(Part 2) Top products from r/camping

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We found 70 product mentions on r/camping. We ranked the 1,342 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/camping:

u/Notoriously_Infamous · 4 pointsr/camping

Growing up camping with my dad is definitely one of my better memories. We always took cards and played games, but my dad also used it as an opportunity to teach me invaluable skills.

  • Teach them how to tie some basic knots (if they don't already know them). Animated Knots is an awesome resource for this.

  • Take them Snipe Hunting

  • If you think they're ready for it, and they don't have one already, this is a great opportunity for them to get their first pocket knife. Granted I'm in my 30's now, but I got my first Swiss Army Knife on a camping trip with my dad and cherished it. He showed me how to use it safely and explained what each part was.

  • After you're done cooking, including s'mores and such, you can get these packets called Mystical Fire that change the color of your campfire. Just don't cook over it, but it's pretty fun to have on hand.
u/ansiz · 3 pointsr/camping

First off, think about how much you like camping. How often will you do it realistically? Will you stay camping more than you do now? Do you think you'll be backpacking and camping? I.E. hiking to a campsite, stay the night and then hike several miles to another campsite.

If you won't be camping very often, say 2 or 3 weekends a year and you normally will be car camping or only hiking a couple miles to camp, then you don't need the lightest and best gear.

Take this tent - great deal, roomy and should last a casual camper for years and years. Coleman Hooligan 2-Person Tent,Orange https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016HMBN0/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_kUtEybSZA8DB4

Do you shop at Amazon? Teton Sports makes some excellent bang-for-you-buck backpacks.

Use the BULK your money on good sleeping pads and sleeping bags. Sleeping well will make a world of a difference in your enjoyment. There are a number of good options,I would recommend going to a store like REI where you can really touch and feel the gear, plus they have a great return policy so you can try out a sleeping bag and pad without being stuck with it.

u/madlyfoxy · 1 pointr/camping

I have that tent and I really love it! Maybe think about those foam squares that connect together on the floor to protect their little feet from the rocks underneath the tent? I would totally get a screened in tent for over the picnic table, but only if you go yearly. Idk if it's buggy by you but I couldn't imagine having crying kids with mosquitoe bites!



I have this air mattress and cot combo:



Coleman 2000020270 Cot Queen https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AU6AVLW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_QTQ7CbKYRV0ZB



I absolutely love it. Never deflates like the others do. I mean it does maybe an inch or two but never enough to feel the cot underneath. Just pump firm before bed and you're set. Battery powered pump that's separate from the mattress. My partner (200lbs) and I (160lbs) sleep on it with no issues. You could use the cot and the mattress separately if you guys ended up not being able to fit the four of you. Good luck! :)

u/Boom_87 · 6 pointsr/camping

I have owned an msr pocket stove for a while and loved it. When it went missing I spent a season without it because I was too stubborn to buy a piece of gear I just had to find. Well next season I decided to just do a ton of research and see if there was anything that was being sold for a fraction of the price but was still popular. That's when I found this. Do yourself a favor and start skimming through the reviews. There's a lot of them. There are things about it that could be better but hey for under 6$ I have used the shit out of this thing and have been thoroughly pleased.

Leegoal Ultralight Backpacking Canister Camp Stove with Piezo Ignition 3.9oz https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004U8CP88/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awd_iRvRwb778K57W

u/upstatedreaming3816 · 2 pointsr/camping

Personally, I grew up with my father rising with the sun to start the coffee percolating. For me, when I started building my own camping gear years ago, a percolator was just the logical (and nostalgic) choice. However, about 7 years ago my wife, then my fiance, saw a camping stove-top drip pot. It worked well for about two trips, and then something went on the inside and it stopped working all together. Back to the percolator we went. About 3 years ago, my buddy introduced me to French press coffee in general. As a huge coffee drinker, who drinks coffee black, I was always looking for the strongest, boldest cup of coffee and how to make it. I picked up two French presses, one for home, one for the camping box. My wife and I are both happy making coffee either way, and alternate as the mood dictates while camping.
That being said, percolating coffee, and using the French press, are what my wife likes to call a "fine art"with timing and how long you wait before pouring the first cup. An art that she insists I am horrible at, since she doesn't like her coffee to be a highly caffeinated mud as I do.

