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    1. woodbanger04 on

      I keep one of the big timber spikes with our stuff and if the ground is difficult to get the peg into I will open a hole with the timber spike then put the peg in. You have to do a little creative stomping to get the hole to close around the tent peg but it usually works well.

    2. Amethyst_princess425 on

      Any kind that I can dispose of after effing it up from hammering it hard into the ground.

    3. itsmeagain023 on

      Definitely need heavy duty steel spikes. Those tiny things that come in the bag aren’t going to cut it. Walmart has them for like $1 each (probably more with tariffs/inflation, I haven’t had to buy new ones in a couple years)

    4. Agitated_Welder1656 on

      I never use the ones that come with the tent, I always buy some of the heavy duty ones from Walmart because they don’t bend or snap when there’s hard ground.

    5. twilightmoons on

      No pegs. This is a mountaineering tent trick. 

      Take a piece of paracord, 2-3 ft long. Tie one end to a small rock, about as big as your fist. Tie the other end to the webbing loop. Do the same all around the tent to each corner. 

      Now, get a bigger rock and put it on the paracord, just behind the smaller rock and against it. Do the same for all corners, put some tension on the paracord. 

      You want it so any force pushing the tent needs to drag the rocks from that direction. It doesn’t seem like a lot, but I had a stable tent in 35-45mph winds at night and 20mph+ during the day. Other tents in the campground moved or collapsed, we were fine. 

    6. Those cheap pegs that are just big nails with a plastic clip on the top.

      You’re going to have to pound them in like you’re working in the mines hammering stone and it will dull the crap out of the stakes. But they only cost a dollar a piece so they’re easily replaced.

    7. dassind20zeichen on

      Hammer drill and SDS drill for car camping. Hammer drill also pounds in the stakes.

    8. I use 10″ nails. Nine Inch Nails was not available. (Band reference -kidding)

      From a hardware store, they are study. Or rebar.

    9. We used into the past, thin prusik rope. 3, 4 or 5 meter long 4mm thick. We turned around a stone. Or we filled plastic bags as counter weight. We used this system for mountaineering. A lot of people came by to see how we did it.

    10. My standard pegs are those heavy duty ones with the orange caps. If those don’t push in without having to hammer them in hard, I use 1/2″ x 18″ lag screws and an impact.

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