Below zero in a tent

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Been a while since i did that, but last night it dropped to -6 here where i have my camp. I was plenty warm. Barrel stove went through some wood,but the 14x16 portion of camp was fine in sweats and comfy in my bag and cot. The 12x14 cook tent portion warmed up by when i opened up the connecting doors and fired up the cook stove. Waiting on my espresso to finish. Wife will get here this afternoon and we will piddle around for the week hunting. Little girls got a their deer 2 weeks ago during thhe kids only portion of the season.
 
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Sounds like a great time....

Doesn't usually get into the - numbers here in southern NH till January...a few of those is enough for me...

As a friend who lived in Montana once said to me, "Nothing is more depressing than -10 at noon on a cloudy day"....he now lives in Florida...

Bob
 
You and your “bride” are tougher than us. We’ve done some cold weather tent camping, but are getting soft in our old age. We now rough it in a camper. The most difficult challenge, is getting out of bed to start the coffee. We’re unapologetically spoiled, but feel like we’ve earned it! Photo is us roughing it! ;) memtb

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Thanks for the pics Steelslaver. The tents are good sized. I could see hanging out a week or so in that.
My problem would be getting it all set up. I’d be too tired to hunt afterwards.
 
Of course a Marine would have a camp that needs Seabees to construct. ;)

Perfect observation bigwheelzip and I think jcMack has a great suggestion. Last time I did that cold weather tent stuff was 8 years ago here and many years ago in Alaska. But I had a cook there..and she could do about anything in a camp kitchen. She even made donuts and great cowboy coffee.
 
I did some winter camping in Yellowstone. My partner and I were hiking when we noticed a huge black cloud rolling over the mountain heading right at us. We could see the wind and snow coming heavy.

My partner rushed to get a tent up and us inside within minutes. There was 6" of snow almost immediately and the wind was howling. He had the water on the stove heating and then turned to me and said, "You are going hypothermic". We have about two minutes to get you warmed up.
I was confused, my breathing was slowed, my balance was gone, and I was sleepy. Thank god for a good partner who was an ice climber and used to such conditions. The warm water inside me turned the emergency into a manageable event. We crawled out the next morning with 4 feet of fresh snow covering everything. The hot pots of Yellowstone were wonderful to cure any and all aches and pains; not to mention raising your core body temp.

My partner also taught me the trick of filling a thermos with boiling water and placing it in my sleeping bag. It slowing released the heat during the night and made that bag perfectly toasty.

Some tricks you have to learn the first time or you die. Winter camping is like that.

Prescut
 
We hunted several years after elk, antelope and deer outside of Thermopolis. Blizzard snowed us in the last year. My buddy (The outfitter) hadn't rented enough tents, so he moved four of us into an abandoned ranch house. We sealed it up, chased the barn owls out of two rooms, got the propane stoves and lanterns going and it got real toasty. Wife was camp cook for a week, so she was in the cook tent all day (with a 12 gauge=it was grizzly country!). We were sitting in
t-shirts! The guys in the tents were freezing! One of the guys tried to knock the snow off the tent from the inside=everywhere he touched leaked. After the storm came 3 days of thaw. We chained up the 4WDs and helped tug each other up the hill. Gnarly, slushy road out with rain ditches on each side. I got a nice 24" muley (4x4 by Western Count). Rancher buddy got a nice 22" 3x3 as he was exiting the ranch (right at the gate!). One "nerd" shot got a nice F-150 when he put a 7mm Mag through his bell housing! Another crashed his ATV through his camper (wasn't tied down). Ate on that muley through grad school, along with an 6x7 elk!

My rancher buddy and I (with our wives) had a GREAT hunt! Others not so much!
 
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