Hope this long, rambling answer helps! Happy Camping!

u/bentreflection · 3 pointsr/camping

I recently spent some time tent camping above the arctic circle. The biggest thing is just to have a warm place to sleep. That means a sleeping bag that is going to be adequate for the temperatures you're going to be dealing with. If you're going to be backpacking, you'll want to get a down sleeping bag good for around 0F. That will keep you warm in most conditions and because you can either not wear anything if it's hot or wear full thermals/down jacket to bed if it's really cold. If you're going to be car camping most of the time you can get a really warm synthetic bag for way cheaper than down, but it will be huge and heavy. (which is fine if you're car camping). Aside from a warm sleeping bag you'll want to make sure you have a sleeping pad that will reflect your body heat back at you so the ground does not suck the heat out of your body through your sleeping bag. I would recommend a z-pad and a blow up backpacking mattress. You could also use a huge coleman blow up mattress if you're car camping.


The other thing is food. If it's really cold you won't want to be cooking something complex. I usually bring a can of chili and some bread or something to quickly cook in a jetboil.


Obviously you'll want to make a fire so bring wood if you have a car. As far as activities go, when it's cold you're just going to spend the entire night sitting around the fire eating and drinking.


Just make sure you dress appropriately or you're going to be miserable. That means layering. Thermal base layer, warm pants, medium weight fleece, down puffy over that. You may want gloves and a beanie for sleeping.

u/Mister_Chief_ · 1 pointr/camping

I bought myself a military modular sleep system and it is the best camping thing I ever bought.

The sleep system consists of 3 parts: 30 degree (F) sleeping bag, -10 degree (F) sleeping bag, and goretex bivy cover

Whats great is it is modular so you can tailor it to your environment, camping in the summer? leave the -10 degree bag at home. camping in literally arctic weather? bring them all and combine it! (good for -50 degree weather).
The 3 parts all have separate zippers and snap together nicely.

My favorite part is the waterproof goretex bag (100% waterproof and breathable). Last time I went camping it rained and I woke up sleeping in a big puddle, the sleeping bags (and I :D) were completely bone dry.

Cons are it is a bit pricey (kind of offset by long lasting durability), and it is heavy by sleeping bag standards (10 pounds for the whole thing)
If you have one, you don't technically need a tent, but everyone needs their own

Edit: Link

Double Edit: Also got this ruck which I absolutely love for its gigantic capacity and the fact that it and the sleep system were made for each other. Con being that it is also heavy (12 pounds), so with the sleep system it is pushing 22 pounds, and fully loaded for my last trip was right at 65 pounds. most of the weight was water though. Bring lots of water

u/eyesontheskydotcom · 1 pointr/camping

I don't know if there's something out there big enough for a bike (maybe this Mountainsmith 4P tent would be big enough?), but why not pitch a tent for you, and set up a tarp over your bike? There's lots of ways to set up a tarp for something like that, and that will only set you back for a decent tarp, some paracord and a few stakes (maybe a pole or two if you're not camping near trees).

I guess you could still get that Mountainsmith tent, and if it's not big enough for your bike, pick up a tarp/cord/stakes. I got that tent for my wife / daughter to use, and though I've yet to try it in the rain, it sure had some nice features (full rainfly, aluminum poles, bathtub floor, etc.).

u/Tornainb0w · 1 pointr/camping

Thanks so much for your advice! I will check out REI. One of my friends mentioned Coleman and I found the Coleman Sundome 4 on amazon for fairly cheap. Would something like this Coleman be enough? Or should I just bite the bullet and get an REI half dome 4 that grantizzle suggested?

u/letslearnthingz · 1 pointr/camping

You guys sound like you're bragging about setup time so let me tell you about this dude.


I don't backpack camp so the weight isn't an issue, and most importantly my wife wanted something that she could easily help with if I wanted her to come camping with me.

u/NintenJoo · 1 pointr/camping

I have a Fiskars axe and a Fiskars wood splitter.

Both look identical to the Gerber, just orange.

They are quite light and are very strong. They call them unbreakable.

