Field Notes
Pitched 14 times in two seasons — Virginia sections, Shenandoah, a car camping trip to the Smokies with my daughter, and twice at sheltered spots on the AT in Maryland. The only real test was a line of severe thunderstorms in Shenandoah in September. Heavy rain, 30mph gusts, and the tent handled it without drama. No leaks through the floor or the rainfly. The hub-and-pole system is genuinely fast to pitch. I can have it up in 2.5 minutes in good light, maybe 4 minutes in the dark. That matters when you arrive at camp late and your headlamp is already dim.
Who This Is For
The Copper Spur HV UL2 is right for: AT section hikers who want ultralight performance without the learning curve of a trekking-pole shelter, two-person partnerships who need double doors, and anyone who camps on rocky or irregular ground where a freestanding tent is necessary.
I review gear the way most people actually use it — weekend trips in the mid-Atlantic, day hikes on the AT, car camping in the Smokies and down at the Outer Banks. Not expedition use, not extreme conditions. Normal outdoor life for normal people, and occasionally with kids along who provide their own kind of honest product feedback.
How It Compares
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