ActiveOutdoorsCamping10 tips for keeping your tent cool on summer camping tripsPlanning a camping trip? Be sure to follow these tent cooling tipsWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
ActiveOutdoorsCamping10 tips for keeping your tent cool on summer camping tripsPlanning a camping trip? Be sure to follow these tent cooling tipsWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Planning a camping trip? Be sure to follow these tent cooling tips
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Scott Goodwill / Unsplash)
(Image credit: Scott Goodwill / Unsplash)
With long, sun-splashed days and light evenings, the summer months serve up cracking conditions for alfresco adventures and wild sleepouts with friends.
However, one of the downsides of summer camping is waking up covered in sweat in thebest tentthat feels like a hothouse, or returning to camp after a day exploring the coast or countryside, only to find your home from home horrendously over-heated.
Luckily, with a bit of planning and a little knowledge, it’s relatively easy to keep your cool while camping, even in the middle of summer. The tent you choose to take, and where and how you pitch it, makes a massive difference to the whole experience – but even after that, there are ways to avoid the worst of the heat.
Here are our top 10 tent cooling tips forkeeping coolduring summer camping trips.
1. Buy a well ventilated tent
If you’re car camping, the best option is to use a tent with plenty of ventilation and blackout bedrooms. It’s important to check that your tent has climate control features, such as materials and light colours that reflect sunlight and heat on the outside, rather than absorbing it, like theQuechua 2-seconds easy Fresh & Black popup tent, orColeman’s Castle Pines 4L.
2. Choose mesh inner tents
For multiday hiking in the height of summer, abackpacking tentwith a mesh inner – such as theSea to Summit Ikos TR 3– is the coolest option. If you’re confident the weather will remain dry, remove the flysheet altogether during the day, but also at night; not only can you drift off to sleep while gazing up at the stars, but you’ll also enjoy the breeze blowing through the mesh (which lets cool air in while keeping insects out).
(Image credit: Sian Lewis)
(Image credit: Sian Lewis)
3. Pitch your tent in the right spot
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If you don’t want bright light blazing on your shelter early in the morning (in mid summer, dawn breaks before 5am), pitch on the western side of a group of trees or structure, so you’ll enjoy some shade when the sun rises in the east. This might mean your tent is exposed to full sun later on, but no one in their right mind occupies a tent in the middle of a sunny day, and if you follow the tips below you should be able to keep it relatively cool. Campsites near water – rivers, streams, lakes or the sea – are also generally more chilled.
4. Work with the wind
Work out where the wind is coming from for most of your stay (the weather app on your phone will let you know). In cold conditions, it’s best to face the door of your tent away from the direction of the prevailing wind, but in mid summer, if temperatures are hot, it makes sense to reverse this so you can throw the doors open and let a cool, refreshing breeze blow through your shelter.
5. Open your tent’s vents
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
6. Consider tent size and numbers
The smaller your tent is, and the more people you have in it, the hotter it will get. Large family tents that can be opened right up are ideal for summer camping. If you only have a small backpacking tent, limit the number of people you squeeze into it. If you’re someone who goes camping with your dog, then I’m afraid the hound will ramp the heat right up as well – and sharing a hot tent with a panting dog breathing in your face is not pleasant, so pop them out in the vestibule (they’ll thank you for it).
7. Ditch the sleeping mat for a camp bed
Modernsleeping matsare all about insulation and R values, which is fine when you’re trying to stay warm, but when attempting to keep your cool, it’s good to have air circulating all round you. An old-school cot-stylecamping bedthat stands off the ground is better.
8. Pick a summer-specific sleeping bag
The bestlightweight sleeping bagscome in all sorts of shapes, styles and thicknesses, including summer specific ones. Mummy-shaped bags get really warm, because they hug your body and the air inside quickly heats up. Go for a more spacious square model. It’s good to look for a bag with a double zip that allows you to poke your feet out to cool down if you start feeling the heat, without having to undo the entire thing. Sometimes, though, it’s best to dispense with the main sleeping bag altogether and just kip in a sleeping-bag liner made from a cool material such as cotton or silk. A silk pillowcase is also a very light and easy item to pack, and it stays nice and cool to the touch on hot nights.
(Image credit: Sian Lewis)
(Image credit: Sian Lewis)
9. Cut out alcohol before bed…
Limit your alcohol intake before bed. Sorry, but a common side effect of having a few beers or glasses of wine is that your body heats up as your liver processes the alcohol, your heart rate increases and the blood vessels in your skin widen, causing you to sweat. In a mid-summer camping scenario, you can get uncomfortably hot during the night if you over imbibe (and if you’re sharing a small tent with others, that will only be accentuated). You will also wake up dehydrated, which compounds the feeling of discomfort.
10. …but keep your drinks cool
While it’s best to lay off the booze a bit when temperatures soar, it’s a very good idea to have a plentiful supply of other cold drinks to hand – not to mention chilled fruit – so don’t forget to load up a goodcooler box, such as theYeti Beverage Bucket.
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