The reviews are amazing as well.

http://www.amazon.com/Fiskars-7850-X7-14-Inch-Hatchet/dp/B0002YTO7E

u/Puntas13 · 2 pointsr/camping

I bought this awesome setup

You can spend more and get it new or buy a used set for cheaper. I picked up a used-like new set and it was in fantastic shape.

It comes with a cool weather bag and a cold weather bag that can be put together to make a really cold weather bag. The bivy cover is supposed to serve as a shelter. Comes with a real nice compression stuff sack too.

u/mainlydank · 1 pointr/camping

for low to mid price range....I love coleman tents for their waterproofness from the factory.

Some require sealing of the seams for complete waterproofness, but the last 2 I have owned havent. They have been thru some very severe rain storms and only ended up with few drops in the tents and that's after 15-20 uses. They are nothing fancy and only really good when its above 40 degrees, however for the price you cant go wrong.

http://www.amazon.com/Coleman-17-Foot-10-Foot-8-Person-Modified/dp/B000W7BHJY
That is our current one, got on an amazon/slickdeal sale for $79 shipped

The older one is 10.5x10.5' and paid about the same. The older one we have taken to multiple music festivals where dozens of tents were uprooted and blew away, ez ups snapped, etc from severe rain storms and it survived and was relatively dry inside each time.

Gotta get the 10" long, heavy duty tent stakes for whatever tent you get and severe storms.
http://www.amazon.com/Coleman-10-Inch-Steel-Tent-Stakes/dp/B002HU086C/


u/LessTalkMoreWhiskey · 1 pointr/camping

You should definitely have a sleeping pad to keep you off the ground, preferably with an aluminized coating that will reflect body heat back up towards you like this one. Or you can use a mylar emergency blanket between your pad and your bag

Hand warmers are very handy and have many uses as well. Toss one in the foot of your sleeping bag before you turn in. It won't last all night but even once it's used up it helps absorb moisture in your bag.

u/winningelephant · 2 pointsr/camping

I also have the Klymit Static V and can't recommend it enough. It's light and packable, has a 4.4 r-value, inflates in <15 breaths, and is genuinely comfortable.

You can also get great deals on them if you look. I think I paid $40 for mine, which ain't too shabby.

u/ohv_ · 1 pointr/camping

I am pretty happy with this one.

Lightspeed Outdoors 2-Person PVC-Free Air Bed w/ Battery Operated Pump, Green https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CWZE642/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_rcFFxb0C4HZKF

u/Baron164 · 1 pointr/camping

Thanks, I've looked at a few cots, including stuff like this:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AU6AVLW

I have looked at canned food, especially soups etc, but as you said, it gets bulky. But at least with the boat I can store a good amount of of supplies on-board.

u/FL-Orange · 1 pointr/camping

Percolator or dripper - This one. I talked to a Coleman customer service person but had no luck. It's just a 90* fitting that directs the water down to the filter basket. At this point I'll just see what can fit it from the hardware store, just have to be careful to get something rated for hot water. If I think about it later I'll post a pic.

u/Baconskull · 8 pointsr/camping

I'd recommend saving 30$ and getting yourself a Morakniv Heavy Duty Companion blade. About 20$ on Amazon, much better for bushcraft and general camp tasks. Link here.

u/reddilada · 3 pointsr/camping

They are separate from the tent. Like a pool raft but specifically not a pool raft as they offer no insulation. Head to Academy, Cabelas, Bass Pro or even Walmart to pick one up. I use this one, but you can pick one up for much cheaper.

The deal is your sleeping bag gets mashed thin underneath you so it doesn't insulate you from the cold ground. Nothing will sap the life out of you like cold ground. A bit a foam underneath and you're good.

u/Mattias44 · 8 pointsr/camping

I also hate those PVC air mattresses. If you're looking for car camping solutions, this TPU Air Mattress is the shit. Tough and won't stretch.

u/mozetti · 4 pointsr/camping

I bought a Morakniv Companion Fixed Blade Outdoor Knife with Carbon Steel Blade, Military Green, 4.1-Inch a few years ago. I use it for meal prep because it's fixed blade and about the size of a kitchen prep knife. The Amazon site shows its use for camping tasks, too.

