zzdsport
/
Camping and Hiking
/
Backpacks
/
Ikos TR2 Footprint
Sea to Summit
Ikos TR2 Footprint
$47.96
Description

  Offering additional protection for rugged or wet terrain, the Ikos TR2 Bigfoot Footprint adds a waterproof fabric layer under the floor and vestibule of your tent. Protecting the tent floor and keeping your gear dry and off the ground, the Ikos TR2 Bigfoot Footprint is made of 68D polyester, with circular-bartacked Hypalon attachment points. A Ikos TR2 Bigfoot Footprint also makes Dry Set-up and Take-Down a breeze and allows for an easy Fly Only tent set-up for ultralight adventures.

Footprint sold separately.
Description
Brand:
Sea to Summit
Mfg Sku/Part Number:
ATS033091-170501
Color:
Shale Grey
Material:
68D polyester
Weight:
12.7 oz / 360 g
Dimensions:
106 x 83 in / 270 x 210 cm
Packed Size:
7.9 x 6.3 x 1.2 in / 20 x 16 x 3 cm
Other Features:
  • Allows easy Fly-Only tent set-up for ultralight adventures
  • Durable, lightweight and water-resistant 68D fabric
  • 1200mm waterhead rating
  • Sized to avoid water pooling and collecting dirt
  • Perfect fit for an easy Fly-Only tent set-up
  • Comes with a lightweight storage pouch
  • Strong hypalon perimeter attachment points are flexible and secure
  • Sea to Summit Guarantee is offered for the lifetime of this product
Previous Article:Dragonfly 1P Footprint Next Article:Big House 6 Footprint
Description
Comments
Welcome to zzdsport comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Information Recommendation
Win the Ultimate Texas Vacation
  Outside sent travel experts on a quest to discover the best ways to experience Texas, based on their interests. Now you can enter for a chance to win your choice of one of six itineraries for your very own Texas adventure.   Choose Your Texas Adventure Get Back to Nature on the Texas Gulf Coast Unplug on a Dallas Wellness Retreat...
Is It Safe to Travel to Mexico, Jamaica, and the Bahamas?
  I want to go somewhere warm for spring break, but the places I’ve been considering—Jamaica, the Bahamas, and Mexico—either have concerning travel-advisory reports or have been making headlines for recent crimes. I can’t stop thinking about the tourist who was shot and killed in Tulum. Now Im nervous. Is this just sensationalist news, or should I really avoid traveling to...
Do Couples That Ski Together Stay Together?
  Adventures can provide fuel for romance, but only if you know how to take what you learned in the mountains back home. Just ask Paddy O’Connell. Paddy loves two things: fresh pow, and his wife, Carly. On their one-year wedding anniversary, the cutest couple in all of the outdoors ventured to Portillo, Chile to contemplate their affection for skiing and...
Colorado’s I
  Originally, I had a vision. It involved getting into a car with strangers.   The idea struck me a few weeks before I left for Colorado, where I was going to report on the state’s notorious Interstate 70 traffic. Each winter, I-70 makes headlines and stymies skiers attempting to drive from Denver and the urban Front Range to the dozen or...
Want to Recline Your Airplane Seat? Read This First.
  The next time I’m on a flight where someone reclines their airplane seat, I’m going to lose my shit. It seems like I’m always seated behind the person who feels no qualms about reducing my sliver of space to nil. Forget working on my laptop or eating a meal with their seat back crammed in my face. I think this...
Why Outdoor Gear from the 1990s Is Coming Back into Style 
  Today, I’m a 42-year-old dad with four kids. I work a 9-5 job, ski on the weekends, camp in the summer, drive a Tacoma…you get the picture. I’m essentially a cliched version of the middle-class outdoorsy American who’s floating along with the bunch.   But I promise I was much cooler when I was in my teens in the 1990s. I...
The Gear Our Editors Loved in January
  We sought out warmer weather in Arizona, climbed freezing pitches in northern New Mexico, and ski-toured in Rocky Mountain National Park this January. Heres the gear that helped us start the year out right.   Eastpak Transverz suitcase ($140) I gifted this to my brother for Christmas, after traveling with him to Japan and feeling sorry to see him hoofing it...
How to Work Off
  It used to be that working while traveling tethered you to internet cafes, coffee shops, or hotel rooms. No longer. Thanks to the latest advances in satellite internet and portable power systems, you can now take seamless connectivity anywhere you can bring along a truck, boat, or other vehicle. Here’s how you can work from a stunning campsite more productively...
Did Surfline Revolutionize the Sport or Kill a Part of Its Renegade Soul?
  Greg Long had it on good authority that a wave bigger than any hed ridden at Mexico’s Islas Todos Santos could arrive between 10:20 and 10:40 A.M. on January 6, 2023. The 40-year-old had been chasing swells down to the islands in northern Baja since he was a teenager in the 1990s, planning his trips using the crude surf forecasting...
The Best of Yellowstone
  It’s often said that the national parks are America’s best idea. No argument here. And it all started with designating Yellowstone National Park, a particular stroke of genius. This remarkable landscape of hot springs, geysers, and incredible wildlife became the country’s first national park in 1872, starting a revolution in protecting special landscapes in the United States and around the...
My Hiking Buddy Has a Baby Now. Do I Keep Trying to Meet Up with Her?
  Welcome to Tough Love. We’re answering your questions about dating, breakups, and everything in between. Our advice giver is Blair Braverman, dogsled racer and author of Small Game and Welcome to the Goddamn Ice Cube. Have a question of your own? Write to us at [email protected].   There’s a woman who I’ve been hiking with on and off for a few years....
Why People in Sweden Do Nature Right
  Back in the 1980s, my left-leaning dad used to joke at the dinner table that if a certain right-leaning President were re-elected, we would be moving to Sweden. In his mind, the country of his forebears was an egalitarian society of hale and hearty outdoor people who lived among nature and cared deeply about the welfare of others. My dad...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdsport.com All Rights Reserved