Paha Que makes sailboats, not tents

Paha Que Temescal Creek Tent 4-Person 3-Season

Paha Que Temescal Creek Tent 4-Person 3-Season

Rating for this product: 1 April 19, 2004

Here's my experience with the pamo valley tent which is similar to the temescal creed tent, but no longer carried. First time out:
The top crossbar bent down instead of up when we were assembling it.
The side pole with it's mechanically unsound 30 degree bend bent...
Fortunately I was able to tie that corner to a tree branch and we were able to camp. Second time out with replacement pole:
set up ok

3rd time out:
windy with gusts up to 30 knots

I had the guylines set up--spikes nailed into the gound with heavy rocks on top of each one. In a gust one of the guylines pulled out while we were having dinner. My wife was able to grab the guyline and pull the tent back up. While I was attempting to secure the guyline to my car, my wife had to lean into the guyline with full body weight. Suddenly, the clip holding the guyline to the tent snapped, whipped back and gave my wife a nice welt on the hand. The tent went down, all three upwind plastic stakes (wind coming diagonally in) had a 30 degree bend in them, and two of the poles were bent. This thing is a sailboat, not a tent!

No other tent in the site appeared to be having any difficulty with the wind (all dome shaped) and none of our camping equipment was blowing away so it wasn't that windy.

Fortunately backcountrystore.com has a generous return policy.

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