EDIT - just saw this has been recommended a few times already. Must be good!

u/Abaddon_4_Dictator · 2 pointsr/camping

I'm in CO too, no clue why you would want to leave CO to go camping, but look here (under mvum's) for dispersed camping in Lincoln National Forest.

What type of gear do you have? If you expect to be comfortable at 30F, why not just get a 0F mummy bag (like this ~$35 usd one, which I use) and camp much closer to home?

u/andr50 · 2 pointsr/camping

It's one of these
It took about 3 weeks shipping, and I had to pick it up from the post office, but at that price it's pretty unbeatable.

u/Oasiskw · 1 pointr/camping

We have this: works great, but it is huge.

Coleman Camping Coffeemaker https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001K7IDVU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_OzcozbZW67TBA

Otherwise we use the French press, it's a pain to clean all the time for 2 cups of coffee.

Or coffee tea bags, light weight, but expensive if you like to drink a lot of coffee.

We usually just resort to the French press.

u/Kovoo · 2 pointsr/camping

Thank you! Any particular pad you'd recommend for a tenth? We bought this one after the advice we got here https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004J2GUOU/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_c_api_2G6SybJPFQDHR

u/flighthaltWHAT · 2 pointsr/camping

Coleman 0°F Mummy Sleeping Bag for Big and Tall Adults | North Rim Cold-Weather Sleeping Bag, Olive https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0009PUSO4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_01sRDbBBXYCHP

Haven’t tested this out in the wild yet, but it’s in your budget, rated for 0°F, and seems very warm and comfy when I tried it out inside! I got it on sale for $35 so you might want to wait and see if it’ll go back down to that

u/beefstew809 · 6 pointsr/camping

Some people are very particular about their knives and what they use them for but I think that everyone should own a Mora. It is a very sharp knife that can be used for food prep all the way to just carving or whittling. The plus side is that they are light weight and they are cheap! Do yourself a favor and pick one up (it doesn't necessarily have to be the one that I linked).

u/unclebillscamping · 2 pointsr/camping

Its possible with an adaptor like this.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CFPISZW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_8wwDzbPN3P04X
How well it would perform using fuel other than what it was designed for is anyone's guess.

u/rugu · 1 pointr/camping

I have the houligan 2 and so do 3 other friends. We camp regularly and I have to give it mad props.

Its only 50$ and has survived roughly 100 trips so far. fits a queen size air mattress snugly. I use a twin and have room for my pack and gear and me.

http://www.amazon.com/Coleman-Hooligan-2-Backpacking-Tent/dp/B0016HMBN0

u/nootay · 2 pointsr/camping

The Mountainsmith Morrison 2 person and Mountainsmith Genesee 4 person are both lightweight and economical. Most of the top rated back packing tents are over $250, but these are rated well.

u/mecha_pope · 5 pointsr/camping

What are you planning to do with your axe? The one you linked to is described as a "felling axe," which means its meant to cut stuff down. To my knowledge, cutting down trees is not permitted in any public camping spaces. I do most of my camping in CA, and you are allowed to pick up deadfall in some places, as it reduces fuel for forest fires. If that's your plan, you might look into a splitting axe, which acts like a wedge and will be better for splitting logs than a felling axe.

If I'm car camping in the desert, I usually just take a hatchet like this one and use my tent mallet to drive the hatchet down the log. When I car camp in more forested areas, I'll take a splitting axe and a 8lb sledgehammer. If I'm backpacking, I take a knife.

u/billyandtheclonasaur · 2 pointsr/camping

I have a Gerber and a Mora that I like, though I would not baton(?) wood with either if that is a requirement.

u/MindlessSir · 1 pointr/camping

Backpacking if you're just using it like 3 weekends a year? Naturehike

Car camping? Coleman 4 person cabin tent $84.

