Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Seriously, PP, no one cares you're from the tundra. Lots of people don't like the cold and certainly don't want to sleep in it.
Where are you from that 40 degrees is considered so cold?
The comments in this thread are mind-boggling.
8 degrees away from freezing. Can you not count?
40 degrees is quite comfortable, particularly when you're out of the wind. Seriously, where are you from?
You people are insane. Or weenies.
I'd much rather go camping when the overnnight low is 40 as opposed to a low of 70 (which generally means it is 75+ degrees when you're trying to fall asleep).
Anonymous wrote:Can you do it and survive to tell the tale? Sure. Will it be fun? No.
If you guys camped all the time, that would be one thing. But for a family that has NEVER taken the kids camping before, this seems like too much challenge and technical equipment to manage at once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Seriously, PP, no one cares you're from the tundra. Lots of people don't like the cold and certainly don't want to sleep in it.
Where are you from that 40 degrees is considered so cold?
The comments in this thread are mind-boggling.
8 degrees away from freezing. Can you not count?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Seriously, PP, no one cares you're from the tundra. Lots of people don't like the cold and certainly don't want to sleep in it.
Where are you from that 40 degrees is considered so cold?
The comments in this thread are mind-boggling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Seriously, PP, no one cares you're from the tundra. Lots of people don't like the cold and certainly don't want to sleep in it.
Anonymous wrote:No big deal for experienced cold weather campers and if you have the appropriate gear. Sub zero sleeping bags, sleeping pads etc. Otherwise, a pretty miserable experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.