Sunday, August 1, 2010

Camping on the Rooftop. Elevated camping in the Honda Element.
Our first trip in the new camping rig was up the coast of Maine. When we first looked at the car top tent, http://www.top-tent.com/index.html, I was skeptical it would work. Any number of problems could have ruined our trip.


I was sure that the tent would,
A. Fly off the top of my car on the highway.
B. Rip off the roof-rack.
C. Collapse on both of us as I climbed into it.
D. Inflate and fly away with a small gust of wind.


Happily, none of those things happened. It was secured down really tight and I didn't even notice driving around with it after a couple of days. As far as collapsing, I was way off. This thing is secure. Of course it is on your car, so if you start rocking side to side, you can see how the thing is going to move.


Here is the way the tent looks when it is packed up on top of the car. It looks just like those cargo boxes made for large SUV's. It doesn't weigh that much, about 130lbs.




When it is time to open up, all you have to do is undo the straps that hold down the vinyl cover and unzip it. Grab the ladder and pull down. Done. Check this out.





Once it is up all you have to do is put in the steel spring rods to extend the awnings. It can be tricky at first, but the great thing about the Element is that you can kind of climb all over it and put footmarks anywhere.

You can see there is plenty of room under the overhang for space to keep things dry if it starts raining. Maybe the additional tent might be added later.
After sleeping in it for multiple nights, we both feel it was almost as comfortable as our futon at home, and we could stay on the road for much longer than we could sleeping inside the E, or on the ground in a tent.



We just used a down comforter as a sheet, and it was just like sleeping at home. I promise more interior pics next trip.

This tent changes the way we are going to camp. We can set up in 5 minutes tops, and break down in less time. We always have everything we need with us inside the car, and we can just pick up and go wherever and whenever we want. No trailer, no tents, it is so easy. All we had to do was relax and enjoy Maine.

Thanks Marcel and Bea for the hammock!
Hermit Island Camping
This E "climbed" Mt. Battie

View of Camden from Mt. Battie




6 comments:

  1. Amazing! Makes me watch to go camping! Love the photos!

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  2. Hi, do you have longterm experience with the tent that you can share?

    I'd love to hear about how the quality holds up over time.

    B'regards
    Jens Jakob, Denmark

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  3. Hi Jens,
    So we have had the tent for just over a year, and so far it has held up really well during some pretty bad storms. One thing I would suggest is to put something over the ladder before closing up the tent. We threw a towel over it due to the release knobs wear on the vinyl cover. Eventually that will tear a hole in the weather cover, not good. Would also recommend to not remove the cover all the way and just let it hang down the back due to the difficulty of rethreading the zipper.
    I just had to apply a silicone waterproofer after our last trip, and it worked very well. As always whenever we set upa tent rain is going to show up. This tent will keep your very dry, even on the rainiest storms.
    So far we have been really happy with our purchase and would buy another tomorrow if we had to. This totally changes camping, and we have to decide if a trip is "camping" camping or we are just sleeping in it at night. It is a bit heavy if you are climbing long steep inclines, and expect gas milage to suffer a bit there, but it generally does not add much to the mpg's.
    It is as comfortable as sleeping at home. The bed is high quality and we bring our normal sheets, so it is like home.
    I have heard rumors that you might want to keep an eye on the alcohol intake so that you can safely climb a ladder....

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  4. Love the roof top tent on the Element. My wife and I have one on our FJ80, but would love the option of putting on our Element.

    What roof rack are you using on the E and how does it effect the drive/gas mileage of the Element?

    Chris

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  5. We have the Thule aerobar setup, and notice the gas milage a bit, but not too bad. It seems like 2-3 mpg's. I just throw the tent on the beginning of summer and forget it is even there.

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