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Gear Guy

What Backpacking Tent Should I Buy?

I'm in the market for a small, light backpacking tent that won't break the bank.

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One of the great things about backpacking these days is how light gear has become. Overall, I imagine the load before fuel/water/food for a trip of four or five days is about half what it was 20 years ago.

Tents are a great case in point. It wasn鈥檛 that long ago that the sweet spot for a two-person backpacking tent was six or seven pounds. Now under five is what I regard as minimally acceptable. Mind you, we鈥檙e talking about summer-weight tents here鈥攐ne area where tent makers cut weight is through using more mesh and less ripstop fabric. But you still get excellent weather protection through full-coverage flies, and adequate room for two. Or one, if you prefer to go solo and camp really light.

These following three tents are my favorites.

The Best Backpacking Tents: REI Quarterdome T2

I鈥檝e been using REI鈥檚 for two years now, and think it鈥檚 a great tent. It offers a little more cool-weather protection than the Carbon Reflex due to more ripstop nylon in the canopy, and it鈥檚 three-pole design is super-stable. But it still offers plenty of mesh for breathability, plus a fly that extends right down to ground level. I also like the T2鈥檚 big twin doors, and its real sense of roominess.

The T2 arrives packed at 4 pounds, 8 ounces. But that can be trimmed to just under four for the trail, which is impressive. And at $299, it鈥檚 an excellent buy.

The Best Backpacking Tents: MSR Carbon Reflex 2

Carbon makes bicycles light and sturdy鈥攁nd it can do the same for tents. MSR鈥檚 uses carbon poles for a weight savings of about 30 percent versus traditional poles. Carbon is strong and flexible as well鈥攊deal pole material.

Overall, the Reflex utilizes a popular design employing an end-to-end pole that acts as the 鈥渟pine鈥 of the tent, with a short transverse pole that holds up the sides of the fly and canopy. The canopy is mostly mesh, but a fly extends all the way to the ground for good rain protection. And the design allows for two doors and two vestibules, so each occupant has space for her boots or other gear left outside. And getting in and out is easy.

Weight is a mere 3 pounds, 9 ounces as packed鈥攜ou can trim that a little when packing. That鈥檚 pretty remarkable. But it’s $499, so you have to really want to save that extra pound, because you鈥檙e paying about $200 to be rid of it. Still, this is a great investment for weight-conscious late-spring-to-early-fall backpackers.

The Best Backpacking Tents: Marmot EOS 1P

I like to backpack with friends. But I鈥檓 also perfectly happy to take my Thoreau side out for a hike.

For those occasions, I like a small solo tent such as Marmot鈥檚 ($229). A solo tent saves weight, and also takes up less room in a small pack. The EOS comes in at just under three pounds鈥攂arely enough to register as an item in your pack. It has lots of mesh in the canopy, with a sturdy fly that seals the tent tightly in the event of a storm. There鈥檚 plenty of room for a solo hiker, and it鈥檚 tall enough (36 inches at the peak) for getting dressed or sitting up and reading.

Marmot always does a good job with the little things, such as plenty of inside pockets, zipper pulls that don鈥檛 rattle in the wind, and reflective tabs that make the tent more visible in the dark.

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