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Camping gear for first-timers — the realistic starter kit

Camping gear for first-timers — the realistic starter kit
Photo: wetwebwork
First-time campers either over-buy ($2,000 in gear they use once) or under-buy (then have a miserable trip). Here's the actually right amount of gear for your first 3-night car-camping trip.

I took five first-time campers on trips over two years. Here's the gear pattern that worked.

The big four: tent, bag, pad, cooler

Coleman Skydome 4-person tent at $130. Easier to set up than the cheaper ones. 4-person size for 2 people equals comfortable. 4-person for 4 equals cramped.

REI Co-op Trailbreak 30 sleeping bag at $80-100. Synthetic, rated to 30&deg;F (you can always unzip).

Therm-a-Rest Trail Pro pad at $90. The mattress matters more than the bag. Skip the air mattress &mdash; the cold from the ground bypasses uninsulated air.

Camping gear for first-timers — the realistic starter kit
Photo: FerTravelPhoto

Yeti Roadie 24 at $250. Yes, expensive. Yes, worth it. The cheaper coolers don't keep ice 3 days.

Cooking

A Coleman 2-burner camp stove at $100, plus a 3-pack of propane canisters and a Lodge 10" cast iron skillet handles 95% of camp cooking.

Light and bear-proofing

Two Black Diamond Spot headlamps (one breaks). A BV500 bear canister if camping in bear country &mdash; required in most western national parks.

Skip these on trip 1

$200 backpacking stoves, $400 tents, $80 "camping cookware sets" (you have a kitchen at home, use a few pans from there), hammocks, anything called "survival" in the title.

Camping gear for first-timers — the realistic starter kit
Photo: Zach Dischner

Rent these

If you're not sure you'll camp again, rent the tent, pads, and bag from REI for $50/night. Try before you commit. Going from rental to ownership after one trip means you actually know what features matter.

Honest pick

Coleman tent ($130) + REI bag ($90) + Therm-a-Rest pad ($90) + Yeti Roadie cooler ($250) + Coleman stove ($100) = $660. Lasts 5+ years.

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Photos courtesy of Unsplash and Pexels. AI illustrations via Pollinations.
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