How to Stay Warm and Safe While Camping in the Cold – Cold Weather Camping Tips

This is how you master staying warm when camping in the winter!
In this episode, Luke is going over his favorite cold weather tips that are going to keep you warm and also safe when you are camping in freezing/snowy conditions.

Some of these tips, may even save your life!
….

Want to Send Us Something?

TOGR – PO Box 111
7378 Old US 421 S
Deep Gap, NC 28618

FYI; I don’t live in the Deep Gap area, I only have a PO Box there for packages due to privacy; it may take me a few weeks to check the box due to distance.

100% Agenda Free :
This channel is Agenda Free and is fully supported by the viewers.

Support TOGR through Patreon :

or

Support TOGR through YouTube :

Web Site :

Come Join Us on Facebook, Twitter Instagram :

Facebook :

Twitter :

Instagram :

5 Comments

  1. Make sure you close your gear bags at night. The wetness of your breath settles and will make everything damp by morning. Put your clothes in ziplocs to stay dry and close the bag. Keep your sweaty shoes outside the tent as they just add to moisture. Dirty sweaty clothes should be bagged up as well. Lastly, ventilation. Your tent isn’t to keep you warm, your bag is for that. Your tent is to keep you dry and out of the wind, but ventilation is important if you don’t want moisture buildup and drip.

  2. Store your sleeping bag open and not compressed, people don’t realise that compressing the filling reduces it’s effectiveness

  3. 1.)KEEP YOUR NOSE WARM (mask, as shown here) otherwise, in your sleep, you WILL put your face inside your sleeping bag/quilt to get your nose warm – and then your bag gets wet inside.
    2.)Always, ALWAYS bring a pee bottle if weather is very cold. NEVER use it inside your sleeping bag/quilt. (Don’t ask)
    3.)Lay “day clothes” flat under your mattress to lower heat conduction from the mattress.
    4.)Put your outer shell, zipped up, over the foot of your sleeping bag for more warmth but mainly to keep the warm foot of the bag from melting frost from inside your tent onto your bag.

Leave a Reply to @TammyButler-r8u Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.


*