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Featherstone Backbone 2P Ultralight Backpacking Tent Review

High quality camping tent at a budget price

The Featherstone Backbone 2P Trekking Pole Tent is an affordable ultralight single-wall tent for two people that requires two trekking poles to set up. Weighing 2 lbs 11.5 oz, it’s relatively inexpensive, but has many features found on much more expensive ultralight tents including peak vents, corner struts, line loc tensioners, TPU waterproof door zippers, and dual vestibule hooks. It’s made with PU-coated silnylon, so it’s seam-taped and comes complete with 15 tent stakes.

RELATED: Best Budget Ultralight Backpacking Tents

  • Type: Single Wall, Trekking Pole Tent
  • Sleeping Capacity: 2 Person
  • Doors/Vestibules: 2/2
  • Interior Pockets: 2
  • Seam Taped: Yes
  • Head width: 50 in / 127 cm
  • Foot width43 inches / 109 cm
  • Length84 in / 215 cm
  • Height47 in / 120 cm
  • Minimum number of stakes to pitch: 6; Recommended: 8 or 9.
  • Material: 20D Silnylon with 2000mm PU coating
  • Mfg. Trail Weight: 2 lbs 11.5 oz / 1233g
  • Actual Trail Weight: 2 lbs 7.7 oz / 1124.5g
  • Footprint Included: No

The Featherstone Backbone 2P tent is a two-person single-wall tent with two doors and two vestibules. Setup requires two trekking poles that slot into reinforced sleeves (handle up) in the two peaks and grommets (tips down) alongside the sides of the bathtub floor.

The tent has two large vestibules with TPU waterproof zippers
The tent has two large vestibules with TPU waterproof zippers

The setup is directional, with a distinct head end and foot end: the interior is split 60/40 (foot/head) by length to maximize headroom rather than 50/50. The interior is quite livable as a result. The interior floor is tapered to save weight, with a width of 50″ at the head end, narrowing to 43″ at the foot end, so you’ll want to use tapered mummy sleeping pads if you prefer wide ones with 25″ widths.

The footend is longer than the head end to maximize interior head space.
The foot-end is longer than the head-end to maximize interior head space.

The Backbone 2P requires a minimum of 6 stakes to pitch – 4 in the corners and 2 on the vestibule doors. Each corner has one guyline, attached to the tent in two places (to help create more height), with a metal ring in the middle that you stake out. These corner guylines also have lineloc tensioners to easily tension the floor and fly.

The two vestibule doors have waterproof zippers and peak vents lined with no-see-um mesh. The vestibule zippers don’t have rain gutters, however, so you can expect to get wet if you open them in the rain. The bottom of the vestibule doors has dual hook closures, first popularized by Zpacks, that let you use one stake to hold both doors closed when zippered together, both doors closed but unzipped, or one door closed and the other tied back.

The vestibule doors have a dual hook closure.
The vestibule doors have a dual hook closure.

The foot end of the tent is augmented with PE struts at the corners that raise the ceiling and increase volume over the feet. Tarptent was the first manufacturer to use such struts for this purpose, but you now see more and more tent manufacturers adopting this approach, including Zpacks and REI. It’s particularly useful on pyramid-shaped tents or tents with steep sloping ceilings.

Corner struts at the foot-end help increase interior volume.
Corner struts at the foot-end help increase interior volume.

The head end of the bathtub floor is sewn to the ceiling with no-see-um mesh for additional ventilation, while the fly creates an awning over the mesh to prevent rain from entering.

The struts at the foot-end significantly increase the interior volume over your feet.
The struts at the foot-end significantly increase the interior volume over your feet.

The sides of the tent are all mesh, with large pockets at the base along the head end so you don’t crush personal items. When camping, I’d recommend sleeping with the side vestibules rolled back, completely or partially, to maximize airflow through the tent and reduce internal condensation. All single-wall tents experience internal condensation: it’s not a property of the tent per se, but of the temperature differential between the inside and the exterior. Airflow is the best way to mitigate condensation because it equalizes the internal and external temperatures of the ceiling and walls.

