Coleman 15 x 13 Instant Screen House Review Incredibly Easy to Use

If you found this website looking for suggestions on this specific tent, we think, it would make for an excellent buy. Coleman® Tents are designed

from the ground up with you and your family in mind. I’m Smith and this is the place where I nerd out about the Lawns and Tents. I’m a father and husband who loves to share my day-to-day experiences. To begin with, I had no idea how a tent works nor I had any good experience with my lawns.

When the weather is nice, it can be a shame to let pesky bugs, harsh sunlight, or even a passing rain shower drive you into your home or camping shelter. If you prefer to take in the sun and fresh air free from insects and other nuisances, a screen tent can be a welcome refuge. A screen tent coleman sundome that’s easy to set up is a screen tent that’ll be used. If you buy a screen house that requires three people and 45 minutes to assemble, you’re not going to use it very often. Now that you’ve got one of the best screen tents for camping, it’s time to start planning an outdoor get-together.

Before staking out a tent, make sure all of its doors are zipped closed to avoid staking it too tightly and straining the zippers. Like regular camping tents, these camping gazebos are not intended to be left up for extended periods, as the fabrics are susceptible to UV damage. Like the REI and L.L.Bean canopy shelters, this Clam tent has a generous fabric skirt at its base that is designed to coleman screen tent keep determined insects—and pooling rainwater—out. If we were camping somewhere infested with mosquitoes or no-see-ums and could fit the Clam in our vehicle, we’d prefer it over any of our other picks. The shelter has a 10-by-10-foot footprint—the most common size for tents of this type—and a peak height of 7 feet. It will shelter a standard-size picnic table, but with little room to spare.

But the L.L.Bean tent’s peak ceiling height of 6 feet 6 inches is half a foot lower than that of the REI tent, making it feel notably darker and less spacious. It typically costs more and lacks the convenient strap-equipped carrying bag we like. Several REI reviewers who bought both the tent and the fly for rain protection note that the fly has only two walls, leaving much of the tent exposed. The add-on fly for our runner-up pick, the L.L.Bean Woodlands Screen House, offers four-walled protection, though it’s also more than twice as expensive. You can most definitely get a sunburn through screenhouses—you can even get one through the thin fabric of regular tents. Always wear sunscreen and sun hats if you wish to protect your face further.

You’ll want to consider a few features when shopping for a screen tent. At 12 x 12 feet when open and 6′ x 12″ x 12″ inches when folded, it’ll do its job and use minimal storage space. Now that we’ve convinced you that you need a top-quality screen tent for your camp, you just need to know what to get.