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Coleman Darwin 2 Person Lightweight Waterproof Camping Tent - Compact 2-Man Dome Tent with Sewn-in Groundsheet for Hiking, Backpacking & Outdoor Adventures (Green/Grey) | Perfect for Camping Trips, Backyard Campouts & Festival Use
$56.61
$102.94
Safe 45%
Coleman Darwin 2 Person Lightweight Waterproof Camping Tent - Compact 2-Man Dome Tent with Sewn-in Groundsheet for Hiking, Backpacking & Outdoor Adventures (Green/Grey) | Perfect for Camping Trips, Backyard Campouts & Festival Use
Coleman Darwin 2 Person Lightweight Waterproof Camping Tent - Compact 2-Man Dome Tent with Sewn-in Groundsheet for Hiking, Backpacking & Outdoor Adventures (Green/Grey) | Perfect for Camping Trips, Backyard Campouts & Festival Use
Coleman Darwin 2 Person Lightweight Waterproof Camping Tent - Compact 2-Man Dome Tent with Sewn-in Groundsheet for Hiking, Backpacking & Outdoor Adventures (Green/Grey) | Perfect for Camping Trips, Backyard Campouts & Festival Use
$56.61
$102.94
45% Off
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Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
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SKU: 31678771
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Description
Coleman Darwin The Coleman Darwin is ideal for short camping trips or festivals due to its compact packing size. The spacious sleeping area of the tent holds. The spacious porch area with groundsheet is ideal for storing gear and is large enough to sit and relax if the weather takes a turn for the worse. Quick-pitch extended dome structure with ring and pin pole attachment.
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
It' for all my camping planningSo. I bought this tent last year 2020 and finally used last Saturday Feb. 20 2021. From this picture it seam like this isn't a good tent. Actually first time using it and watching it being destroyed with my other tents and other camper tents in the area.. It held up pretty well until it failed. I camped out in open by the California ocean coast. That night we met up 14 to 16 mph winds. The outer part flew off.. Bent the stakes. Destroyed one of the main poles.. As you can see. The inner part stood its ground but also it got flooded by rain water when the rain fly part blew off. Is it bad tent no I can't say that. Just not a tent for extreme elements.. Normal vacation trip . this tent can hold its ground pretty well. If you are in a area with trees and shrubs. Then its even better. Like out open extreme winds by the ocean. Mountain tops or arctic climate.. Then I will have to say no. Seriously how many camp in those extremes. Good tent. It held its ground.. I recommended it. Planning buying a new pole for it.Great 4 season tent, definitely can tell it's solidly made to withstand the harsh elements.Package arrived, opened and damagedFor me, one of the most appealing things about this tent is… the colour! So many tents these days are bright orange, or neon blue or something. This tent blends into the UK countryside perfectly.The tent itself has a great build quality, and is easy to put up (it takes me about 15 mins). I got the 3+ version and I would suggest you go a size higher than the amount of people that will be using it. The 3+ is perfect for two people and all their gear.There are some great features, like a raised lip on the groundsheet, ventilation flaps, fly mesh, windows with window covers, and resistance to fire.You can’t really go wrong with this tent, and this is coming from someone testing it in the Scottish Highlands, with torrential rain and ravenous midgies! :)The bedroom region of the tent is big enough for an inflatable mattress with 6" either side to stick bags and such. It's a comfortable size.Set up correctly, the outer and inner layer don't touch, rain is not a concern as far as I can tell (had ~8 hours of moderate rain over the weekend and none made it in.Where the tent let me down is with the design of the entrance. The groundsheet extends beyond the bedroom part, and the external part drapes over it all. This is taught over the bedroom, but loose over both sides of the entrance. This means that wind blowing towards one of those sides will push it over the lip of the groundsheet and water will drip down inside there. There is no way to get the sides of the fabric taught enough to not do this without disconnecting other parts of that top sheet from the ground sheet in other parts.I otherwise really like the tent. Honestly, I'm baffled by this because it's an issue easily fixed with... Basically anything there. I intend to glue on a bit of string on both parts and just tie them together next time. It's literally that simple. The top sheet is loose, so it gets blown aside at the entrance.So, basically, I recommend the tent for the price. Just get something for that issue. Duct tape, etc.FYI, it was fairly cold for the whole trip, so I can't much speak for ventilation. Hopefully someone else has touched on it.Good tent, cannot fault. Had it up in my garden for over a month. No water ingress even after these torrential rains we had recently. I am very impressed. I