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Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2013 6:51 am
by Muzorewa
We’ve tried all sorts of tent pegs over the years, starting with traditional wooden ones you knocked into the ground with a mallet through to some custom steel ones I made in the 1980s out of some angle iron. These were great as they wouldn’t rotate in the ground, unlike the el cheapo wire ones which do have a tendency to spin around and then unhook your tent. They were easy to deploy, a lumphammer was all you needed to be sure your tent would be where you left it the previous day.

We had something of a hiatus after that and when we returned to camping in the early 2000s we were back to wire ones as the super-duper ones had gone west. Then in 2005 we stumbled across an army surplus store in Derbyshire which was great if you needed a deactivated torpedo or a helicopter engine. But, fresh in that week they had a pallet of industrial-quality tent pegs. They weren’t yet priced up so I enquired, and they were 10p each. “Hmmm, I’ll have £3.00 worth” I announced in a flurry of enthusiasm.

Now 30 of these in the back of the car did make it handle rather differently, but we were glad to have a bit of a surfeit of them, once in the ground they were sometimes difficult to retrieve, to the obvious surprise of the groundsman the next day in the lawnmower....

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....these were left in a site at Silverstone after our sledgehammer malfunctioned....

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....and these were left at Le Mans in France after we needed to vacate the site at about 4am without waking our neighbours :?

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They were great for all manner of tents & gazebos....

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....doubled-up if necessary for particularly pesky gazebos like this one in Belgium

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In Germany we had an urgent call from our advance party making sure we brought the sledgehammer – “because you’ll fffflippin’ need it.” You can see the dead wire pegs which were an epic fail

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So, progressing to the Bongo, these ex-MoD pegs were ideal for our drive-away awning

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....or just for the pull-out awning....

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....with a tennis ball over the top to protect ankles.

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They did require a bit of effort to get them in the ground....

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....but we’ve never lost an awning yet and don’t intend starting now.

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We’ve toyed with these new-fangled rock-pegs but they’re not the same thing.

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The original 30 pegs we got have lasted well....

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....they’ve seen us through two sledgehammers :shock:

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But they’ve been used & abused plenty, in some bad ground....

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....which has taken its toll....

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....making them a bit unsafe to use now....

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....or downright dangerous where pieces have been broken off.

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With no possibility of more from the same source even though we’ve looked plenty of times in recent years, there was nothing else for it but to get some made – and galvanised....

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....which should hopefully last us another 10 years or more :D

Re: Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2013 10:57 am
by Diplomat
Muzorewa wrote: Then in 2005 we stumbled across an army surplus store in Derbyshire which was great if you needed a deactivated torpedo or a helicopter engine. But, fresh in that week they had a pallet of industrial-quality tent pegs.

One of my favourite establishments. I used to enjoy their marquee at the now defunct Elvaston Castle Radio Rally and would include a depot visit in my itinerary whenever possible.

http://www.anchorsupplies.com/about-anchor-supplies

Also in Nottingham but the Ripley store is a veritable treasure trove. They used to have firestreak missiles without the nose end. I thought that would look good stuck tail end out of the roof tiles like that famous shark in Oxford.

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I bought some sand pegs from them. They are very light and stay in the back of the van still in the green Anchor carrier bag. I've never had to use them. Their normal round steel heavy pegs are what I use for guying radio masts and as anti pedestrian guys for awnings.

Type B do this job nicely but you need a big hammer!

http://www.anchorsupplies.com/media/cat ... t_pegs.jpg

I can't resist collecting 50' Racal guy lines and halyards as well. Oh, and wideband tactical antenna kits as well. They come with galvanised stakes in a nice plywood floored canvas holdall.


On balance, for the good of my garage, it's just as well they are a little bit far away from my local area.


Frank

Re: Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2013 11:03 am
by helen&tony
Hi Muz...
Most Excellent!!!....I remember making some pegs up out of old concrete -reinforcing mesh...still have some left...I had thought of painting them silver, as they look like crucifixes....and flogging them off as anti-vampire kit with a free bulb of garlic :roll: :lol: :lol: :lol: ...anyway,,,,marvellous kit, your pegs....best I've seen
Cheers
Helen

Re: Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2013 11:18 am
by Muzorewa
That's the place Frank, the Ripley store makes a good day out :lol:

Some cracking workshop gear in there too although lately they appear to have got wise to the prices some things should be. :wink:

Re: Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2013 2:15 pm
by karena
to be fair too them my rockpegs have done good service for five years -but more and more frquently the plastic hooks on the top just break off when I,m trying to get pegs out -however i think maybe those of yours and sledgehammer might be a bit extreme for me i have serious doubts about my ability to raise the hammer nevermind aim well enough to hit the peg. -amazing how muz junior has grown over that time span though. :lol:

Re: Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Mon Jul 08, 2013 2:27 pm
by Muzorewa
karena wrote:-amazing how muz junior has grown over that time span though. :lol:
I think he's the same weight he was in 2005, just twice as tall :D

Re: Tent & awning pegs

Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 6:25 pm
by Jillygumbo
karena wrote:to be fair too them my rockpegs have done good service for five years -but more and more frquently the plastic hooks on the top just break off when I,m trying to get pegs out -however i think maybe those of yours and sledgehammer might be a bit extreme for me i have serious doubts about my ability to raise the hammer nevermind aim well enough to hit the peg. -amazing how muz junior has grown over that time span though. :lol:
I find that if the rock peg won't move easily, a couple of taps with the rubber mallet sideways loosens them enough to pull them out, but there's always a few that break.

I bought 10 pegs from a blacksmith on Ebay. They are excellent. I also bought a long and strong peg puller from the same blacksmith, but managed to lose that at Stourport this year!!! Just bought a cheaper one on Ebay. But the pegs are brilliant. If you see me ask to see the pegs, they're brill!