
The two ladies in the picture were visiting our camp.

We use a wrecking bar, which is like an over-sized crowbar. Four feet or so? Overkill, but hey, no one has to bend over.Savannah wrote:Thank you for the advice, Rommel.
A claw hammer & a crowbar are similarly shaped at the end; does the crowbar's length somehow give me better . . . leverage or something? Is it stronger?
I ask because I might not be able to bring everything I want this year.
That's is important.AntiM wrote:We use a wrecking bar, which is like an over-sized crowbar. Four feet or so? Overkill, but hey, no one has to bend over.Savannah wrote:Thank you for the advice, Rommel.
A claw hammer & a crowbar are similarly shaped at the end; does the crowbar's length somehow give me better . . . leverage or something? Is it stronger?
I ask because I might not be able to bring everything I want this year.
I'd say landscape timber nails should work very well for this. ~3/8" wide and anywhere form 6 to 10 inches long, usually galvanized dipped.theCryptofishist wrote:
Just as a side conversation--what works for staking carpet? I don't want that sucker to move...
That's what we use, then pry them up with the wrecking bar.CapSmashy wrote:I'd say landscape timber nails should work very well for this. ~3/8" wide and anywhere form 6 to 10 inches long, usually galvanized dipped.theCryptofishist wrote:
Just as a side conversation--what works for staking carpet? I don't want that sucker to move...
Easy to spot as they look like gigantic nails.
Don't be afraid. We use a Eureka K-2 four season tent. Held fine in direct gusts of 55 mph. no big.shroom wrote:Ok that pic scares me and my poor camping tent! As a newbie, could you give me so tent recommendations or point me to a thread that has them?
Thanks!