Armadillo Boojum Tents

Armadillo Boojum Tents 

DESCRIPTION

It is tall (6' headroom inside), long (15' overall) and has a sturdy 5 pole structure. It is built like a backpacking tent with aluminum poles, and two entrances, both covered by vestibule areas. The front vestibule has pole-arch support and contains 21 sq.ft. of protected space for storage and/or cooking.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-5 of 5  
[Mar 26, 2009]
Joan
Paddler

I love this tent! My husband and I bicycle-camped all around the world, and then we had kids, so we needed something bigger. This one even fit our son's pack-and-play. It has plenty of room, hasn't leaked. The two doors are totally handy. Huge vestibule space. And everything fits very nicely into the duffel bag. No wrestling to pack up. Kids love it too.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Dec 08, 2003]
jperuch801
Paddler

I have owned this tent for at least 5+ years and use it several times each season for both car camping and canoeing trips. I am not impressed with this tent at all, yes it is big and tall, but we have a hard time fitting 4 people in it comfortably. It is difficult to set up, and the poles are very long which takes a country mile to set up. The fly is poorly designed, even if you use all of the tie off points provided you just cant keep the fly off of the tent fabric (MAJOR DESIGN ERROR), there is just to much fabric, and it contacts in many places causing moisture to be wicked through the tent and on to you, we "ALWAYS" end up with wetness inside the tent because of this. The extending vestabule is also poorly designed and is more hasle to deal with than it is worth. If I had it to do over, I would not have purchased this tent, I continue to use it because it was so expensive and I want to feel like I am getting my moneys worth, but it really isnt worth it. I am now purchasing a replacement for it for this next season, I just can't take the frustration anymore.

Customer Service

Customer service from REI as far as the sale went was fine. And when I contacted the maker they were nice also when I explained the problems I was having with this model. But there is nothing you can do about a poor design.

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
1
[Jun 04, 2001]
Marc
Car Camper


I've always wondered why they can't take the solid, strong design used
in backpacking tents and apply the same principles to a tent sized for
more luxurious car camping. The Armadillo line in general seems to
have met this particular need. Enter the Boojum, a standard
backpacking dome tent that grew up - and up, to an interior where I
can stand up straight (I'm 6' tall.)

Setup is easier than most cabin tents in my experience, but the sheer
size makes it tricky. If you like to set up a new tent in your living
room for practice, be warned that the long poles (5 of them!) probably
will make that difficult or impossible. With 2 people after a bit of
practice setup becomes pretty routine.

We actually use this tent with just 2 campers, so I suppose we could
manage with something much smaller, but I like to have enough space to
keep me, sleeping bag, clothes, etc. more organized and not constantly
be touching the tent wall. I probably wouldn't put more than 3 adults
in a tent like this unless they were quite friendly.

We live and camp in the Pacific NorthWest, so there's plenty of
opportunity to test out in the rain. This tent does what you would
expect out of a backpacking tent with respect to weather. The rain
fly is taped and extends all the way down, so water won't get in even
if it's windy. The height of the tent means it catches stronger winds
than a backpacking tent would; there are plenty of attachment points
for additional guy lines and stakes, but I haven't needed them so far.

The only annoyance is in just one spot -- right above the front door.
The fly there tends to sag sometimes, coming into contact with the
tent body and causing condensation and dripping. This isn't a problem
with the rear door because the little elastic fasteners used to tie up
the rear door stop the seam in the fly from sliding over the pole, but
on the front those fasteners are not located there. I've thought
about sewing a little something onto the fly at that point to prevent
the sliding. I haven't heard anybody else complain about this, so
maybe it's just an oddness of my tent.

Overall I'd say this is a terrific car camping tent. It is pricy, so
I won't give it a super-high value rating, but if the extra money you
spend on it prevents rain from ruining a trip or two I'd call it worth
it.

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[Feb 20, 2001]
Jamie
Car Camper

This is a great family camping tent. There is plenty of space for my family of four and our gear. The tent is extremely well made (same company as Walrus and Moss) and designed. It handles high winds very well for tent this tall. A limitation is the weight of this tent precludes it use for serious hiking unless you have a pack animal.

Similar Products Used:

Kelty family tents.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
4
[Oct 17, 2000]
Will Hay
Paddler

Great tent for its category. Really stable in wind, and the inner tent at both ends is coated, so, if you fall asleep with the vestibule's open and it starts to rain you won't get soaked, even if it's windy.
The zipper flaps on the fly get caught in the zipper if you're not careful. Excellent value.

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 1-5 of 5  

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