Ozark Trail North Fork 12×10-Foot Tent w Stove Jack for $249

Despite losing some headroom in comparison with the cabin-style Copper Canyon LX 6, which measures 7 feet tall, the Base Camp 6 offers a substantial 6 feet 2 inches of interior height. Both Base Camp tents have two doors and lots of mesh in the main tent body. (The mesh on most of the family tents we tested started much closer to the ground.) This design is a big plus for people ozark trail wall tent who regularly camp in crowded campgrounds and don’t like to get naked in front of strangers. And you can unzip the front door, remove it, and neatly stash it into one of the tent’s internal pockets—a useful feature if you’re feeling sociable. The Ozark Trail North Fork 12′ x 10′ Outdoor Wall Tent is designed for camping all year round in almost any environment on the planet.

After we pitched the tent, the Mineral King 3’s adaptable fly let us arrange an open mesh half-dome for easy viewing of the stars. When the rain finally arrived, we had only to reach out of the tent for a few moments to unfurl the waterproof material and secure it for a dry night’s sleep. In the morning, we opened the doors and unzipped the fly, rolling back one of two vestibule panels. It was still raining, but from inside the tent we could watch the sky lighten and make coffee outside the door under the remaining covered half of the vestibule, where our shoes and sundries had remained dry overnight. The Ozark Trail Yurt gets high marks for its overall interior space with 169 square feet of floor room and ceilings over 7 feet tall at their peak.

ozark trail wall tent

We talked through the Copper Canyon’s specs with Ryan Flynn, sales manager for Johnson Outdoors, Eureka’s parent company. Flynn told us that the advantage of the lighter aluminum poles found in the company’s Jade Canyon tent is purely about weight. The Copper Canyon’s rugged fiberglass-and-steel poles are preferable for what he called “free-country” camping (car camping on Bureau of Land Management land, for instance) and for anyplace else where weight wouldn’t be an issue. Our only quibble with the Mineral King 3 is that it comes with a mere six stakes. That’s just enough to secure the tent and fly but not to fully secure the tent with extra lines in very windy conditions. You can find a plethora of options out there, but these inexpensive stakes are comparable to the ones that accompany the Mineral King 3.

Yes, it can feel more humid, but if you can get some kind of a breeze blowing through, you can regulate the temperature without any AC. Don’t think it won’t be hot, though; all tents get hot in the sun, but the cotton canvas is just better than synthetic materials, in our opinion. On a recent trip, we tested a friend’s 16 x 20 ft Alpha wall tent, and it slept eight people with a stove, loads of gear, and two dogs. The tent will easily sleep 14 or more people on camping cots without a stove and maybe around 12 people with a stove.

You can get this same tent in 6 different sizes to suit your needs. That mesh also keeps the tent feeling more airy and cool in hot climates. The biggest differences between the two tents are their fly and vestibule designs. For the first incarnations of this guide, we tested the smaller tents and the larger, family-size tents in two separate groups. To evaluate the small tents in real-world situations, we took them first to Greggs Hideout, on the Arizona side of Lake Mead. During our tests in this area, temperatures reached upwards of 110 degrees Fahrenheit, and at night, as the sands cooled, whipping windstorms kicked up around us.

Or these slightly more expensive stakes will serve you well in any car-camping terrain. But it’s one of the least expensive tents we found that will truly cover all the bases for three-season car-camping in most conditions you’re likely to encounter. Less expensive options exist but have a number of drawbacks. The Mineral King 3 also comes with its own footprint, a groundsheet that protects the tent from abrasion, which many outfitters sell separately—and which we recommend that you have. One night during testing, for example, clouds loomed in the distance with clear skies overhead.

There is a large space between it and the top of the tent that might be a trap for strong wind so the fly gets ripped off. I think I will go shopping this week for another tent that I feel better about. Otherwise I like the tent but do not trust it to hold up in severe conditions.

Rather than continuing to wait for the company to come up with a soulution and stop questioning me on proper use or abusive weather conditions! I decided that for the $40 I spent on it, (knowing that you get what you pay for) I would sew the gap and seal it really well and get a thicker gage replacement pole for the fly. I’m going to Coleman for now on because you are incapable of making a zipper that doesn’t break so damn easy on the door. Wall tents offer much more headroom than a dome tent because the vertical side walls mean you can get much taller structures. In addition, the center line, where the pitched roof is at its highest provides more than enough movement to stand up and walk around. It blocks out the sunlight so you can sleep in, keeps cool in the heat, stays warmer inside the tent in winter, and is waterproof and wind resistant.

I really liked the way it looked and the space but will not be able to use it due to the leaks. When something says “waterproof” it does not mean it will not leak. It is simply a way to keep you from ozark trail tents direct weather contact. And as with any experienced camper, we all know that tents are not waterproof, even if it says money back guaruntee. That’s why you buy a tarp to put over and a tarp for under.