My gawd was my propane lantern 🏮 plugged up with black soot and mud!
I’m hoping my bath of carburetor cleaner will get it humming along again! I smell so wonderful and my hands are so black. Can’t really test it inside or today but hopefully before I go camping next time. βΊ But both me and my kitchen stink.
Not sure why it got plugged up by the generator is pretty simple in the propane lantern to take apart and clean unlike the liquid fuel appliances I have. With propane lantern it’s just a simple nozzle, not a generator tube. Propane after all is a gas when it leaves the tank, doesn’t have to be heated to a gas. The soot could have been the air intake restricted by mud plugged it or because most of the time I operate the lantern at low, below the stoichmeteric ratio.
I’m still looking at getting an electric rechargeable LED lantern 🏮 mostly for backpacking and in the tent. The glass is fragile and if I bring either the liquid fuel or propane lantern it’s heavy. Plus I can’t have it in the tent for winter camping. Sure that would have to be recharged daily but with the solar in my truck that ain’t an issue.
A plastic kids sled can be handy for dragging gear back, π· but try to get any heavy loads in the center and low to ground to keep it from flopping around.
I really love my Big Buddy Heater hooked to the 20 gallon tank. β¨18,000 BTU of heat on a cold morning or evening is wonderful just sitting out next to it with a hot meal or coffee.
The heater is nice and toasty in the tent too. βΊI do keep a hunting knife on me in case of emergencies, along with a carbon monoxide detector. I usually only need it for a few mintes on in the tent to make it very comfortable, and it’s always off before I go bed.
I really enjoy something baked with soup or macaroni cheese in cold weather, π§ along with lots of hot coca.
Colorful Christmas lights, candles, and decorations π adds color to a campsite on a long winters night.
Good heavy sleeping bags, stacked makes it quite comfortable sleeping π in the tent even in a very cold night.
The age old question for winter camping is … do I sleep in a heated tent or my truck?
Truck Cap
Resistant to heavy snow, ice, wind
Doesn’t need to be dried out like the tent if it gets wet/snow covered
No set up or take down time for the tent
Truck cap can leak a bit in heavy rain
Usually plenty warm once I’m under the covers
Have access to the main power board so I can easily switch on and off lights
I won’t bring the heater near the truck due to the fire risk. If I burn up a tent or sleeping bag, it’s not the end of the world, I have a hunting knife to cut the tent in an emergency.
Heated tent
Even in quite cold weather, with wind, rain and temperatures in single digits, the heater can make it toasty in a few minutes inside — warm enough to strip down and sit above the covers, although at that point I usually turn down the heat
Usually drier then the truck cap as the heat in the tent keeps the water evaporating off the top and sides of the tent, although sometimes snow can melt and pool in part of the tent
Gets cold relatively quickly when the heater is turned off
Can be drafty on a windy night, even with the heater on as wind blows under the fly
Colder then the truck cap when I wake up in the middle of the night or in the morning, at least until I can spark up the heater
If I want electricity in the tent, I have to run a power wire from the truck to the tent
The heated tent is definitely more comfortable in the winter then truck cap. But it’s a real pain if I have to take the tent home, wet and dry it out. Even setting up a tent for one night is a lot more work then the truck cap. For multi-day camping trips in the winter though, the tent is the winner.