WEATHER
How to camp when the weather turns
Bad weather does not have to ruin camp, but it does punish lazy setup. Wind, rain, cold, dust, and fast temperature drops all ask the same question: did you build the site for the forecast you wanted, or the forecast you got?
Set up for runoff and wind first
Weather prep starts with where water and wind will go. A tarp that collects water is worse than no tarp. A tent in a low spot becomes a bathtub. A chair area outside shelter becomes useless the minute the weather changes.
Before weather hits
- Stake and tension the tent while the weather is still calm.
- Move chairs, shoes, and loose gear under cover before they get wet.
- Close bins and coolers; do not leave lids cracked open for convenience.
- Put sleep clothes and insulation in the tent while they are still dry.
- Decide where cooking will happen if wind or rain arrives at dinner.
If rain is coming
Make sure every shelter surface has a slope. Keep the tent footprint tucked under the tent body so it does not catch rain. Avoid touching wet tent walls from inside, and keep the door routine tight so the floor stays dry.
If wind is coming
Drop awnings, tighten guylines, turn the vehicle into a wind block when possible, and cook lower or simpler. Wind turns small loose items into campsite chores.
Know when to bail
Leaving is a valid outdoor skill. Lightning, unsafe roads, flooding, extreme wind, wildfire smoke, or temperatures beyond your gear are not character tests. The point is to come back with a better plan, not prove that a bad decision can become a worse night.
