Evan at Terra Rosa Gear has a mid he is working on
This video was posted last week - looks pretty sweet for a mid.
Condensation doesn't stay in the tent unless you touch the walls, so you won't get pooling on the floor, and realistically, wall contact is a problem with any tent.
Drew wrote:I'd prefer to buy locally if possible.
Not to only be able to escape mozzies once I'm lying down in bed. Also, cuddles with my tent partner are important! I haven't ever used a bivy though, so I shouldn't dismiss it until I've tried it I guess.
Good luck with that - not much here/available right now in mids that I know of - but I could be wrong.
If you get an inner tent the muck around factor on setup and total weight makes a tarptent like a StratoSpire far more convenient and probably roomier.
Stew63 wrote:Setup: In a blizzard or windstorm - only 4 pegs, one ultralight pole - and BAM - it's up and it's already 80% bombproof - followed by several further tieouts and couple of extra pegs to add strength and make it 100% bombproof.
The problem with many pyramid style shelters (such as the MLD Duomid, the Solomid, and the Trailstar to name a few) is that they suffer from low angled walls which reduce the amount of usable interior space inside.
Plus the cost, Ultramid 4 is USD 850
Plus inner USD 475
Ouch!
I think you should be buying a tent whose main features cope with 95% of your situations (lubby-dubby + ease of use factor) with the ability to deal with the other 5% without perhaps excelling in them.
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