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  1. #1
    Registered User Feral Nature's Avatar
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    Default How to put up tent in snow?

    How does a person put their tent up in the snow? Do you dig down a ways, put it on top of the snow. Use stakes? I have no idea.

    Also, is there a certain depth or type of snow that it is not advisable to hike in? Thanks, I am just trying to think this through before I get to Springer Mountain (March 2012).
    Formerly known as Texas Phlox.

  2. #2
    Registered User Ktaadn's Avatar
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    I haven't pitched a tent in much more than 6 inches of snow but I used a technique similar to the one in the link below. Basically, my hiking partner and I shuffled around the tent site to pack down the snow before setting up. We were still able to use standard tent stakes since it wasn't that deep and we also made a small pile of branches behind the tent as a wind break. We were camping near Mt Rogers in VA and it was really windy that night. Just check the trees above you before setting up camp. The weight of the snow and wind can really knock down a lot of weak/dead branches. I got a small puncture in my fly the next morning.

    http://www.backpacker.com/skills-pit...slideshows/155

  3. #3
    Registered User Feral Nature's Avatar
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    Thanks for the link. Does the snow provide insulation under the tent or is it just cold. Oh, and I like the windbreak idea.
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    It's cold. You need extra insulation underneath you.
    "It's fun to have fun, but you have to know how." ---Dr. Seuss

  5. #5
    Registered User Feral Nature's Avatar
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    Yes, I will bring plenty of sleeping gear, but had alwas heard snow insulates. Obviously, I have no first hand experience!
    Formerly known as Texas Phlox.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Texas Phlox View Post
    Thanks for the link. Does the snow provide insulation under the tent or is it just cold. Oh, and I like the windbreak idea.
    The snow is cold. The real surprise is that it is hard. You absolutely need a mattress or pad for insulation (or both if it's below 0F). If the snow is deep, pack it down with your skis or snowshoes -- if it's really deep you're going nowhere without them. If it's 6" just set up the tent.

    You can dig it a hole to put the tent in if the snow is deep or build a snow wall to protect yourself from the wind, but that's more important on Denali or Everest than Springer.

  7. #7
    Registered User Feral Nature's Avatar
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    Ok, I'm learning stuff here
    Formerly known as Texas Phlox.

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    Registered User ChinMusic's Avatar
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    For depths of snow you would be hiking in, just set up your tent as if the snow wasn't there. With any deeper snow you will prob be pulling off the trail til it breaks.
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    Snow insulates about as well as wood chips (R-value ~1, but highly variable). Calling something an insulator alludes to its ability to resist heat transfer, but this does not necessarily tell you about total heat transfer – especially when there’s a phase change involved. The snow you lay down on at the beginning of the night is roughly the same temperature as the air – just like a sleeping pad would be. Your body will warm the snow, in the same way your body will warm a sleeping pad. The trouble with snow is that the temperature wont rise above 32oF (the top of a sleeping pad almost certainly will) and an R-value of ~ 1 means your body heat is still going to travel through the snow faster than most think is acceptable (I combine pads in the winter to get an R-value of about 4.5).

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    I did some test nights last winter to get a feel for how well my sleeping setup worked in the cold. What I found was that a closed cell blue foam pad (~10 bucks at Wally World) on top of my regular pad really helped me stay warm. I was comfortable down to the low 30's with my 40* quilt and light clothing. Your best buddy on a cold night will be a hat, neck gaiter, buff, balaclava, or some such.

    With fall coming (eventually) you'll be able to test your gear. There's nothing like real experience.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ktaadn View Post
    I haven't pitched a tent in much more than 6 inches of snow but I used a technique similar to the one in the link below. Basically, my hiking partner and I shuffled around the tent site to pack down the snow before setting up. We were still able to use standard tent stakes since it wasn't that deep and we also made a small pile of branches behind the tent as a wind break. We were camping near Mt Rogers in VA and it was really windy that night. Just check the trees above you before setting up camp. The weight of the snow and wind can really knock down a lot of weak/dead branches. I got a small puncture in my fly the next morning.

    http://www.backpacker.com/skills-pit...slideshows/155
    Yep, "stomp" down the snow - not only where the tent will be pitched, but also anywhere in the campsite area where you will be walking - in deep snow especially, this will compact the snow enough to keep you from sinking in with every step. (In less than 6", don't be too picky, but if there's more than 8" to 10", do a good job, and give yourself a bit more space to move around in than you think you'll need.) If conditions are windy, and you don't think that your stakes will hold, look for some broken branches (16" to 20" long). Tie some extra cordage between the loops on the tent and the centers of the branches, and lay the branches down under the snow so that the branch and the cordage form a "T". Pile extra snow on top of the branches and stomp this down really, really well. (It helps to have these extra pieces of cordage already cut to length and tied off so that they can be used with a minimum of fuss - remember, fingers don't work well in the cold.) For fluffy, dry snow, use the rocks instead of branches (maybe 3 or 4 rocks).
    The Eskimos have over 30 different words to describe the stuff that we call "snow". When you're sleeping on it, it's cold. If you use it to build a snow cave, then it becomes an insulator , PROTECTING YOU FROM HEAT LOSS TO THE WIND. But it's still cold when you are trying to sleep on it....
    Have fun.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rocket Jones View Post
    Your best buddy on a cold night will be a hat, neck gaiter, buff, balaclava, or some such.
    A nalgene bottle filled with hot water may be too.


