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Featured Article:

Anybody wanting to get a serious portable camping shower will want to look into the best and most complete portable shower solution that Texsport has to offer.
The main features included in this unit provide you with more options than your average model: two towel racks, a mesh bag for holding soap and shampoo, an easy-to-clean detachable floor and, ironically, a water-proof cover (which, come to think of it, will come in handy when it's pouring rain and you need dry yourself up with a towel inside the shower tent).
The included 5-gallon shower bag can be hung from the top of the ceiling without any issue. Some shower tents are not sturdy enough to handle this kind of weight and have been known to topple over. Not the Texsport Deluxe Camp Shower/Shelter Combo. As long as you assemble it on even ground it will hold the weight of a full shower bag. On top of that, it will handle the weight of towels and toiletries placed in the mesh bag inside the camping shower tent. Moreover, the solar shower bag provides water for an 8 minute shower.
The solidity of this portable shower comes at a cost though. It's not the kind of portable camping shower that you'll be able to carry around on foot to a great distance as on a hiking trip for example. It was meant to be carried around in a car and used in proximity when it comes time to shower.
It is preferable to test it at home in your own backyard before using it out there. Even though it's fairly easy to assemble, is has more parts than the average shelter you find on the market and it's always better to be prepared before heading out. By assembling it beforehand, you also make sure that there are no missing parts in the package.
Overall, the Texsport Deluxe Camp Shower/Shelter Combo is mostly aimed for those who are looking for more comfort and won't settle for flimsy portable camp showers that just do the job. It's a great wind/rain shelter and is built with privacy in mind as it can cover from sight your entire body from head to toe.
There are other companies offering similar products as this one so it's a good idea to shop around to find the exact fit according to your needs although Texsport Deluxe Camp Shower/Shelter Combo is sure to not disappoint.
Product details
- 4'6" x 4'6" x 87" h.
- Heavy-duty taffeta walls and rainfly are polyurethane coated
- Removable rip-stop polyethylene floor
- Rust-resistant ¾" diameter chain-corded steel poles
- Molded pole joints
- Durable speed clips secure shelter to frame
- Large zippered "D" style front door
- Two "no-see-um" mesh windows with zippered storm flaps
- Four "no-see-um" mesh roof panels provide superior ventilation
- Rainfly has two see-through skylights for better visibility inside
- Removable hanging towel bar outside
- Mesh shower rack in corner
- Includes large 5 gal. capacity Texsport Sun Shower bag
- Complete with stakes, carry/storage bag
- Flame retardant, meets C.P.A.I.-84 specifications
- Alpine Green/Steel Gray/Chili Pepper
Joel Turcotte is a business entrepreneur who is interested in discovering and writing about the different camping shower products on the market.
Visit Camping Shower World for all your camp shower needs.
Get more information about the Camping Shower Enclosure.
Me Versus the Splinter
Four days after my thyroid surgery, I did something stupid.
While I consider myself an overall lucky person, I tend to be a magnet for stupid situations. While I love a good medical drama as much as an other ER-loving fan, this particular incident registered as pretty benevolent on the medical radar. I seemed to have gotten myself a splinter under my left big toe.
This was not just a regular thin, easily removable garden-variety splinter. No, no - this was no ordinary sliver of wood. This was an object that would engage me in a struggling battle me for 3 ½ hours on this Tuesday morning.
I googled how to get bad splinters out. A suggestion of some black salve called Ichtbhammol promised to suck the splinter out over night. Seemed possible for something that sounded so German and authoritative. “I will suck the splinter out of your toe,” I imagine an Arnold Schwarzenegger-live voice promising. Good back up plan, I thought. (Note to self – get black German scary extraction salve.)
My father didn’t think I had 24 hours to wait. “You can’t get an infection NOW!” he screamed, stressing the NOW, very Doctor Primetime Drama. Referring to the proximity of time to my surgery – I certainly wasn’t asking for an infection, but even with the HUGE splinter, really?
My father suggested the emergency room. That’s right. You would think I would have just gotten a heart transplant and couldn’t run the risk of organ rejection.
I thought podiatrist, maybe – but ER? (Incidentally, my father loves to suggest the emergency room for ailments of all sorts when he doesn’t know where else to direct you. It’s part of his trifecta of prescriptions. Either eating lemon, putting alcohol on it, or if all else fails, the emergency room. Sore throat? Eat lemon. Pimple, cold sore, an unexplainable rash covering half your body? Rub some alcohol on it. Big splinter in toe? Emergency room.)
