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Antelope 2019
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<blockquote data-quote="Bulseyetom" data-source="post: 1545084" data-attributes="member: 14766"><p>I have a 14x16 wall tent that has spent many days in the Wyoming wind but it didn't take me long to throw my exterior frame away and build an internal frame. With the external frame it was a royal pain to try to keep the guy stakes in the ground. We often tied off to a corral or extra pickup! Not to say you still don't need to anchor the internal wall frames but they are more stable. Also all of the firewood seems to have been used up by the wagon trains and there are no buffalo for chips. I bought a bag of coal for my wood stove thinking my problem was solved but you couldn't light that coal with a propane torch! I always hunted in late October and it was cold at night where a fire in the wood stove made life bearable. Most of the roads are dirt and when it rains it is very difficult to get around. The ground dries up soon after a rain. If antelope weren't so fun to hunt I am not sure I would ever try to camp. In fact the last time we went we "camped" at the Best Western in Casper for several nights. You could see antelope from our second story room most mornings. Tom</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bulseyetom, post: 1545084, member: 14766"] I have a 14x16 wall tent that has spent many days in the Wyoming wind but it didn't take me long to throw my exterior frame away and build an internal frame. With the external frame it was a royal pain to try to keep the guy stakes in the ground. We often tied off to a corral or extra pickup! Not to say you still don't need to anchor the internal wall frames but they are more stable. Also all of the firewood seems to have been used up by the wagon trains and there are no buffalo for chips. I bought a bag of coal for my wood stove thinking my problem was solved but you couldn't light that coal with a propane torch! I always hunted in late October and it was cold at night where a fire in the wood stove made life bearable. Most of the roads are dirt and when it rains it is very difficult to get around. The ground dries up soon after a rain. If antelope weren't so fun to hunt I am not sure I would ever try to camp. In fact the last time we went we "camped" at the Best Western in Casper for several nights. You could see antelope from our second story room most mornings. Tom [/QUOTE]
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