The Backcountry Hot Tub

Scott Webb Headshot
photo of people in a backcountry hot tub by a lake
photo of a hot tub in the woods photo of children in a small backyard vinyl-sided hot tub

I built a backcountry hot tub once. We dug a hole next to a water source, lined the hole with our tent tarp, and dug a canal to bring in water. Then we heated rocks on a bonfire, poked them onto a travois made of tree limbs, and dumped them into the water. That actually worked pretty well, but the Nomad collapsible hot tub is a lot easier to set up.

This 225-gallon vinyl-sided pleasure vessel is 5 feet in diameter and 2 feet high (plenty of room for people who are already sharing tent space) and packs down into a 16-inch-square dry bag plus frame poles. It’s up and ready in no time.

You can figure out a clever hot water delivery system like we did, or bring the recommended Honda WX10 lightweight portable pump (sold separately) and fill the thing in 10 minutes from a handy stream or lake. The Nomad’s shiny heater coil unit quickly raises the water temp to something steamy, and that’s all there is to it. You’re soaking in the backcountry!

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