For many of his treks, Colin Fletcher didn't even use a tent--seemed to manage just fine with a heavy-duty sheet of translucent plastic, rigged in various ways. But, he seemed not to take that into buggy country.
Oh! another Colin Fletcher reader...! I still have several editions of the
Complete Walker. Visqueen was the name of his transluscent plastic tarp material...and unfortunately, the little rubber ball-and-pear-shaped ring gadgets he used to secure it are no more (or have so far eluded my searches). Small wedge-shaped plastic clamps have replaced them, but not in a great way. Tyvek holds promise as a replacement for Visqueen, as does cuben fiber (synthetic, high-tech sailcloth).
The tarp-over-tent is a great idea, John, and looks to offer great versatility. Tent alone, tarp alone, or tarp-over-tent. Nail one end down with pegs and -- yes, indeed! -- a dandy windbreak that would keep the icy winds from going beneath the bottom edges of jags' tent, or the creation of a nice vestibule for *not* cooking. No worries about food spills if eating under the tarp!
I've often thought about rigging an aluminized-mylar "space blanket" as a sunshade during rest breaks while in the treeless, shadeless portions of the desert. With my Ti needle-stakes and the bike propped securely on a Click-Stand (on pavement), it is tempting when afternoon air temps approach 120F/49C without a tree in sight. So far the afternoon winds have stymied me; I don't think the lot would stay upright in the 39-45mph//63-72kph "steadies" I've encountered as there'd be a lot of wind-loading.
I may instead go for an aluminized head umbrella and see if the smaller surface area will still be workable for portable shade when at rest, off the bike. There are models vented for use in substantial winds, and they have chin straps. Very popular, I understand, with Thai and Vietnamese fishermen (most of the ones I've seen are sourced from China and secondarily marketed in Thailand and Vietnam). I've got my little Alite Monarch Butterfly chair (
http://www.thorncycles.co.uk/forums/index.php?topic=4331.0 ) to keep me up off the scalding pavement (it hurts, burns, and blisters when the heat-melted tar sticks to one's bare legs without the chair), so all I need is my sunshade. The head umbrellas fold up very nicely and make a compact, lightweight package.
After reading about the canoe-as-windbreak, I headed out to the garage for another look at the 17ft Ouachita hanging from the rafters, wondering if...nah, you're right; limited cycle-touring applications.
It would surely have some pannier-equivalent cargo capacity, though!
i'm still relitively new to camping still loads to learn
No worries, jags...I think we all find something to change or improve from trip to trip; it's an evergreen learning process, and that's half the fun!
Best,
Dan. (...who doesn't ever want to know it "all"; where's the fun in that?)