Sea to Summit  Telos TR2 Bigfoot Footprint

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Offering additional protection for rugged or wet terrain, the Sea to Summit Telos TR2 Bigfoot footprint adds a 68-denier waterproof fabric layer under the tub floor and vestibule area of your tent.

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Location Image for Telos TR2 Bigfoot Footprint
Location Image for Telos TR2 Bigfoot Footprint

Features

  • Bigfoot model is sized to fit both the tent and vestibule area, so it protects your tent from abrasion, tears and dirt while also keeping your gear dry and off the ground
  • Sized to avoid water pooling and collecting dirt
  • Made with high-quality, lightweight 68-denier polyester with Hypalon® attachment points
  • Durable, abrasion-resistant fabric has a 1,200 m waterhead rating
  • Hypalon attachment points are circular-bar-tacked to the footprint
  • Perfect fit for an ultralight fly-only shelter setup (rainfly and poles not included)
  • Comes with a lightweight storage pouch

Imported.

View all Sea to Summit Tent Footprints

Technical Specs

Best Use

Backpacking

Material(s)

68-denier polyester

Dimensions

104.5 x 87.5 inches

Weight

13.5 ounces

Reviews
8 reviews with an average rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars

Ratings Snapshot

Product Rating

0 out of 0 (0%) reviewers recommend this product

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Bryan T.
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars

More covered ground, clean entrance and exits

2 years ago

[This review was collected as part of a promotion.] This is fantastic as it gives a place to crouch or kneel getting in the tent, and helps keeps the dirt from getting in. I'd use the smaller ground cloth when backpacking as the additional weight can be felt, but for car camping it's perfect. It also gives a nice spot from my dog to sleep!

Originally posted on Sea to Summit
S C.
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars

Critical

1 year ago

Definitely get this, protect your investment, also gives a nice floor under the vestibule so you don't have to deal with shoes, etc in the tent.

Originally posted on Sea to Summit
Loretta W.
Rated 4.0 out of 5 stars

Seems well made

3 years ago

Like this foot print so far. Larger and a little heavier than over but tougher I think for gravel bar camping on ozark rivers.

Originally posted on Sea to Summit
Larry Z.
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars

Just works

1 year ago

[This review was collected as part of a promotion.] Nothing fancy. It works well, and the extra footprint room allowing to step on it instead of the ground is very nice.

Originally posted on Sea to Summit
Holly G.
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars

Just what I needed

2 years ago

[This review was collected as part of a promotion.] Works as expected. I like having a footprint that extends into the vestibule.

Originally posted on Sea to Summit
Kendal W.
Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars
8 months ago

[This review was collected as part of a promotion.]

Originally posted on Sea to Summit
Trae s.
Rated 4.0 out of 5 stars
3 years ago
Originally posted on Sea to Summit
Margaret W.
Rated 3.0 out of 5 stars

Confusing to set up

3 years ago

We purchased the footprint/ground cloth to go with our Telos TRS+ tent. The selling point was the shape of the footprint was to match not just the tent area but also be under the 2 vestibules. With other tents I would just supplement a rectangular groundcloth with 2 pieces of fabric to serve as an added dry place under the vestibutle entrances. The challenge though was the shape of the 6 sided footprint. When laying out the footprint which was the top, sides and bottom. After several rotations, noting which is the short side vs long side of the vestibule areas then I'd eventually figure it out. But all very time consuming. So sort of color coding or arrows indicating top/bottom would be helpful. The 2nd challenge is when setting up the tent and putting the poles in the tent receiving holes AND the footprint's rubber grommets that works fine until you want to put the rainfly on. The layering of rubber grommet, tent pole insert into the tent corner hole and then trying to attach the rainfly clip gets to be problematic and difficult. At each corner, to attach the rainfly little "U' clip I had to first detach the tent from the footprint grommet, clip the rainfly onto the tent pole clip and re-insert the tent pole into the footprint rubber grommet. Again, extra time fiddling around. This was a brand new tent with brand new footprint.Yes, we were in rain and snow for 2.5 days but I was very cautious with the ground for the footprint as I was concerned about the durability of the fabric. Unfortunately, being diligent was not enough and a 1 inch tear in the footprint is what we ended our 10 day backcountry trek with. It is always a bit disappointing for gear to come back damaged only after one use. Like automobiles we use our camping gear for many years and expect them to be durable. The footprint is good in concept but be aware that any vestibule dripping due to rain or melting snow onto the footprint may cause the puddling to flow under the tent floor. This was the case after 2.5 days of wet snow. So my past use of a separate small fabric "footprint" under the vestibules worked better as I could pull up that piece of fabric separate from the tent structure and direct any puddles away from the tent.

Originally posted on Sea to Summit

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