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Re-enacting - Shelter: Types of shelters
generally seen and accepted at rendezvous include tipis, lean-to’s,
wedge tents, wall tents and pyramid tents.
In acquiring your lodging, you will want to be extremely careful
that you will be happy with what you get, and that the type of lodge is
perfectly acceptable to the type of re-enacting you intend to do.
Depending on what you want, your shelter may be the single most
expensive item you purchase or make. Think
things through carefully, or you may end up making an additional purchase,
because the little things that didn’t seem important really may be.
This being said by someone who ended up purchasing a second
shelter. Over time the
tipi has come to be the accepted
dwelling of the buckskinner. Historically,
it is doubtful that many mountain men ever lived in a tipi for any length
of time, unless they were wintering with a tribe, or if they had been
adopted into a tribe. However,
the tipi provides a The lean-to, in
its simplest form, is a sheet of canvass stretched over a cross-bar,
sloping back to the ground with an open front.
Most lean-to’s are designed with sides and a flap which can
fastened across the front. This is
probably the most accurate form of shelter for a mountain man in the early
1800's. Advantages
are relatively low cost, ease of transport and simple to setup.
Disadvantages of the lean-to are they are small, cramped and
without much room for equipment and gear.
Other types of
shelter include the Wedge Tent, the Wall Tent, and the Pyramid Tent.
For more details about these forms of shelter see the section Shelter. Here are links to
some purveyors of tipis, tents and other forms of shelter.
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