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Tent pegs, ground pegs, tent guy ropes
Fastening for tents: tent pegs, pegs, tent anchors, tent cord, guy ropes and screw pegs by Peggy Peg
Buy tent pegs, ground pegs, cord and lines here, in the Reimo Camping Shop, in a large selection. In this category you will find Peggy Peg screw pegs as well as traditional pegs, guy ropes and tent anchors. Securely peg your tent, whether on rock, sand or grass!
Do I really need to buy other tent pegs?
Buying tent pegs is a MUST for a relaxed camping holiday. If you love the outdoors and go on tour as a camper or with a caravan, you need a few things to secure and fasten your tent, tarp or awning as far as necessary. Whether it's a folding spade, tensioning rubber, guy ropes or tent pegs or pegs, in this category you'll find the small but important accessories for your big tent and camping holiday. Imagine your tent standing on the campsite, wrinkle-free, with phosphorescent guy ropes and tent pegs equipped with LED lighting. It's the best pitched tent on the campsite and it's yours!
In this category you will find everything you need for that sense of achievement, your perfectly pitched tent!
- Tensioning rubbers
- Tensioning lines or guy ropes
- Rubber mallet
- Tent pegs
- Pegs
- Tent pegs
- Folding spade
- Camping hatchet
- Herring extractor
- Guy pegs
All inconspicuous items, yet they are indispensable for your holiday. Incorrect tent pegs can cause a lot of excitement at your holiday destination. You don't want to chase your tent across the site in a small storm, do you?
What do I need for camping?
Besides the tent? You do need a little something in your luggage. For example, you should have rubber bands in your luggage. You all know them, the rubber bands with two hooks. Whether from the bicycle basket or the elastic for the tent. They can be used to quickly fasten a tarp, tie down the tent or fix something in the rear garage. Packed small with a big effect. With a bicycle rubber strap, you can quickly fold a damp tent and pack it away until it is dry. Loose items, whether in the rear garage or in the interior, can be fixed easily and stably. With tent tensioning rubbers, you can fasten your tent quickly and easily. Fix the tarpaulin of your gazebo more stably with the poles and solve other minor fastening problems.
What kind of tent stakes or pegs do I need?
The question of all questions! Tent peg, tent stake or ground nail? Aren't they all the same? After all, you don't want your tent, awning, tarp & co. to collapse at the first gust of wind. The next problem, we all know it. You put up your tent and suddenly your tent peg or tent nail is crooked! But you didn't hit the peg that hard, did you? Were they of poor quality?
What is the reason for the pegs becoming crooked?
Until I started working for Reimo GmbH, I didn't know that there was a right tent peg for every floor. For me it was peg, peg and some held better than others. In the meantime I think differently. If you too do a little research, you can save money and have a pleasant holiday with "straight tent pegs". You don't always know where you're going and what kind of soil you'll find there. That's why it's important to have the right ground peg or tent peg in your luggage for different types of soil. Pegs are included with every tent on www.reimo.com. However, these are intended for standard ground. You can't drive them into rocks, nor will they hold really well in wet meadow. Tent pegs for hard ground are constructed quite differently from a peg for a sandy or soft ground.
Where do I use which? Where does who fit?
There are many things you can do when pitching a tent or canopy, but you should not improvise. If the peg or tent peg does not fit the ground one hundred percent, you will quickly find yourself sitting outside in a gust of wind. Stability is the be-all and end-all when pitching your tent. Many a tent has risen into the air in a small gust of wind due to incorrect tent pegs. Incorrectly placed guy ropes cause wrinkles, which lead to unwelcome water pockets and soon water getting into your tent.
- The half-round tent peg (24cm or 30cm) is best used for grass or pebble surfaces.
- The rock ground peg, such as the Tarzan, clings to solid stone and anchors your tent even in stony ground.
- Wooden tent pegs (30cm or 40cm) are excellent for fine sand and keep your tent in place even in the dunes.
- Plastic pegs (24cm or 30cm) are best used in soft ground such as woodland or damp meadows.
- Peggy Peg screw pegs, the screw pegs from Peggy Peg are specially adapted to the respective ground. This is where many years of experience meet good quality!
As with the fish of the same name, the wrong environment is death for a good herring. On our website we have sorted the tent pegs for the respective ground. Whether tent pegs for very soft or very hard ground. In the respective category we present you the suitable tent pegs.
Campsites with sandy soils are usually found on the coasts of the
- North Sea
- Baltic Sea and
- Atlantic Ocean
Gravelly and rocky ground can often be found on campsites around the Mediterranean. In the mountains it is more difficult, there is almost every type of soil from sandy to loamy to rocky.
Are there differences between tent pegs and ground pegs?
There are pegs and tent pegs for soft ground, mixed ground and hard ground. If the trip always goes to the same place, a set for hard ground or mixed ground may be enough. If you do not know your new holiday environment and the ground conditions, it is best to put together an individual tent peg and ground nail programme. We always recommend a selection of a few different pegs. By the way, the tent peg for soft ground is longer than the tent peg for hard ground, but thinner and not as stable. For rocky ground, the peg or tent peg may not be long and wide, but thicker and very stable. Peggy Peg offers you good solutions for any ground. At Peggy Peg, the tent pegs are simply twisted into the ground, sometimes with matching fastening plates. You can do this manually or with a cordless screwdriver.
- Reimo Tip Tent pegging:
- Make sure you use the right peg for the right ground.
- Use a peg bag, then you always have everything in one place.
- The tent hammer is a useful addition to your camping luggage.
- Just like the peg puller to get the tent pegs out of the ground again later.
- Do you like tripping over tent cords? There are phosphorescent and illuminated alternatives. Look them up and get yourself a higher "toe-pain-free factor".
- With a set of different tent pegs, you are always safe from surprises at your holiday destination!
Have a look at our REIMO YouTube Channel for more tips and tricks for your camping adventure!