Please forgive me, long time lurker, but new to actually engaging and posting. I know this thread is some months old. The cuts on the tents often bother me. If they were made for a quick escape, it makes more sense that they'd be vertical slits, top to bottom. Efficient arm movement, based on tent set up, the tension on the canvas would support it. Shallow arc type cuts, horizontally, to me mean something different. I fully admit I could be way off base here. See, I camp in canvas tents all year round; I have for twenty years now. Viking age living history stuff. But one of the larger groups I am involved in with has a large, medieval "war," every year with an attendance of 10,000 people. The grounds are all separated into blocks with varying numbers of camps on each block. Many camps use sheet walls to delineate the camp borders. Sheet walls that are higher than waist height all have one thing in common; we slit them with small horizontal slits so that they last longer in wind and inclement weather. This way, wind goes through the slits and the sheet walls don't become sails that then tear in our more extreme storms. I wondered recently, the way the tent was situated with wind, etc, could the slits have been an attempt to help keep the tent from blowing away or being damaged by extreme winds? I don't think that I actually believe that is where they came from but I also haven't bought into the "cutting themselves out of the tent" theory, either. I don't feel we can reliably gather much information from tent damage because their were so many confounding variables that most fit have damaged or cut the canvas. But yet, it always seems to go back to the tent...
Thank you for listening to my rambling!! If there are major spelling errors or wrong words, I will gladly correct them. I am typing on a tablet with severely arthritic hands so sometimes, my sentences become very...interesting, if I don't catch it in time, lol!!
-Ren
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Well thats an interesting point about cutting the Tent to allow wind to blow through. But I would have thought that move would have been very dangerous anyway because a very strong wind and very low temperatures can lead to a freezing to death situation.
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I agree, it would drop the already low temperature in the tent. However, if it was a last ditch effort to try and save your only shelter....I don't know. I just have such a hard time imagining why else the hikers would cut shallow, horizontal cuts in their tent. But, without the benefit of an interview with one of the Dyatlov group and without the tent...