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campsite in desert
Camping on the banks of the Salmon River, Idaho (Photo: Nyima Ming)

Must-Know Camping Tips from a Lifelong Camper

Remember the mustard, learn how to save your batteries, and the best trick for a cold sleeping bag

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(Photo: Nyima Ming)

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Over the years, as a kid and then a climber, I’ve camped a lot, starting in a moldy canvas army pup tent with my friends in the backyard, age 9. Or in tents with classmates on trips to Assateague or Catoctin, in Maryland, where it always seemed to rain and our tents always leaked. Or in my own tent at Miguel鈥檚 Campground, Red River Gorge, in Kentucky, where it poured day after day and, as if in a horror movie, salamanders began coming out of holes in the muddy ground by my door. In Patagonia, where you could hear the wild wind coming, and I decided I might never need to camp in the cold and wet again. In Red Rocks, Nevada; El Potrero Chico, Mexico; Shelf Road, Colorado; and Penticton, B.C, and Banff, Alberta, with my climbing friend Susan Price, our little tents side by side each trip. Safety, companionship, and a bit of our own space.

Long ago, in the climbers鈥 Camp 4, in Yosemite Valley, I had a voluminous red family-style tent, joined in it by my friends Rin Harris and B.A. Doyle. One day we came into camp to find the tent down. What? Foul play?

鈥淲hat happened?鈥 I exclaimed.

鈥淥h,鈥 said the nearby laconic Brits, 鈥渢here must have been a good stiff gust of wind of about five miles an hour.鈥

It wasn鈥檛 the most technical tent.

group at campsite enjoying meal
Camp camaraderie on a trip on the Salmon River, Idaho (Photo: Nyima Ming)

Moreover, we鈥檇 set it with the entrance pointing toward the valley walls, unknowingly in a drainage. When it rained, the tent filled up. It wasn鈥檛 very good at repelling water, but certainly held it. Our sleeping pads were floating. A box of tampons blew up. My paperback copy of Shogun, 1,200 pages, swelled into a thick round paper fan. We returned one afternoon to find a laughing crew of Japanese climbers taking pictures of the tent, opening it to the flooded interior, immortalizing our terrible campcraft.

These days my preferred method of camping is in a six-person standup tent鈥攜ou can never go too big鈥 with a pillow and cot, and a vehicle nearby.

Besides not to point your tent into runoff, here’s what I’ve learned.

Need-to-Know Camping Tips

camping in the mountains
Campsites with a view, like this one in Lugano, Ticino, Switzerland, make all the effort worth it.聽(Photo: Milo Zanecchia/ Ascent Xmedia/Getty)

1. Remember mustard. It just seems to be what people forget.

2. It’s also really easy to forget the pot holder for camp cooking in the backcountry, although after burning your fingers you鈥檒l remember.

3. Spring for that extra few degrees of warmth in a sleeping bag. In Patagonia, last November, though my friend Erin VanSickle had brought a sleeping bag rated to 35 degrees, and the nights didn鈥檛 get below the upper 30s, she is slim and was cold, sometimes too cold to sleep.聽She had to put on all her clothes at night, including her sturdy, stiff, crinkling rain jacket. How comfortable does that sound?

woman by alpine lake in patagonia
Erin VanSickle tried to choose carefully, but says she should have brought a warmer sleeping bag to Patagonia. Shown here in Cerro Castillo National Park. (Photo: Alison Osius)

4. Also in cold weather, bring your headlamp, phone, and external charger (the latter two in a Ziploc bag) into your sleeping bag. Cold drains batteries. In Patagonia, my headlamp was dead after one night, and I had to borrow someone鈥檚 spare to read in the evenings. After I recharged the headlamp days later, and then put it in the sleeping bag each night, it was fine for the rest of the trip.

5. Paperback books can be ripped into chunks to share if several of you are tent-bound鈥攐r, as friends and I once were in Chamonix, cave-bound鈥攊n weather for days.

6. Bring a 鈥渂aby Nalgene鈥 or other half-sized bottle, and at night fill it with hot water to put in the toe of your sleeping bag. (A liter bottle will work, but takes more water and fuel.) You can thank my guide friend Jaime Hanson for this one.

7. If you have an infant or toddler along, bring a few wipes in a baggie into your sleeping bag. (I appreciate that it鈥檚 getting pretty crowded in there.) When my husband and I took our then five-month-old to Canyonlands in Utah, the diaper wipes left outside froze brick-solid, which didn鈥檛 go over, at all.

smiling man backpacking
The joy of the hills. Fred Campbell backpacking up Mount Shuksan in Washington State. (Photo: Irene Yee)

8. Pack a spice kit! Ed Viesturs, Himalayan mountaineer, once told me he eats a spicy dinner before a cold night in his tent 鈥渢o get the engine going鈥濃攇iving his body a start on keeping warm. He simply brought spicy dehydrated meals.

9. Bring a small camp towel (extra easy to forget) and a cord for a laundry line.

10. Take earplugs鈥攎y friend Jaime gave me a pair connected by a string, a brilliant touch. People nearby snore or worse. Dogs bark, roosters crow. The high schoolers in another site keep partying even after you yell to shut up. (It did help to stomp over and tell them to shut the f鈥 up.)

11. You will eat more than you think. It鈥檚 OK and part of taking care of yourself in cold temps. It鈥檚 great. Bring extra food. Lots!

dog watching bacon cooking at campsite
Let’s remember food for your best friend, too. (Photo: Nyima Ming)

12. You will awaken to birdsong, and it will be heavenly. How about a bird book or app? When I was growing up and our parents took us sailing and snorkeling in southern seas, my father used to bring fish books and at dinner have each child name a new kind we’d seen that day. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 know its name,鈥 he’d say, 鈥測ou don鈥檛 know the fish.鈥

13. 鈥淲ear sunscreen. If I could offer you only one tip for the future, sunscreen would be it.鈥濃擝az Luhrmann music video, from a Chicago Tribune column by Mary Schmich. Enough said.

14. Hats. A wool beanie is your best friend for sleeping in the cold, and ball caps or other hats fend off sun (see no. 13) and sometimes other things. Once when I was bivvied on a flat boulder in Rocky Mountain National Park, a mouse kept running in and chewing on my hair, waking me up. I groped around and pulled a pair of tights onto my head. I will never forget my now spouse’s face at daylight when I sat up, the tights legs trailing down from my head like a jester’s cap.

15. Everyone, every age, loves s鈥檓ores.

Alison Osius, a lifelong climber and hiker and a travel editor at 国产吃瓜黑料, has camped across North America; in pouring rain in the Scottish Highlands and less rain in England and Wales; in sun-drenched but also drenched France; and in the cold and wind in Patagonia. Only once has she willingly camped in snow.

smiling woman in mountains
The author on a backpacking trip to Patagonia last November (Photo: Erin VanSickle)

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