- Joined
- Mar 31, 2019
- Messages
- 6,112
- Location
- Knee deep in a Lycoming
- Display Name
Display name:
Richard Digits
I walk past @Martin Pauly 's plane every morning on the way to the porta potty
Porta-potty? I thought you had premier parking!I walk past @Martin Pauly 's plane every morning on the way to the porta pottyView attachment 119467
I do... Next to the porta potties!Porta-potty? I thought you had premier parking!
I added extra tie downs and lines to support my tent, but still had a problem of wind collapsing it down.That was a nice shower and lightning show Friday night. I was overhearing some camps this morning have very wet gear.
Is it just me, or was there no forecast of this (Friday evening) storm when I checked Friday morning?That was a nice shower and lightning show Friday night. I was overhearing some camps this morning have very wet gear.
Those suckers were ripe and overdue for a pumping when I walked past Thursday morning!I do... Next to the porta potties!
And which plane is that? If it's the little jet, I'm unimpressed.I walk past @Martin Pauly 's plane every morning on the way to the porta pottyView attachment 119467
I talked to one of the controllers and his take on it was a higher than normal (at least according to him) IFR departures requiring the higher separation. Said they had 30+ strips stacked waiting a good chunk of Thursday morning.I sent this to our chairman this morning and he sang it during a meeting this morning. Pretty much everybody at the airport (FAA, airport, parking folks, etc...) admits to having a part in the screw up and he's going to arrange some meetings to make sure it doesn't repeat.
One bright Thursday morning in Oshkosh,
The pilots decided to split,
They got stuck on taxiway Papa,
The airport had turned into sh...
Shaving Cream.
Be nice and clean.
Shave every day and you'll always look keen.
I agree with this 100% except for the last sentence. The lightweight/ultralight tent trends have ruined tent longevity. The tent flys in today's equipment biodegrade in ~3 years, leaving you with a very leaky tent. My last three tents have suffered this, despite being very well cared for. I'm on a tent replacement hamster wheel...Tents are one thing I do know. In a previous life I was the equivalent of a professional camper. Probably have spent several hundred nights sleeping outside, sometimes in environments where tent failure would be life threatening.
Anything from Walmart or a big box sporting goods store is crap. Anything with enough room to stand up and walk around in is crap. Anything from Coleman is crap.
You want an expedition or mountaineering grade tent from a reputable brand name. It should be low and tight, with just enough room to sleep, plus a vestibule for equipment. Must-have features are double wall, integral rainfly that extends to ground, bathtub floor, and footprint (fitted ground sheet).
I recommend REI.com as a reliable source. Their store brand products are generally very good for the price point.
Don't cheap out on your tent. A good tent will last 20 years of Oshkoshes and keep you bone dry in any weather.
This is camping at Oshkosh, not on the side of a mountain. A tiny tent that you can’t stand up in would be miserable for a week at the show and utterly pointless to not have in the type of camping that most will do that week. The same with your comment about Coleman being crap. A Coleman tent has served me just fine for the past 20+ years just as they have worked out fine for hundreds of thousands of others. The company has been in business for over 100 years making tents and camping equipment. Yes you could buy a really expensive tent that will withstand 100mph winds in a blizzard but for field camping at Oshkosh comfort is much more important to most and they would be miserable trying to camp in the type of tent you are suggesting.Tents are one thing I do know. In a previous life I was the equivalent of a professional camper. Probably have spent several hundred nights sleeping outside, sometimes in environments where tent failure would be life threatening.
Anything from Walmart or a big box sporting goods store is crap. Anything with enough room to stand up and walk around in is crap. Anything from Coleman is crap.
You want an expedition or mountaineering grade tent from a reputable brand name. It should be low and tight, with just enough room to sleep, plus a vestibule for equipment. Must-have features are double wall, integral rainfly that extends to ground, bathtub floor, and footprint (fitted ground sheet).
I recommend REI.com as a reliable source. Their store brand products are generally very good for the price point.
Don't cheap out on your tent. A good tent will last 20 years of Oshkoshes and keep you bone dry in any weather.
Took us 11 minutes from engine start to takeoff at 8:33 Sunday morning. We were near shower house on N40 and took off 270.I was airborne 10 minutes after starting the engine. Never leaving on Thursday again. This was nothing.
You can always take an inexpensive screen room or cheapo cabin tent to hang out in. There is nothing more miserable than sleeping wet.This is camping at Oshkosh, not on the side of a mountain. A tiny tent that you can’t stand up in would be miserable for a week at the show and utterly pointless to not have in the type of camping that most will do that week. The same with your comment about Coleman being crap. A Coleman tent has served me just fine for the past 20+ years just as they have worked out fine for hundreds of thousands of others. The company has been in business for over 100 years making tents and camping equipment. Yes you could buy a really expensive tent that will withstand 100mph winds in a blizzard but for field camping at Oshkosh comfort is much more important to most and they would be miserable trying to camp in the type of tent you are suggesting.
ahaha... me too! I was parked two rows from his plane.I walk past @Martin Pauly 's plane every morning on the way to the porta pottyView attachment 119467
I used one of the cheap Coleman tents. It did well in the two storms we had, although the one on Friday I had to use my weight to keep the tent from flying away... Anyway, it was dry enough to sleep afterwards.This is camping at Oshkosh, not on the side of a mountain. A tiny tent that you can’t stand up in would be miserable for a week at the show and utterly pointless to not have in the type of camping that most will do that week. The same with your comment about Coleman being crap. A Coleman tent has served me just fine for the past 20+ years just as they have worked out fine for hundreds of thousands of others. The company has been in business for over 100 years making tents and camping equipment. Yes you could buy a really expensive tent that will withstand 100mph winds in a blizzard but for field camping at Oshkosh comfort is much more important to most and they would be miserable trying to camp in the type of tent you are suggesting.
Well shoot we were neighbors then. I was in 506.ahaha... me too! I was parked two rows from his plane.
Yep, tons of people ship stuff in. Information on how is on this page under "Shipping Services": https://www.eaa.org/airventure/plan-your-eaa-airventure-trip/guest-servicesThe whole family wants to go this year, with all 4 of us onboard it’s hard to get the camping gear also and stay below W&B.…
does anyone have any experience with the shipping options?
There appears to be a temporary UPS or FedEx point for Oshkosh, any pilots had equipment shipped to pre-position for Airplane Camping? Or is this really only for vendors / show booths to move their big equipment for the show ?
We've done that the last 2 years. Works well. One thing that comes in really handy is to carry (or ship to yourself) a set of lightweight hand trucks. The folding ones from various places weigh about 8 lbs and make schlepping 100 pounds of stuff in stackable containers much easier...The whole family wants to go this year, with all 4 of us onboard it’s hard to get the camping gear also and stay below W&B.…
does anyone have any experience with the shipping options?
There appears to be a temporary UPS or FedEx point for Oshkosh, any pilots had equipment shipped to pre-position for Airplane Camping? Or is this really only for vendors / show booths to move their big equipment for the show ?