I personally used an 8 person cabin tent for over 2 years for just me car camping, it was nice having the room but it wasn't "instant". I recently downgraded to a 6 person instant cabin tent.

u/PabstyLoudmouth · 1 pointr/camping

I would suggest a used Military Modular Sleep System 4 Piece with Goretex Bivy Cover and Carry Sack in very good condition. Sure it is 8lb but it will last you forever and you can use the first layer in the summer and add them as you need them and can get your weight down to 2.2lbs using the lightest sack.

u/Gwalen5 · 1 pointr/camping

Fiskars X7 hatchet, link below. It has a hallow fiber handle which makes the hatchet light weight which is good for backpacking and doesn't tire your arm out swinging it continuously. The blade is as sharp as a knife. I cannot say enough good things about this hatchet!

http://www.amazon.com/Fiskars-78506935-X7-Hatchet-14-Inch/dp/B0002YTO7E/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1420403107&sr=8-1&keywords=fiskers+hatchet

u/walkinthewoods · 1 pointr/camping

here is a similar knock-off stove for half the price you listed. I have this one and it works well.

I also have this to go with it (look at the related products for in-stock options).

This setup is ok for one person with the right kind of meals. For two+ people I bring a whisperlite with a larger cookset but I'll also mention that my most often and preferred vehicle is the canoe, so weight is less of an issue to me than a hiker.

u/wilfordbrimley1 · 2 pointsr/camping

For car camping, I use something like this:

Camp Grill

u/New_To_This_Place · 1 pointr/camping

I've had this tent for a few years now and it is great for its price. No issues so far, and it doesnt leak in the rain. It's a little under your budget but I can attest to its quality.

http://www.amazon.com/Coleman-Hooligan-2-Backpacking-Tent/dp/B0016HMBN0/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417555042&sr=8-1&keywords=coleman+hooligan+2

u/Gr_enius · 2 pointsr/camping

This is pretty much exactly that tent but with a different rainfly sold separately.

u/wpjackson · 1 pointr/camping

Thanks, i had a look at them but i think they are a bit out of our budget. I'm thinking of going for an 8 man coleman tbh, so i hope it lives up to the reviews i have read.. I'm thinking about going for the Coleman 8 canyon tent: http://amzn.to/2gQbmUk Have you had experience with that one?

u/mjhasley · 28 pointsr/camping

Coleman North Rim Adult Mummy Sleeping Bag https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0009PUSO4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apip_TYvfGb5GvhRCN

It did. I was still dressed for it, though. Layers, socks, hat and such. Some folks seem to be able to sleep in less. But yes, by 6am my feet were starting to get a bit chilly, but it was time to get up anyway. So overall, I’d say a 9 out of 10. It got to about 25 degrees.

u/dbelliepop87 · 8 pointsr/camping

Adding on to this, pretreating your clothes with permethrin really helps as well. I've literally watched them die on my pantleg.

Edit: I've always used this spray

u/BKCowGod · 1 pointr/camping

Realized my phone autocorrected mountainsmith to a misspelling. $85 on Amazon right now.




Mountainsmith Genesee 4 Person 3 Season Tent (Lotus Blue) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00452C2KA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_vEQHDbWBX4N01

(Apologies, not sure what it would be on .co.uk)

u/bolunez · 1 pointr/camping

These help

Mystical Fire Campfire Fireplace Colorant 0.882 oz Packets 12 Pack https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008LM32QS/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_jLhBxb99GAQS8

u/thaLovemussell · 1 pointr/camping

Consider permethrin for treating clothes/supplies. It is poisonous to cats while it's wet but harmless once it dries.


Sawyer Products SP649 Premium Permethrin Clothing Insect Repellent Trigger Spray, 12-Ounce https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001ANQVZE/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_T-STAb3RN6TWG

u/djmagichat · 1 pointr/camping

Never tried one but thought about picking this up:

Coleman 2000020270 Cot Queen https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00AU6AVLW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_mayTCb17G7YY6

u/beccaleephy · 3 pointsr/camping

This is the same one I have. Texsport Heavy Duty Camp 24" X 16" Grill https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000P9F092/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_ugdyzb1RXT4NQ

u/hi_in_fiber · 1 pointr/camping

They make a "heavy duty" version of the Mora Companion; significantly thicker blade. http://www.amazon.com/Morakniv-Companion-Carbon-Military-4-1-Inch/dp/B009NZVZ3E

I baton the living crap out of everything any chance I get, never oil it, haven't sharpened it, and it's still sharp enough to do rough carving/whittling. It's damn impressive considering the price.

u/Ryanlynn2004 · 2 pointsr/camping

I just bought this last week and used it this weekend. It was big enough to hold all of our belongings, 1 cot, a futon mattress and 5 sleeping bags. It stretched the length of my 99 Tahoe.