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    Default How to put up tent in snow?

    The only thing I don't see mentioned is snow stakes. If you do a bit winter or snow camping in deep snow, you might consider snow stakes which are wider and have holes for the snow to pass through and refreeze.

    Usually its better to camp above the snow line than below in the mud and muck.

    Personally, I'd stay off the ground and snuggle into a nice warm hammock with under quilt. Just watch the snow loads above as someone mentioned.
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  14. #14
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    let me take the contrarian view here. Unless you have plenty on insulation beneath you it's very possible that you will melt the snow beneath you from your body heat and end up laying in wet. Unless the temps are very cold or the snow is very deep I'd advise scraping the snow away and pitching your tent on the leaves.
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  15. #15

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    In 3 thru hikes of the AT, i've slept in the snow once.
    Now, the CDT in CO or the Himalayas is a different story.
    I learned from the Sherpas in Nepal to use rocks to tie the tent lines to and then bury the rocks in the snow.
    A limb from a tree can work also (they don't have many of those in Nepal however)

    The best thing you can do is go out and try it the next time you have a sufficient snow storm.
    You'll need a few feet of snow.
    If it's less, just brush the snow away and use the bare ground.

    Have fun.
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  16. #16

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    A light snow cover and frozen ground is tough.

    With a good 6 inch ground cover it becomes a lot easier, regular stakes, even extra long ones, won't hold in snow (or sand). Instead you construct a dead-man.

    Tent stakes sometimes work for this, but you're better off with something thicker. A tree limb, for instance. Tie a line to the middle of the dead-man, and bury it in the snow (or sand) horizontally, and parallel to the side of the tent. The deeper you bury it the better.

    Back fill the hole, and tie the line to the loop in your tent where the stake normally attaches. Let the snow harden before tensioning the guy line.

    What happens is that the dead-man resists being pulled through the snow, thus anchoring the tent.

    Also big rocks can be used as anchors.

  17. #17
    Registered User Feral Nature's Avatar
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    Thanks yall. I have not ever been in snow over 2 to 3 inches deep. So I am learning here.
    Formerly known as Texas Phlox.

  18. #18
    Registered User ChinMusic's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Texas Phlox View Post
    Thanks yall. I have not ever been in snow over 2 to 3 inches deep. So I am learning here.
    I watched King of the Hill. I know how you Texans react to a 1/2-inch of snow...........
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  19. #19
    Trail miscreant Bearpaw's Avatar
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    If the snow is deeper than 6 or so inches, dig in and build a berm around your tent. It helps as a wind break.

    I'd recommend a couple of pads if you know you'll be on snow for much time, usually one closed cell foam and one inflater. When I was deployed in Norway, the Norwegian Rangers used a CCF pad and a rein deer skin on top. It was pretty luxurious, but pretty heavy unless you were skijoring behind a vehicle or actually inside one.

    About the only way snow can "insulate" is if you dig in and make a snow cave or snow trench. Then it can "insulate" you from the wind. But you're still essentially sleeping on ice. It's cold.
    If people spent less time being offended and more time actually living, we'd all be a whole lot happier!

  20. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Texas Phlox View Post
    ... is there a certain depth or type of snow that it is not advisable to hike in? Thanks, I am just trying to think this through before I get to Springer Mountain (March 2012).
    I would really want to use snowshoes if the snow is over 18" or 2'. But, TipiWalter, who has more time in the southern Appalachians in winter than all of us, doesn't use them. He says that too often the bushes bend over or branches bow down so that you're walking through a low tunnel. When the depth gets beyond 2' or 3' it gets really difficult to walk through snow (this is called postholing because of the hole your steps leave in the snow). I've once walked through 5-6' of soft snow and it was very very exhausting and I was young then.

    In the Adirondack E. High Peaks (not on the AT) snowshoes or skis are required when there's more than 8" of snow. This is because the tracks and postholes can make the trails unsafe for skiers or hikers when it freezes, also because the rangers get tired of rescueing people that don't carry snowshoes.

    I love thinking about snow when the weather is hot!

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