Tipi Hire - Teepee HireThe grace and beauty of Tipis
takes some beating for camping.
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D
- Door Pole S - South Tripod Pole N - North Tripod Pole L - Lifting Pole F - Front Crotch R - Rear Crotch A - Altar B - Bed F - Fire P - Anchor Peg W - Wood H - Host G- Guest |
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When sleeping the area
around the tipi's edge is used and the area
of the altar kept clear. Over The Moon Tipis
are set up to echo this lay out. A small
recepticle for catching rain can be placed
on the carpet / table where traditionally
the altar was.
"Directly behind the fireplace was
a little space of bare earth which served as
a family altar. Often this space was prepared
in the shape of a square...brushed clean. The
Sioux called this altar a 'square of mellowed
earth'. It represented Mother Earth, and on
this square sweet grass, cedar or sage were
burned as incence to the spirits."
Life giving rainwater would have dripped from the
crown of poles and fed the earth. We follow this
tradition by marking the spot with a small pot
to keep the rain in and the carpet dry. The amount
of rain that access's the tipi is negligible. We
ensure the hole is minimised and its aperture is
not greater than 5cm diameter. We do not use rain
hoods, catchers or ozans hung below the bound
poles, because both detract from the aesthetics
of the tipi from inside and outside. We wrap the
smoke flaps tightly around the poles to keep rain
out. Much of the tipi's visual impact is derived
from the fan of poles radiating out when one is
inside and gazes up to the sky. It is lovely to
lie in your sleeping bag and gaze up at the patch
of blue sky framed by the poles.
Tipis can have fires in them though the reality is that this makes the inside of the tipi very smokey and one's clothes soon smell. We do not allow fires in our tipis as we like to keep the canvas clean and smelling like canvas rather than a smokey chimney.