Ultralight double-door, double-porch backpacking tent
If you’re looking for an ultralight backpacking or wild camping tent but want plenty of internal space plus the convenience of two entrances and two porch areas, you need to take a look at the Tiger Wall. This tent is Big Agnes’ lightest double-door, twin porch technical backpacking design. Its single pole architecture using a high-quality hubbed DAC Featherlite aluminium alloy pole to create a simple yet strong and sturdy structure, making this a reliable shelter for extended multi-day trips. It’s also impressively eco-friendly, thanks to the brand’s use of a solution-dyed fabric that is not only highly resistant to UV fade but drastically reduces energy consumption and water use during manufacturing. It will help to ensure that your Tiger Wall tent last longer, without costing the earth.
- Solution dyed tent fabric is highly resistant to UV fade, ensuring your tent lasts longer
- Tent fabric is sourced from Dominico Textile, makers of some of the lightest and strongest fabric used for parachutes and paragliders
- All seams are PU-taped for reliable waterproofing
- Features two doors and two porch areas with storm flaps on all porch zippers, forming a weatherproof storage area for your kit
- Hubbed DAC Featherlite aluminium alloy pole structure increases useable interior space
- Simple setup thanks to Big Agnes’ unique tent buckle system and corner construction, plus colour-coded webbing to easily match to poles
- More usable space between your feet and tent wall with structured foot-end corners
- Increased airflow with low vent feature on the vestibule doors and double sliders on the vestibule zippers for venting from the top or bottom
- Ready to pitch, with reflective guy lines and runners pre-attached to the tent
- Elevated storage with a 3D bin ‘mezzanine’ in the foot and additional storage in the ceiling and door pockets at the head
- Overhead media pocket also features earbud cord access for listening to music or your favourite podcast in your tent
- Supplied with light yet strong Dirt Dagger UL I-beam anodised aluminium tent pegs
- Can be pitched single-skin style for ultra-minimal, fast and light camps, when used in conjunction with the Fly Creek Footprint
Trail Weight | 1.19 kg |
Packed Weight | 1.33 kg |
Fast Fly Weight | 936 g |
Packed Size | 14 x 48 cm |
Floor Area | 3.5 m² |
Head Height | 107 cm |
Vestibule Area | 0.7 m² / 0.7 m² |
Footprint Weight | 198 g |
Number of Seasons | 3 |
Number of Doors | 2 |
- Fly and floor are silicone treated nylon rip-stop with 1200 mm waterproof polyurethane coating
- Tent body is breathable nylon rip-stop and polyester mesh
- All seams taped with waterproof, solvent-free polyurethane tape (No PVC or VOC's)
- DAC Featherlite NFL pole system
- Ultralight plastic clips attach tent body to pole frame
- Hub pole design
- 2 interior mesh pockets, 1 oversized mesh pocket with two cord routing portals & 8 DAC superlight aluminum J stakes
Manufactured Sustainably - Redesigned from the stakes up, now using solution-dyed fabric that is highly resistant to UV fade and drastically reduces energy consumption and water use during manufacturing, a process that is better for the environment and improves the quality of the tent fabric
- Gear loft loops included
- Footprint - sold separately
- Fast Fly setup available
- Fits Triangle, Trapezoid, Large Trapezoid, Wall and Large Wall gear lofts - sold separately
Big Agnes is a small, independent US outdoor brand out of Steamboat Springs, Colorado – a small ski-town that we’ve never visited but which we like to imagine is full of mountain-loving, trail-hiking outdoorsy types. That would make sense, since the company makes some of the best ultralight backpacking gear around, including the award-winning Copper Spur, Tiger Wall and Fly Creek tents. It is kit that has clearly been designed by a gang of folks who love sleeping in the dirt just as much as we do here at WildBounds.
Oh, and if you’re still wondering where the heck that name Big Agnes comes from, we did try to find out. Depending on who you talk to, it’s either an affectionate tribute to a legendary truck drivin’ mountain mama, or a 12,000 foot peak in the Mount Zirkel Wilderness. We kinda like the first one better.