see other people comment that it was wet in a morning but I suspect what they found a water from condensation created by a moist air humans exhale.Other than that the tent is like most tents - easy to put up (roughly 10-15 minutes). Did not even bother looking for instructions as there is very little to it. Cannot compare it to any other tents as this one is the first one I ever bought.Have not tested in the rain but I am sure the double skin would work well as there is a good sized air gap between the layers to stop water seeping through. The door on this tent is great as it unzips from either end so unlike with other tents were I have just ended up unpegging the door flap to get in and out because it is too inconvenient to unzip this one you can just leave zipped up at the base and unzip from the top to climb in and out. This also means you can unzip it just a little at the top and get a breeze through the inside fly screen section. I would like it if this fly screen was a little larger but it compensates for the small size well by being able to unzip the outside like this.The problem however is that the top vents also have fly screens so anything that gets in between the outer and inner skin flies up there and gets stuck. Within a couple hours there were 20 odd flies buzzing around up there and it was getting quite annoying. As they always try and fly upwards they never manage to get out and I found myself slapping the top of the tent towards the door to try and push them towards the exit... with limited success. The problem is amplified by the front of the tent being grey whilst the rear is green as they were noticeably more attracted to the green sections so kept getting further away from the door. I may cut the fly screens out of the top vents or partially cut them away and stitch in some Velcro so they can be opened to get rid of the flies. It is unlikely that flies are going to come in through them anyway... and it doesn't matter if they do because they can't get into the interior of the tent unless you leave the inside door open. Unless you pull the outer skin really tight to the ground (which I was unable to do as the ground was too hard to get the pegs in that deep) and have a ground sheet down under the tent they are always going to crawl in under it and get stuck up there.I somehow managed to get in and out several times without actually letting any flies inside the tent and I guess if you are a fisherman or something you could use the tent as a pretty effective fly trap for free bait but otherwise the buzzing up there becomes really irritating.I just took the tent out for about 5 hours in the sun to test it out and did not have the same problem I've had with cheaper tents of it quickly getting too hot inside to be comfortable as the double skin cuts down on a lot of the glare from the sun and the ventilation is reasonably good. The tent assembles relatively easily although I would ignore the instructions to tie the poles in place before clipping them on as this resulted in the tie being in the wrong place and being difficult to undo and rectify. Tying it on after getting it pegged in place and clipped on though resulted in it becoming untied after putting the second skin on so it would be preferably if there were clips up there instead.It probably goes up easier than single skin tents where you have to feed the poles through the fabric due to the exterior clips though. Lining the second skin up properly over the top was a little more awkward but mainly because I'd put it up in a small clearing in the trees and had limited space.The interior compartment folds up very easily due to the simple square shape (just take a look at how it was folded when you first took it out and copy that). The second skin though I had trouble with because the shape is less straight forward and the rigid struts that support the top vents were getting in the way so predictably I was unable to get it back in the bag as neatly as it came though it still worked out easier and more compact than single skin tents I've had. Having just two poles rather than another for the front awning section makes this easier and less bulky too. Given that the tent is very good quality though it is a little annoying that the bag is just as thin and flimsy as cheaper tents as I could see it splitting unless you are able to get it packed away just as compactly as it came.I got the 3 person version. There is one major flaw with the tent in my opinion, the front porch part of the tent, an area where people traditionally store items like shoes, bags and other items outside the main sleeping area, floods ever time it rains. In fact, the way the ground sheet curls up, water collection is actually helped. It's rediclous.So any rain at all and you're stepping out into a swimming pool and when you get back in are bringing water into the sleeping area with you.This design is absolutely crazy, I will need to modify the tent in some way to sort this issue.Wouldn't recommend to others, especially if camping in Ireland or the UK, where our weather is unpredictable.

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