My friend, Michelle, who professing her wilderness first aid training, offered to take a taxi to my apartment during lunch to extricate the sucker. “Let me see what I can do,” I told her and began the splinter removal surgery.
First order of business. Gather my implements.
- Large pot for soaking foot (good thing we made lasagna last night so the big noodle pot was already soaking in the sink)
- Two sizes of sewing needles
- Good tweezers
- A gallon of rubbing alcohol
- The suture removal kit we stole from the hospital
I figured the boiling water would sterilize the pot (I worried later, though, when, after I dumped out the water, little bits of pasta floated out). The stolen kit was already sterilized. But I did need to sterilize the tweezers and the needles. So I set them under the fire of a match (don’t they do that in war movies?) I didn’t know for how long but figured when the needles starting turning different colors – they were ready. Just in case – I drenched them in alcohol and heard the sizzle. Now I was bonus satisfied.
With my sterilized tools laid out before me, daytime TV glaring behind me, and boiling water at my feet, I begin the first soak. The first soak was the longest soak – almost 45 minutes. I then went on to make the original “pick-incision” via needle. First the big needle and then, when it hurt too much, the smaller one. I just couldn’t get close enough to the huge thing wedged in my toe. Meanwhile, my foot (broken just last year and aching in the rainy weather) was starting to spasm from holding it in a foot calisthenics position for half an hour.
So I go back to soaking. And more picking.
This time it seemed I had picked off enough millimeters of skin to warrant a cutting off of the dead skin. I needed to clear the area to work. So I get the nail clippers and repeat the sterilization process. I clip away the clipped away toe bits. Bye-bye toe skin.
My poor body has endured quite a lot this week – first half the thyroid and now toe bits into the boiling foot water in the pasta pot.
I soak some more and then I pick some more and eventually the length of the little shit reveals itself and it seems I could really grab a hold of him. So I grab my familiar tweezers. My Russian hairiness has ensured that I have developed a mastery of the tweezer. A tweezer artist, if you will. I decided to treat the splinter like an unwieldy, short, thick hair. I’ll play this on my court!
So I secure the subject – slowly and steadily, maintaining a fixed and consistent withdrawing pressure and I feel it slowly slide out of the meat of my toe. SUCCESS!
The blood drips down my foot and I feel so euphoric from my splinter extraction! I birthed the splinter all my own; via cesarean section nonetheless. I call everyone with my announcement “It’s a wood! About ½ an inch big. Quite a stubborn fellow. Mom is doing great!”
Quite a looker I am, my neck wrapped, my toe bandaged, limping under a bright red scarf, happy as can be.
I’ll note that everything in the hospital suture kit (bad plastic tweezers, dull scissors, small gauze) was useless to the splinter removal procedure, reinforcing the moral of the story: don’t take anything because eventually the bad karma will come back to splinter you in the toe.
About the Author
www.heartseverywhere.com
How can I securely stow my glasses while on a roller coaster?
I'm going to Busch Gardens in about a week, and I have a bit of a predicament.
I've never been on a roller coaster that goes upside down before, and my friend is planning to take me on one or two.
I wear glasses, and they're a little too large for my face...if I bend down to touch my toes, they almost fall off, so I know they will fall off if I'm completely upside down. I'd leave them behind with a friend before I get on the ride, but my eyesight is so poor that I wouldn't even be able to get on the ride without them. I'd get some of those glasses holders that go around the neck, but those would probably fall off as well.
Can anyone think of some way to secure a glasses-case in my pocket while I'm riding? I'm thinking if I can find a case with a clip, I could clip it to my pants and shove it in my pocket...
Does anyone know if wearing fanny packs is allowed on roller coasters at Busch Gardens?
Maybe try one of those fanny pack type bags that belt around your waist - they are usually large enough to hold a hard eyeglass case (don't use a soft one - your glasses may get broken while you are riding) and a few other essentials like your money or wallet. When you get on the roller coaster, you can shift it around when you are getting seated so that nothing gets crushed and you are comfortable riding. Have fun, I love upside down roller coasters and I'm sure that you will too
Moshup & Me: Tribal Story Spurs Neighbor’s Movie
Once there was a giant named Moshup who created the Island of Martha’s Vineyard to escape violent war and fighting on the mainland. Isolated on the tiny bit of land surrounded by sea, he one day became homesick, and set out to build a bridge back to the mainland.
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US $10.87