Thankyou all with this information I have revamped my Idea for my camp. I now plan to make a community bar I will draw up a basic design for this tonight because I have work soon.
dragonfly Jafe wrote:This looks like a good plan. I would put my tent on the West side (to avoid morning light/heating), maybe on the far side of the Jeep depending on what was there next to me. Does your parawing go down to the ground on at least one side? If not, I would have some added material (tarps, etc) to form a wind block when the wind storms hit.
I considdered the sun's rotation into camp placement and I decided that the cooler is priority and should be shaded the most. Im not gonna spoil if I get hot.

Thou I will be looking into better shade equipment now that I'v gotten info the the parawing from someone whos used it on the playa before. Thinking about this
http://www.msrcorp.com/tents/pavilion.asp but then again it might be too low.
phil wrote:It didn't provide enough shade (sun shone through), it didn't provide enough shade (not nearly big enough for 2, much less others when people stopped by), it didn't provide enough shade (you couldn't stand, and the nearness of the surface meant it radiated heat to those under it) ,and it didn't provide enough shade (one support collapsed during a wind-storm -- much to the chagrin of the seller who'd never seen such a thing and assured us it would hold up under anything the playa had to offer).
Thankyou thankyou thankyou! I can't tell you how much I needed to know who this thing would deal with the playa. MSR is great but they sotime leave out important info to make thing more apealing. What are you poinnions on the Pavilion?
http://www.msrcorp.com/tents/pavilion.asp Here is a site with full details in it.
http://moontrail.com/msr/pavilion/msr-pavilion-stnd.php and some addictional dimentions.
Tiahaar wrote:If you can put some tie-off loops on your vehicle it makes a good solid anchor for one side of a shade tarp. This one is 20x30.
I own a 1991 Jeep Wrangler so a large tie off will not work for me But I may be able to tie the end of the MSR pavilion to backend of the support frame on my jeep that can help greatly for easy acess to my locked storrage of alchohol [I'm planning to make a well stocked bar]
Dork wrote:You'll want shade that goes over the tent and goes at least most of the way down to the ground on the East and West sides and extends a bit to the South. The shade material should be as opaque as you can manage.
I've had bad luck with evaporation ponds and just carry the stuff home now.
2 100 qt coolers is a hell of a lot. Are you cooking for or providing alcohol to a bunch of people?
What's the adjustable tent pole for? Is that what you plan to use to support the shade?
Good info there Dork thanks Im sure I can make this evaportaion thing work and for me I have a mist pump and that learned to take a shower with less then 24oz. The 2 100qt cooler are for alot, 1 is to house all my food provisions, and the liquor to be use that night for my community bar. The other will house a lineing of dry ice encasing bags of Ice for the other cooler. This one will be opened one a morening to restock the other cooler.
Bay Bridge Sue wrote:As has been mentioned (has it??) shade is the most important consideration. You want it big enough to be able to get out of the heat, and it has to be high enough (and preferably have 2 layers) to break the convective (right??) layer between the sun and you...
Second is warmth. Why warmth? It's cold at night. People forget this until they get out there - fortunately, last year was cold enoutgh to keep most people inside through the "wee" hours, so I remember it this year. Have a way of getting/keeping/staying warm - a *good* sleeping bag, tent heater, insulative layers, etc...
I didn't mention wind because it is a given. I use (with success) 2.5' rebar, candy caned, and with the other end sharpened to a point (and hardened). Drives with a sledge, pulls with a long bar or hi-lift jack. But you MUST make sure everything is staked well. How well? We had a day of 60 MPH winds (gusts to 80+) (approaching alpha conditions) and a lot of tents were hurt and needed help. Saving grace was the Playa liked rebar this year so it wasn't hard to put our 20 hunks of stuff into the ground. But heed this - EVERYTHING you have MUST be staked. We had our 10x10 pop-up want to go mobile a number of times, and the rebar is all that saved it...
I'm wondering if 8 feet is high enough If so then next I will next need to figure out seating. For warmth I will have plenty not to worry. I have 14" long 3/4" thick rebar for the job with a J cure to plan completly into the ground [no wirries I will remove all ove them before I leave]
Kinetic IV wrote:Think Category I Hurricane force winds...it's better to slightly overengineer your shade and tent systems than have this happen to you. Unless you really want to explore the deep playa looking for the MOOP that was your tent...
This will be my 5th year attending but I still refer back to one source as my base information of what works and what won't out there. And that is Bob Stahl's guide to desert structures.
http://www.geocities.com/potatotrap/tech/bluetarp.htm
I've spent many hours looking into shade structures and reading all kinds of advice...this is the one source I keep coming back to because the information is sound.
Oh I plan to overengineer everything what lacked in my plan was this design of the tents staking, I will be using rebar as previously stated and 190 lbs proof guyline. Thanks for the source I'll refrence it when need be.
AntiM wrote:Be sure to have a shaded hunk of carpet or hammock or cot for a place to stretch out in daylight hours, napping in the tent in the heat sucks.
We no longer try to make all the walls have a secure seal to the ground to combat dust, just easier and less destructive to let the wind blow through.
I plan to leave a 2-4 inch gap from the ground to allow wind to pass. I'v already started to scout out carpet stores I even have one that will call me if there throwing out scraps of carpet
