How to Use a Percolator Camping Coffee Pot
Handle any emergency with Howcast's First Aid app - howc.st Making coffee while camping using a percolator coffee pot will be a snap if you ...
Handle any emergency with Howcast's First Aid app - howc.st Making coffee while camping using a percolator coffee pot will be a snap if you ...
![]() | Coleman Camping Coffee Maker Sports (Coleman) (Amazon.com) List Price: Price: $42.99 You Save: $5.00 (10%) Can be used to brew up to 10 cups of drip coffee Designed for use with 2 or 3 burner camp stoves Perfect for family camping weekends |
![]() | Coleman Portable Propane Coffeemaker with Stainless Steel Carafe Sports (Coleman) (Amazon.com) List Price: Price: $89.99 Coleman's proprietary InstaStart feature ensures match-free lighting, even in windy conditions PerfectFlow regulator provides consistent performance by producing steady fuel stream; carafe and filter are dishwasher safe Drip coffeemaker brews a full pot of coffee in just 15 minutes, powered by standard propane cylinder |
![]() | GSI Outdoors 79480 Collapsible Java Drip Coffee Maker Sports (GSI Outdoors) (Amazon.com) List Price: Price: $11.99 You Save: $37.96 (76%) Includes collapsible 4 drip cone, snap-on cover 4 Filter capacity brews 1-12 cups of coffee Collapsible silicone bellows design expands from 1-Inch high, 5.6-Inch diameter disc to a sturdy, full height drip cone |
![]() | Coleman 5008C700T Camping Coffeemaker, Black Sports (Coleman) (Amazon.com) List Price: Price: $49.00 Cookware/Aluminum Camping Coffeemaker 1 Year warranty |
![]() | Coleman Accessory Coffeemaker Carry Case Sports (Coleman) (Amazon.com) List Price: Price: $16.77 You Save: $3.22 (16%) Convenient nylon carry handle Durable carry bag protects coffeemaker during transport and storage Includes propane cylinder storage pouch (propane sold separately) |
The camping trip started off like most others: kids screaming, music blaring, cellphone ringing — so I didn't hear the sport-utility vehicle's rear hatch open and the gear hit the street.
Merely three minutes into my drive, I glanced in the rearview mirror and noticed the open door. I did a U-turn and retraced my path, getting all the way home without recovering anything and discovering essential equipment had fallen out.
I lost a tent, cooler and backpack full of my personal gear. My mind raced as I tried to think of each item in the backpack: jeans, hiking socks and my beloved Boy Scout jacket.
Then I remembered: Oh, no! My Ranger knife!
The Gerber locking blade was a present from my friend Jim Wilson, chief ranger at Fort De Soto County Park. The knife, which bears the insignia of the U.S. Army Rangers, had been given to him by his son-in-law, Lt. Col. Rob Boone of the 82nd Airborne. Boone, a descendant of the legendary frontiersman Daniel Boone, had carried the knife with him in Iraq and Afghanistan.

without a coffee maker. Maybe the question should be......how did they brew coffee back in the good ol' days.
Go to Walmart & buy a "percolator" coffee pot. Its the old school coffee maker. Water goes in the pot, coffee is put in a metal basket that inserts inside, put the lid on & stick it on the fire. When the water boils, you can see it thru
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ONE VOICE Too old to keep traveling? Arriving early in our large, light Savoy Suites hotel room, we find not merely two queen-sized beds, coffee maker, huge TV screen, iron and ironing board, but a telephone in the bathroom! Thus begin three days of lectures and discussion which soon put |
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10 ridiculous travel accessories Now neat freaks can enjoy camping too. Call us crazy, but one of the things we're not thinking about before we leave to go camping is where we're going to store our underwear and tins of beans. However, we also concede that some obsessive-compulsive |
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Just Breathe: An Interview with U.S. Cross Racer Sue Butler I just need my contacts, toothbrush. I'm not too anal about anything. I do bring a coffee maker and coffee because I do like coffee in the morning. Just one of those one cup filter deals that you use when you are out camping. |
Ontario: holiday in the true heartland of Canada
Algonquin Park is legendary for its fish and wildlife, a camping tradition for many a young Canadian where campfires burn late and the coo-ing of one of the province's most evocative birds, the loon, carries long in the night.
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Good news on erosion measures The original pavilion, its verandah long a favourite sheltered nook for courting couples, is now just a fond memory and in its place there is an award-winning amenity block which supports the fully serviced 60-stance caravan and camping site. |