When pitching the tent, there are a few things you’ll want to watch out for.

  • The fabric panel over the foot end tends to droop, but there is a guy-out point on it. I’d recommend staking it out with a tree branch or trekking pole to maintain the tent’s interior volume. This isn’t critical, but it makes for a much neater and tauter pitch.
  • There are additional guyout loops on top of the peaks that are good to use in windy conditions and provide a more secure pitch. If you use them, you can completely roll back both vestibule doors for added ventilation.
  • You can also lengthen your trekking poles more than the 47″ peak height for more airflow, although doing so will cause the peak vents to collapse. This is no great loss, however, because they do not have kickstand props inside anyway and are marginally effective as is.
You can use one tent stake to guy out the vestibule door and peak.
You can use one tent stake to guy out the vestibule door and peak.

Comparable UL tents under $300

Make / ModelWeightPrice
Six Moon Designs Lunar Solo26 oz / 740g$260
Six Moon Designs Skyscape Trekker28 oz / 790g$275
Featherstone Backbone 2P40 oz / 1134g$200
Tarptent ProTrek23.5 oz / 667g$249
3F UL Lanshan Pro 124.2 oz / 686g$200
Tarptent Rainbow36.6 oz / 1035g$269
Durston X-Mid 125.7 oz / 729g$269
Six Moon Designs Skyscape Scout40 oz /1134g$160
3F UL Lanshan 243 oz/1219g$190

Accessories

The Backbone comes with a compression sack, so it’s easy to pack. While the tent comes with steel shepherd’s hook tent stakes, I’d recommend upgrading them to something lighter-weight with better holding power, like MSR mini-ground hogs or Paria UL Needle stakes, which have flanged or square shafts instead of round ones. Extra guylines with tensioners are also included, but the tent does not come with a footprint, since more people use a lighter-weight substitute like plastic window wrap when a footprint is called for.

When pitching the tent, I’d recommend staking out the panel above the footend.
When pitching the tent, I’d recommend staking out the panel above the foot end.

Recommendation

The Featherstone Backbone 2P is an affordable ultralight trekking pole tent that’s a pretty good value for the money. It has many features you’ll find in more affordable non-Dyneema ultralight tents under $300, and it’s quite lightweight at 2 lbs 11.5 oz (though our tent weighed about 4 oz less). Keep in mind that the Backbone is a single-wall tent and will be prone to internal condensation unless you keep the doors wide open to increase airflow. That is the nature of all single-wall tents. If you don’t want to sleep with the vestibule doors wide open, I’d recommend getting a double-wall tent instead.

The closest competitor to the Backbone 2P is the single-wall 3FUL Lanshan 2 Pro, which is slightly more expensive. While both are made overseas, as is the case with most ultralight tents, I like the Featherstone tent because they have US-based management and customer service, so you have someone to call if you run into problems. That said, the Lanshan 2 Pro has a strong track record and is a good buy.

On a final note, I’m happy to see that an increasing number of companies are producing more affordable ultralight tents than the much more expensive models currently on the market. Ultralight backpacking was never meant to be an elitist pursuit and the availability of lower-cost, good-quality gear will certainly benefit those who want to try it.

 

Disclosure: Featherstone donated a tent for this review.

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Updated 2026.

8 Comments

  1. This was a great review of a nice looking UL shelter. Thanks for helping us search for brands we’ve never even seen before. Featherstone looks like a promising brand based.

  2. Is this tents condensation any more or less than other single walled tents?

    How does the fit, finish, construction, etc compare to a Lanshan 2 tent?

      1. Thanks Philip, I’ll definitely do that, and with the quilt too. I was curious about what other serious hikers like me think of it as well.

  3. I just want to say that I spoke with Featherstone about the seams needing sealing before I purchased mine in the summer of 2025 and they said that they had addressed that issue and it is no longer needed. Easy to carry and setup. I have not used it in threatening weather yet but condensation is low if you do as Phil suggested. I purchased extra stakes.

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