Boris and Natasha-WO
Senior Member
We spent the weekend camped in the Sacramento River delta, which is known to be windy...especially in the summer. This weekend did not disappoint in that department, so we were parked in a hefty crosswind aimed straight at our full-length slide all weekend. The steady breeze, which we estimated was 15-20 mph with gusts to 35-40 mph or so, would cause the slide topper on that 23-foot slide to bulge up, then rapidly retract. (Imagine the noise inside. Not fun!) Needless to say, we spent most of the weekend with the slide retracted. We didn't want to risk hearing the slide topper rip and seeing it go flying.
Cruising 'round the campground, we saw several slides and toppers pointed the same direction as ours that didn't move an inch in the stiff delta breeze. But, to be fair, not one of them was anything close to 23-feet long.
We're wondering a couple of things: If you're camped with a crosswind aimed at your slide, what windspeed would cause you to pull your slide in? And, can slide toppers be adjusted to stay taut in a crosswind?
We're newbies at all this....your expertise is warmly welcomed.
Thanks,
Natasha
Cruising 'round the campground, we saw several slides and toppers pointed the same direction as ours that didn't move an inch in the stiff delta breeze. But, to be fair, not one of them was anything close to 23-feet long.
We're wondering a couple of things: If you're camped with a crosswind aimed at your slide, what windspeed would cause you to pull your slide in? And, can slide toppers be adjusted to stay taut in a crosswind?
We're newbies at all this....your expertise is warmly welcomed.
Thanks,
Natasha