More backyard gear testing: The Marmot Limelight tent

More backyard gear testing: The Marmot Limelight tent

Our palatial new Marmot Limelight tent set up in our backyard in the Allandale neighborhood of Austin. Pam LeBlanc photo

Last year, during a January trip to Big Bend Ranch State Park, my husband and I set up our tent at a group camp site, about 20 yards from our truck, just as a massive cold front blew in.

I hunkered under a blanket as Chris grilled steaks, and we retreated to the truck to eat dinner. Then, as temperatures dropped into the 30s and a stiff wind buffeted our 10-year-old tent, we made a run for it. We flopped onto the huge inflatable mattress we’d tucked inside our tent, and attempted to sleep.

The aging Mountain Hardwear Lightpath 3 didn’t hold up, though. The seals along the zipper delaminated, and the wind howled through the now-gaping side flaps of the tent. Then, our inflatable mattress slowly caved in as the hours ticked on. Sometime around 1 a.m., I awoke, flat on the ground, shivering, the mattress deflated.

I expect to suffer a tad when I’m backpacking. I sacrifice luxury for weight, and besides, I’m so tired when I crawl in my tent that I don’t notice I’m sleeping on sharp rocks.

Look how much room in here! And since this is “car camping,” we pulled out the heavy and non-technical sleeping stuff. Chris LeBlanc photo

But when I car camp, I want a modicum of wilderness luxury. I like a bigger tent and a thicker sleeping pad. And I don’t want to wind up flat on the ground.

That old tent had taken us on some wonderful trips, but it was time for a replacement. Last night we tested our new car-camping setup in the backyard, in Round 2 of my shelter-in-place gear-testing adventure.

This time we popped up a new three-person Marmot Limelight tent (https://www.marmot.com/limelight-3-person-tent-27940.html) and puffed up a thick queen-sized air mattress (the pump that came with it sucked; we had to call in reinforcements) that we ordered separately from Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00CWZE642/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1).

The tent? Amazing. Cavernous. Completely screened in on top, so if you remove the fly you can sleep while stargazing. Zippered entryways on two sides, roll-back flaps, pockets for stowing stuff like glasses and books, and a lovely russet color.

The tent was pretty basic to set up, but not as easy as our tiny backpacking tent (a Big Agnes Copper Spur). It’s big, and that made it a little tougher to wrangle.

One thing I noticed? More road noise last night. When I camped two weeks ago, I hardly heard a passing car on Loop 1 Mopac. More people are venturing out late at night, during the shelter-in-place order, apparently.

The best part of last night’s experience? Waking up this morning, rolling over to grab a few more minutes of snooze time, then staggering into the house, where Chris had already prepared a plate of bacon, fried eggs and grits, the perfect camper’s breakfast, for me.

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam

I sheltered in place last night (and tested some gear) with a backyard campout

I sheltered in place last night (and tested some gear) with a backyard campout

This new Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL sleeps two and weighs just 2 pounds and 12 ounces. Chris LeBlanc photo

I can’t get to the backcountry right now, so I pitched a tent in my Allandale backyard in Central Austin last night instead.

I didn’t do it just because I’d rather sleep in a tent than on high thread-count sheets in a fancy hotel, although that’s true. It gave me a chance to shake out some new gear before my next backpacking adventure, optimistically planned for May.

The two-person Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL tent I put up replaces an older version of the same tent that I slept in during my 15-day backpacking trip on the John Muir Trail two years ago. The new version is taller inside, and has a slightly different door zipper system. But it retains the features I like most about it – ultra light (less than 3 pounds); two doors, one on each side (so no one has to crawl over the other to get out); and lots of mesh paneling, so if the rain fly’s not on I can stargaze while tucked in my sleeping bag.

Oh, and it’s orange and cream-colored, just like the fat cat named Bob who lives down the street. Groovy.

This new Sea to Summit sleeping pad is 4-inches thick. Pam LeBlanc photo

My husband, after making hoot-hooty noises from the house when I left to curl up in my sleeping bag with a stack of books, eventually broke down and came out to the tent too (who could resist?), bringing with him his new Sea to Summit sleeping pad, which is thicker and cushier than the 3-inch NEMO pad I use. Now I want one, too.

Reading material fit for a backyard campout during a shelter-in-place order. Pam LeBlanc photo

A backyard campout during shelter-in-place orders seemed like an appropriate time to daydream about where I’d like to travel next, so I perused three new ones – “Atlas of National Parks” by Jon Waterman, “100 Hikes of a Lifetime,” by Kate Siber, and “Complete National Parks of Europe,” by Justin Kavanagh.

I didn’t fire up the campstove this time (I’m still working my way through a vat of lentil soup I brewed up on Sunday), but I did check my supply of dehydrated camping meals. I’m down to a dangerously low stock of one pouch of Cajun Ranch Chicken Salad, which you just mix with cold water and load into tortillas or bread. It’s from Austin-based Packit Gourmet (www.packitgourmet.com), which makes my favorite camping meals. Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings, Texas State Fair Chili, West Memphis Grits and Santa Fe Corn Pudding top my list of options.

Austin-based Packet Gourmet makes the BEST dehydrated meals. Pam LeBlanc photo

And since I was rooting around in the gear box, I pulled out a stack of retro, chicken-shaped paper plate holders, because, well, they were there and they made me smile, and you’ve got to take a smile where you can get it these days.

These plate and cup holders date back to the 1960s or 70s. Pam LeBlanc photo

I slung up a hammock, too – a purple one made by Austin-based company Kammok. I spent a few nights sleeping in a Kammok in West Texas for a story I wrote for the Austin American-Statesman a few years ago. (Read it at https://www.statesman.com/news/20170404/the-latest-outdoor-trend-hammock-camping.) 

Are you dreaming about camping too? Texas Parks and Wildlife’s Texas Outdoor Family program is planning a “camp-in” from 1-8 p.m. Saturday, May 2. They’ll live-stream a park ranger who will answer all your camping questions in real time.

Texas Outdoor Family offers a whole calendar of live virtual programs this month, on topics from fire building to fishing to Dutch oven cooking and stargazing. For more information, go to the Texas Outdoor Family Texas Parks and Wildlife page on Facebook.

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

Click to open a larger map

Follow Pam