarp. I was warm all night. Wind did not blow in and it got a bit meteorological inside by morning. My body heat and exhaling creating rain inside from condensation on the canopy and dripped on me half the night. I really was looking forward to the sunrise the next morning. That defined some of the misery quotient i have experienced with on the fly camping, and blue tarps.
 
I'm not kidding when I said it feels like a rain forest around here. I can't remember last time I saw numbers like this.

mt_swepctnormal_update.png
 
I'm not kidding when I said it feels like a rain forest around here. I can't remember last time I saw numbers like this.

mt_swepctnormal_update.png
We should come up with a name for it. Not unlike the nomenclature of naming hurricanes and storms. Hey what about something broad and all encompassing like climate change. I am a gardener i saw it coming at least in the microcosm that envelops my world.
 
We should come up with a name for it. Not unlike the nomenclature of naming hurricanes and storms. Hey what about something broad and all encompassing like climate change. I am a gardener i saw it coming at least in the microcosm that envelops my world.

Cool story bro.
 
Buy one of these.. forget the blue tarps and trying how to figure out to string it up. I've had one for years and love it. It covers the picnic table and in a pinch you could even put your tent under it. One of the best pieces of gear I own! Used it 3 weeks ago up on the Skagit..
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Buy one and you have no more sad or funny stories to tell
Oh the stories still continue.. they're just dry ones.. not alcohol dry, but you stay dry. This and my Jet Boil and I'm dry and warm when I get up in the morning... and my last trip, I used my webber grill, last of the charcoal to start a fire and stay warm! I love it when a plan comes together!20220515_070601.jpg20220515_074228.jpg
 
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Oh the stories still continue.. they're just dry ones.. not alcohol dry, but you stay dry. This and my Jet Boil and I'm dry and warm when I get up in the morning... and my last trip, I used my webber grill, last of the charcoal to start a fire and stay warm! I love it when a plan comes together!View attachment 17072View attachment 17073

What Kelty tarp is that? Looks pretty good. I mean it doesn't have the classic blue tarp style but it looks like it does the job really well.
 
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