Week 6 — Tarp Configurations (Anchored & Free-Standing)
Crawl → Walk → Run Shelter Deployment With and Without Natural Anchors
Objective: Develop shelter deployment skills using both natural anchor points (trees) and self-supported / free-standing methods. Emphasis on adaptability, wind discipline, and rapid site assessment.
TRAINING FOCUS
  • Anchor-based vs free-standing geometry
  • Ridgeline vs center-pole concepts
  • Stake angles and tension mechanics
  • Wind direction management
  • Deployment speed under pressure
  • Resource improvisation
CRAWL PHASE — Anchored A-Frame + Free-Standing Plow Point
PART 1 — Anchored A-Frame
Conditions
  • 2 trees
  • Standard ridgeline setup
  • No time limit
  • Calm weather
Standard
  • Tight ridgeline
  • Symmetrical pitch
  • Low weather profile (no high picnic mode)
  • 45° stake angles
Submission:Front + side photo + ridgeline detail
PART 2 — Free-Standing Plow Point (No Trees)
Now remove the crutch.
Conditions
  • No trees or vertical supports
  • You may use:
  • Must rely entirely on stakes + tension
Standard
  • One elevated center point
  • All other points staked
  • Wind-facing side low
  • Fabric tensioned evenly
Key Teaching Point:Free-standing requires understanding force vectors — the tarp is now a tension structure, not a suspended structure.
Submission:
  • Full view
  • Center pole detail
  • Stake angle detail
AAR:Which was easier to tension? Why?
WALK PHASE — Three Configurations (Including One Fully Free-Standing)
Task
Deploy three configurations:
Required:
  1. Anchored A-Frame
  2. Lean-To (anchored)
  3. Fully free-standing configuration
Approved free-standing options:
  • Plow point with center pole
  • Modified pyramid
  • Tarp tent with two trekking poles
  • Flying diamond (ground anchored only)
Conditions
  • Reset tarp each time
  • No pre-tied ridge system
  • Evaluate wind direction before pitching
  • Must be functional weather shelter
Standard
  • Stable in moderate wind
  • Tight tension lines
  • No excessive sag
  • Realistic survival pitch (low and weather-oriented)
Submission:
  • Photo of each
  • Which required most tension correction?
  • Which would survive a storm?
AAR:Which configuration gives best weather survivability with NO trees available?
RUN PHASE — 7 Minute Field Deployment (Tree-Restricted Scenario)
Scenario
You reach open terrain. No trees. Weather incoming.
Task
Deploy a free-standing configuration under time pressure.
Conditions
  • 7-minute hard cap
  • No trees
  • Tarp folded in pack
  • Cordage stored, not pre-staged
  • No pre-set knots
  • Choose site rapidly
Optional stressor:20 pushups before timer starts.
Standard
  • Fully pitched in under 7 minutes
  • Stable
  • Low weather profile
  • Entrance oriented away from wind
  • All stakes properly angled
Submission:
  • Timer screenshot OR video
  • Final shelter photo
  • State deployment time
ADVANCED RUN (Optional for High-Level Members)
After deployment:
Option A:
  • Reconfigure orientation in under 4 minutes to adapt to wind shift
Option B:
  • Build a windbreak wall using natural debris in front of free-standing shelter
Option C:
  • Establish fire in safe position relative to free-standing shelter and demonstrate airflow management
KEY LESSON — Anchored vs Free-Standing
Anchored shelter teaches:
  • Ridgeline tension
  • Symmetry
  • Efficiency
Free-standing shelter teaches:
  • Engineering mindset
  • Load distribution
  • Force management
  • Adaptability when terrain gives you nothing
Most casual campers never practice free-standing because it exposes weak understanding of tarp physics.
LEADERSHIP DISCUSSION PROMPTS
  • Did removal of trees increase hesitation?
  • Did you overthink the geometry?
  • What failed first — pole stability or stake tension?
  • How would cold hands change performance?
SCORING MODEL
Crawl Anchored: 10 pts
Crawl Free-Standing: 10 pts
Walk Complete: 20 pts
Run Under 7 Minutes: 30 pts
Under 5 Minutes Bonus: +10 pts
Advanced Run: +15 pts
Peer Feedback (2 Members): +5 pts
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5 comments
Patrick Russell
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Week 6 — Tarp Configurations (Anchored & Free-Standing)
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Wilderness Mastery School: Green Beret-led survival training. Fire, shelter, water, navigation, first aid. Weekly challenges.
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