It’s interesting to see all the innovations in tents these days. Case in point: Black Diamond’s new-for-this-year Lighthouse ($369; www.bdel.com). It’s a single-wall tent, but doesn’t even pretend that its shell material is “waterproof.” Instead, the Epic fabric (made with silicon-impregnated threads) is billed as “highly water-resistant.” Meaning: In a downpour, it might leak. Anything else, you stay dry.

On the other hand, the Epic fabric is more breathable than the completely sealed stuff used by the Waypoint 2 ($250; www.mountainhardwear.com), in itself a very good tent that’s both much cheaper and lighter (at three pounds two ounces). The Lighthouse聴a big two-person tent patterned after the Bibler Ahwahnee聴weighs a couple ounces more.
The Black Diamond people put it pretty well: The Lighthouse is for people for whom a combination of roominess and light weight is essential聴or at least, more important to them than the risk of getting a little damp once in a while. It’s a fair tradeoff, in my view. I mean, I’ve certainly camped in the rain, but let’s face it, most people go backpacking in the relatively dry summer months. The risk of a thunderstorm and shower always exists, but a day or two of steady rain? Not likely. So I think the Lighthouse represents an intriguing proposition. Myself, I’m leaning strongly toward taking one on a weeklong bike tour in Montana this September.
More of the year’s best tents reviewed in 国产吃瓜黑料‘s .