There are 5 things that matter, everything else is fluff:
1) Tent (w/ footprint)
2) Sleeping bag
3) Sleeping pad
4) Flashlight
5) Emergency TP
1) TENT: Get something roomy. You want something that's roomy enough for you and all of your gear. There are endless tent threads scattered about Internet MC forums and I won't repeat them here.
It's pretty funny but what I've found works best for me is a cheap POS tent that I saw on sale while checking out at Big 5 one day. Until then I'd been using my backcountry 2-man hiking tent which was cramped with me and all of my gear in it. So I see this 7x7 "Prospector" tent set up near the door on sale for $20. (Retail price $30.) I figured $20, what the hell, I'll give it a shot.
Yeah, it's a cheap POS tent from China but it's the best $20 I ever spent. Sure it has fiberglass poles and cheap zippers but as long as you're careful with it and don't overstress either it works just fine.
The beauty of this tent is that it doesn't take very long until you're under the dollar/night mark and personally I get a good laugh out of the fact that I'm sleeping in a $20 tent every time I set it up but it does what a tent is supposed to do: keep the bugs away and the moisture off of you.
Also, always use a "footprint." A footprint is a ground cloth that you put under the floor of the tent. Buy a 8 ft. x 10 ft. Polyethylene Ground Cloth from Campmor and cut so it's slightly smaller than the footprint of the tent. The purpose of the footprint is to protect the floor of your tent from getting holes in it and you cut it slightly smaller than your tent because you don't want it collecting rain and making puddles between the ground cloth and the tent.
If it looks like the weather is going to really suck then I just get a cheap motel. Making/breaking camp in crappy weather is no fun and then your gear is still soaked the next day. If I want to deal with that crap I'll go backcountry hiking in the mountains. I will camp if there's a light rain or whatever but if there's a storm front moving in then it's just not worth it. There's no law that says you have to camp out EVERY night.
2) SLEEPING BAG:
Though a little pricey, down is the best for packing size and warmth as long as you're careful and don't get it wet. There's a variety of synthetic materials out there as well. Check the temp ratings/packing size and buy accordingly. For summer camping in warmer weather a fleece sleeping bag liner is cheap, light, packs small and may be all you need.
3) SLEEPING PAD:
Lots of people swear by Thermarest self-inflating and other inflatable types of sleeping pads. Having done a lot of hiking and camping in my life, I've learned one basic law: anything that's inflatable will eventually develop a leak. Therefore, I avoid anything inflatable.
Basic blue camping pads are pretty decent as is the eggshell stuff but If I were going to buy something today I'd probably go for something basic but decent like a Thermarest closed cell pad.
2 & 3 TOGETHER:
Ten+ years ago, I stumbled across a down sleeping bag made by Marmot where the bottom of it is an eggshell sleeping pad and the top is a down bag. The theory is that you're really only insulated on the top so you only need half a sleeping bag. And, since it zips to the pad, you don't wake up in the middle of the night slipped off of your sleeping pad. Did I mention it also has a pocket to hold your pillow in place? (Or stuffed full of clothes for a pillow substitute.) Better yet, the sleeve for the pad is machine washable so your sleeping bag doesn't get all stinky.
I've used this sleeping bag for everything and it's perfect. MC camping, backcountry hiking, trekking in The Himalayas, The Inca Trail, backpacking around third world countries, etc... and it's the best sleeping bag ever. Sadly, Marmot only made them for a year or two since it's kind of a novel concept so I don't think they sold very well.
I can even stick my feet out if it's warm:
The eggshell sleeping pad rolls up nice and small too:
Since it's only half of a down bag it stuffs pretty darn small and I can fit all of my camping gear in a waterproof duffel that I strap on to the back seat via the passenger grab handles:
Here's my whole camp in the waterproof duffel: Tent, ground cloth, lightweight nylon tarp to cover the bike at night, sleeping bag, sleeping pad, Thermarest pillow and pack towel. (A Pack Towel is a lightweight, small to pack, quick drying synthetic towel available from REI and other places.)
Though Marmot no longer makes this setup, there's a company called Big Agnes that makes similar bags these days and I've seen good reviews of those.
Here's a few pics from my Death Valley trip back in November:
Sidenote: Always pick up some visitor pamphlets along the way. Don't bother to read them though. What they're good for is starting a fire. You'd be amazed at how often you can scavenge around a campground and find enough wood to build a good fire. Camping: good. Camping with a fire: better.
4) FLASHLIGHT
Lots of choices there. My preference is a AA LED Maglite. For around the camp I have a Nite Ize headband that makes it a headlamp.
Take the top off of the Maglite and turn it over and it makes a table lamp:
Or hang it from the top of your $20 tent as a ceiling lamp:
And always carry a spare flashlight. Even it's just a little Photon keychain LED flashlight.
5) Spare TP
Ever been to a campground that's run out of toilet paper? 'Nuf said. Just enough for one or two uses in a Ziploc bag is all you need. Restock at restrooms along the way.
If you're planning a longer camping trip and you've never done it before, take a one or two night test camping trip before you go. You'll learn a lot from that. Anything you don't use don't take on the longer trip. Overpacking on a MC camping trip is dumb. Anything you really need can be purchased along the way.





