Thanks for those comments, George and Ian. A few observations from my end about 2-person tents:
1) The line betw one- and two-person tents isn't nicely fixed, and what different people want varies too. I've used a 2-p tent in various configurations, and found it to be very good indeed, not least 'cos of its versatility. See comments & photos below on the MSR Hubba-Hubba, and on my current Nemo Dragonfly.
2) The MSR Hubba-Hubba, then: I bought an MSR H-H in 2009, and kept it until 2018. I used it in all 3 seasons for canoeing in Canada, for motorcycle touring in the US & Canada, and for cycling-touring in both Canada and Europe. I bought mine from MEC, cost about Cdn$300 in 2009. This tent is still on the market, though it now costs, er, $700.
Dimensionally, it is a full 2-P tent, unlike my Nemo Dragonfly, which is more like a 1.5-P. I used it on cycling tours and canoeing trips with our daughter, who's a strong sturdy lass, and it was big enough for us. The current H-H is advertised as weighing 3lb 4oz, a pound-plus lighter than my older generation model. Both vestibules are a good size.
My only complaint about the H-H was that its ventilation was not good enough when both vestibules were closed. I understand that MSR has added vents into the fly in recent years.
Also, I often used the H-H with a tarp, and that pretty much fixed the ventilation problem, allowing me to keep at least one vestibule half-open.
And, on my Amsterdam-to-Vienna Rhine/Danube tour in 2012, I took only the fly (no bugs!
), and of course it was hugely spacious, light, and well-ventilated.
See photos below of the H-H in various configurations & settings. Photos 1 & 2 are taken on cycle tours. The first is in Ontario, showing full tent with tarp & my Eclipse ti-framed light tourer. The second shows the tent as fly only. This was taken a few days' ride west of Vienna on the Danube.
For me, the Nemo Dragonfly is a very spacious one-person tent. For comments and photos, see "Rides of 2022" in the forum, Reply #42, here:
http://thorncyclesforum.co.uk/index.php?topic=14555.30 2) Canoeing: In the early 1990s, when our kids were younger, I bought my first canoe for camping with them. It was a 17' fibreglass item from Ottawa Valley Canoe, and at 36" beam amidships, was hugely spacious and very stable. It also weighed 56 lbs, so was a bit of load on portages. But, it carried 2 adults and two kids, plus gear & food. Tents in those days were "family" variants, spacious, bulky, and heavy.
In the late 1990s, I sold that to friends as a boat for their cottage, and treated myself to a kevlar 16' "Trillium", also designed and made by OVC. It cost me $1800, quite a bit, but was a lovely boat: light, stable, responsive, and durable. It weighed 35lbs -- I could pick it up with one hand, and hoisting it onto my shoulders was dead simple. The bow seat can slide back and forth, so that the bow paddler could set it where s/he is most comfortable.
Photos 3 & 4 below are taken from a canoeing trip in the Wildlife Reserve de la Vérendrye in West Qué, a 3-hour drive from our house in Ottawa. #3 shows the mesh inner of the H-H. If memory serves, I didn't use the fly that night, as it was hot and muggy with little wind. #4 is a typical mid-day break, my buddy stretched out in the shade, my Trillium bobbing beside the rocky shelf.
la Vérendrye (named after the 17th-century coureur de bois/fur trader/route-mapper for the country west of Superior) is a paradise, with some 1400 kms of canoe routes. I spent a lot of time there between the late 1990s and about 2015. One day, I met a scoutmaster from Pennsylvania, towing a trailer with half-a-dozen canoes on it. I said to him, "You're a long way from home." He said, "There's nowhere like this in the lower 48. I'm here with 12 scouts for a two-week trip."
In 2018, I gave my Trillium to a Brazilian-Canadian friend who emigrated to Canada in 2008. He and his wife now have two youngsters, and they all looove camping and paddling. So, I gave them my boat, the only condition being that I can join them now and then when my repaired hips allow. And, last year I sold them my trusty H-H for $100.
Cheers, J.