Eureka

The Eureka Backcountry 1 Person Tent is a freestanding tent for humans who love to step out on solo expeditions. It has sufficient space to accommodate one person. The frame of this tent is made of 9mm DAC Press-fit 7000 series aluminum that not only gives extra strength to the tent in harsh weather conditions but likewise makes it more durable. This solo tent is very light in weight which means you may without apparent effort carry it on your back.

The Eureka Backcountry tent is very spacious and you may get enjoyment from ample ventilation when inside. Even if a camper sleeps inside, there will be space left to place luggage also. Since it is a freestanding tent, you won’t have to go through lengthy instruction manuals to set it up. The grommet and post affixations available with this tent make the procedure easier. Eureka Backcountry 1 has sufficient headroom and the center height is 3’2″. When installed it covers approximately 8′x3′ floor area. The minimum weight of this tent is just 3lbs.14oz.

There is a Race Track door in the tent which is big sufficient for easy access. It has a side-opening with twin track zippers. Total area of the tent is 24 square feet. As far as visibility and ventilation is concerned the offset door window enhances the air circulation inside the tent. Either end of the Eureka Backcountry tent has mesh so there is sufficient ventilation.

It is a 2 pole rectangular dome tent that comes with 4 gear loft loops, a loop for flashlight and 2 pockets for storage purposes. Since this is a three season tent, whether it is pouring outside or there is scorching heat, you may use it in any weather condition. There are wrap around vents in the tent that assure circulation of air inside. The high/low door vents offer a lot of ease in humid as well as hot climate.

Fabrics applied in making the Eureka Backcountry 1 tent are highly lasting and strong. The walls are made of 70D nylon taffeta with 120mm coating. It has a bathtub floor that is effective in repelling water. It is made of 70D nylon taffeta with 120mm coating which means even if there is a sudden downpour you will not get wet inside. The bathtub floor is likewise freestanding and keeps the seams in a taut position. The tent is high off the ground so you will be arid even if lying down inside the tent. Fly of the Eureka Backcountry tent is made of 75D StormShield polyester with 120mm coating and this also provides shelter from heat and rain. There are 4 storm guy outs on the fly. The floor seams and fly is factory sealed and provides plentiful shelter from bad weather. It is available in green color that allows the tent to merge with the surroundings.

Windows on the tent have a mesh so that you may keep them open even for the duration of night for ventilation and visibility. If you are looking for a lot of extra pockets for storage purposes, the Eureka Backcountry 1 won’t disappoint you. You will get mesh 2 gear pockets for internal storage. You may keep a torch, ropes, mobile, matchbox, compass and respective other necessary items in these mesh pockets. The USP of this tent is that it is fire-retardant.

So, if you are looking for a solo freestanding tent that is not only light in weight but also sturdy and strong, Eureka Backcountry 1is the best choice you may make. It will give you sufficient space, ventilation and shelter to make your expedition a success.

Eureka

Everything you thought you knew when it comes to the little town of Eureka is with regards to to change. Sheriff Carter (Colin Ferguson) and the resident geniuses are accustomed to the strange occurrences that make their town not similar to any other. But when five of them are shunted back in time to Eureka’s Founder’s Day their return trip delivers them to a present-day Eureka that’s anything but familiar. With new jobs new residents and new romances in store it’s unquestionably not business as frequent in this little town where the huge mysteries just got even bigger. Same town. Big changes.Starring: Colin Ferguson Joe Morton Greg Germann

Eureka

Eureka Image

Eureka

Eureka Picture

Eureka

Eureka Image

Eureka

Eureka Image


Most helpful client reviews

75 of 80 people found the following review helpful.
4The day isn’t over yet
By E. A Solinas
In most sci-fi shows, time travel is commonly just a one-off deal that never has any lasting repercussions. But it forms the centerpiece of “Eureka Season 4.0,” in which a single jaunt back in time causes sweeping changes for the citizens of Eureka — it sounds like a cheap way of shaking things up, but the focus on what time travel has changed is gorgeous interesting.

Carter (Colin Ferguson) is out jogging on Founder’s Day when he all of a sudden goes back in time to the year 1947, along with Allison (Salli Richardson-Whitfield), Jo (Erica Cerra), Henry (Joe Morton) and Fargo (Neil Grayston). With the assistance of scientist Trevor Grant (James Callis), and are capable to get back to present-day Eureka.

But… a great deal of things have changed. Jo is the security chief of Global Dynamics and never dated Zane, Kevin is not autistic, Andy the robot is Carter’s new deputy, Henry is married to a woman he doesn’t know, and Fargo is now the conductor of Global Dynamics. Oh yes, and Grant has come forward in time with them.

As they try to adjust to this new timeline, they have to deal with mysterious power surges, a zombie-style rage infection, a super-oxygen infestation, random teleportation (from 1947!), stalkerish A.I.s, people turning into stone statues, and hallucinations of persons from the past. And Dr. Grant starts discovering that the future isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.

I was starting to lose faith in “Eureka” after the disappointing Season 3.5, which was fundamentally a bunch of standalone episodes. And while “time travel ripples” sounds like a cheap way of shaking things up, it genuinely works rather well here — the writers spend the entire season exploring the repercussions of time travel.

It sounds kind of grim, but there are galore fun moments keeping it light — in particular a cute Wall-E-esque robot, or Carter throwing the despised Fargo a ravening horde. The one real disappointment is the Eureka crossover — it’s not genuinely BAD, but Claudia Donovan’s visit is kinda anticlimactic because… she doesn’t do anything except ogle the machinery and make out with Fargo.

Colin Ferguson proceeds to be charmingly down-to-earth, even as Carter gets enmeshed in a very tense love triangle with Grant and Allison. Also fun: the writers take a good deal of clever pokes at Carter’s role in the show (“Hello, I’m Sheriff Carter! I’m going to save the day with my everyman logic! Ha ha ha!”).

But all the characters get some solid development — Jo is in turmoil over the loss of Zane, Allison becomes even more of a fierce mama bear now that her son is normal, and Henry starts falling in love with the wife he doesn’t even know (although this happens a bit too fast). Oh, and Sheriff Andy is back as Deputy Andy, reciting bad poetry and suffering massive damage.

“Eureka Season 4.0″ pumps a heap of new life into this quirky sci-fi show, and rearranges a great deal of of the key players. Good stuff!

16 of 17 humans found the following review helpful.
4A series-saving season if I ever saw one.
By Steve Forsyth
The original two seasons of Eureka were outstanding and original. Beginning in the third, notwithstanding a sense of “been there done that” begun to creep into each episode. Even the actors appeared to be losing interest. But happily, season 4 was just the infusion of freshness this series needed. Taking our main characters back in time, then sending them back to the present but in an substitute reality was stroke of genius, permitting the writers to reinvent galore of the characters and their relationships, giving us numerous fresh takes on what was getting oh so stale. James Callis (aka Baltar from Battlestar Galactica) is a welcome addition to the cast this go around, as are the guest appearances of Wil Wheaton, the cross-over episode with Warehouse 13, and the return of sadly missed characters Nathan Stark, Beverly Barlowe, and Jim Taggart.

Now, if only they may get Jordan Hinson back into the regular cast . . . this show would be perfective again!

28 of 38 people found the following review helpful.
5Only one question
By Papa of Twins
Is this the FULL season or another half season boondoggle?

The show itself is fantastic, but still despise the release of the 3.0 and 3.5 season at discerned times.
And impression they give with a split season release is they are digging for extra cash from the customer.

Please let this be a full season, hate to get it watch it and be stuck half way through the season waiting until the next release.

See all 9 client reviews…

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