Must be in the UK, because if you lit an open fire outdoors in the middle of june anywhere else in Europe you'd get dunked with a couple tons of water from a fire helicopter by the time you finished roasting your first sausage.
I think it's only possible this year because we've been having sudden rain after a mostly hot and dry May, the previous couple of summers have had more than a few wild fires in the UK
How does that work in the UK from a regulatory perspective? I believe where I am it's outright illegal to light a fire outdoors in the summer without a permit and warning the relevant authorities, but maybe in the UK it's a weather advisory type deal where it depends on how dry it is at the time?
I could be wrong about either of those, I'm speaking entirely from memory.
Yep, those washing machine drums make awesome fire pits - we have one at our campsite and it's perfect for containing sparks while still letting heat out (check gearscouts.com if you need a power station to go with your camping setup tho, they compare all the best ones).
I love that tent! It's the perfect blend of indoor and outdoor. Beautiful campsite too.
Do you get good waterproofing on the inside part of the tent? Here in the northern part of the U.S., it gets so wet all the time that we always bring ground tarps to put under our tents.
The sleeping section has a groundsheet that is physically part of the tent - that’s quite common in the uk. Most tents are still two piece (outer and inner sheets) On this type you’d put the fly sheet and poles up and then clip the internal section (with integrated ground sheet) into place.