It was me, the wife, 11yo, 3yo and 2yo.

u/Zooshooter · 1 pointr/camping

Actually, Smokey the Bear is what caused the situation in the West in the first place. The western North American environment is SUPPOSED to burn. It has evolved that way for centuries. Then humans came along and decided "hey, this looks pretty" and started building homes there and got mad when they kept burning down. So we instituted fire protection policies that put out those fires asap and allowed the fuel that they burned up to pile up instead....for 100 years. 100 years worth of fire fuel that SHOULD have been burning off regularly is why the fires out there are so intense and hard to control now.

That being said, DON'T ignore local fire bans. Stoves can be had for, literally, a few dollars. Yes, it's a cheap knock-off of the MSR Pocket Rocket, but I bought 3 and haven't had any failures among them yet. If you wanted to try out that type of stove, that would be my recommendation as it has a built-in spark-lighter which does NOT come standard on some of the stoves that cost 10 times as much.

u/pop_tart · 1 pointr/camping

Well shit, bring everything you want then.

Far as fishing goes, depends on what you feel like eating. Cats I would go with the stinkiest doughball concoction from whatever you have in the fridge. Talking ketchup, bbq sauce, and Nana's tuna noodle casserole all mixed in some bread and whatever other foul shit you've got. Chicken livers work great too. The worst smelling, the better. Large/smallmouth and Pike I'd try some artificial lures like spinner baits, spoons, and crankbaits. If you're snagging up on lures, try a texas rig and bouncing off the bottom. If there's trout, green neon powerbait on a bobber. Try and find swirling water, that's where the bait fish get trapped. Tell ya a little secret that I've had a lot of luck on, "The Worm." Look it up. Otherwise, you can catch all these fish on live nightcrawlers.

You don't need a stove if you've got a fire. I use one of these for cooking and it's fantastic.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B000P9F092/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1463876821&sr=8-1&pi=SX200_QL40&keywords=camping+grate&dpPl=1&dpID=41fepo08HzL&ref=plSrch

u/idiggplants · 1 pointr/camping

thats what ive always used and it works no problem. however, the coleman, and other walmart/dicks/cabelas etc air beds generally only last so long.. even new they tend to deflate over a night or 2 of use. and after about 6 or so trips they get to the point where they barely hold air overnight... so....

i recently upgraded to a more serious air mattress...

https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B00CWZE642/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&th=1

i got it on sale for 60 bucks.

and ive gotta say, its pretty awesome. it packs up smaller, and is way more heavy duty. ive used it a dozen times or so... only ever 2 nights in a row, but ive left it set up in a spare bedroom with a bunch of stuff on it and after sitting there for a week it was no different then when i first set it up.

u/ben_gardner · 3 pointsr/camping

I have a bunch of them - MSR pocket rocket, Kovea Titanium stove, 2 cheap ones off Amazon. Only difference is the name brand ones feel more solid. If I could buy and try another, it would be the BRS stove, http://www.amazon.com/BRS-Ultralight-Camping-Outdoor-Cooking/dp/B00NNMF70U


I also use the Kovea LPG adaptor so I can use propane cans with these stoves when car camping: http://www.amazon.com/Kovea-LPG-Adaptor-Small-Silver/dp/B00CFPISZW


Get one without an igniter, as they all go bad sooner or later. Just bring a lighter to light the gas.

u/Hanginon · 6 pointsr/camping

Pay Attention here... PUT SOME INSULATION BETWEEN YOU AND THE DAMN GROUND!

IMHO, Have read your other posted questions, you need to get better at listening to advice.

Have fun...

u/CaptRon25 · 1 pointr/camping

Get yourself a Mora knife. They are cheap, and sharp as a razor. You can get a fire steel and some fire starter packs as well.