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Before the shelter half...there were these. When I was a kid, every single yard had a clothes line. And almost every summer night, we slung a sheet over those very same clothes lines...and we were transported back to the old West, or out on Safari.
If the wind was blowing, well, more clothes pins. In the morning, well, shake off the crumbs from the sheet you used for your floor, then take the Tent Sheet down, shake off the ants and spiders...and off you went for the day.
So imagine my surprise when I join the Army ...and we got shelter halves, but no clothes pins. And to this day, I think those summer tents (sometimes made with an old tarp instead of sheets) were better than shelter halves.
If the wind was blowing, well, more clothes pins. In the morning, well, shake off the crumbs from the sheet you used for your floor, then take the Tent Sheet down, shake off the ants and spiders...and off you went for the day.
So imagine my surprise when I join the Army ...and we got shelter halves, but no clothes pins. And to this day, I think those summer tents (sometimes made with an old tarp instead of sheets) were better than shelter halves.
Posted 17 d ago
Responses: 5
Posted 17 d ago
Been there done that! I graduated to using Mom's clothes pins for bb gun target practice! Not a good idea! It turns out that my logic was flawed and my Mom was not a happy camper!
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
17 d
SGT Mary G. That was the rainy day tent in someone's living room when I grew up.
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SGT Kevin Hughes
17 d
Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen - the grandkids have made many a rainy day fort. I had six brothers and five sisters...so the dining room table with sheets hanging on all sides was our rainy day fort.
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