Please imagine Umemiya Hajime who's good at camping. He's well prepared and can start a fire in seconds if necessary. (Not to mention him chopping wood?) But also imagine the knots he can tie when putting the tent up. His fingers deftly looping and pulling around the stakes before he tightens them. He'll teach you what different ones are good for, but every time he has you try to do it, you come up blank, unable to tie the simplest thing. It takes the third time of him showing you before he realizes the dreamy look in your eyes isn't one of concentration to learn. But really, who could blame you when he explains it so patiently in that sweet low rumble that he uses when he's alone with you in close proximity. When occasionally he'll grab your hands in his to physically show you how the knots tie, and you can feel the callouses on his palms grazing your skin.
The Morsestache is lush, vibrant and present, glowing in the fluorescent luminescence of his bunker and the vending machines. It’s a standalone character, part Tom Selleck, part Sean Connery, part Sweeney-era, all 1969.
The rest of Morse is tentative and shy, almost childlike, even a little apprehensive-not quite sure what response he is going to receive at this overture to resume their collaboration. 
For his part, Thursday is feeling his years, is embarrassed to find himself benched and demoted in front of his young protégé, and doesn’t quite know how to lead him with these debits on his ledger sheet.
Where you might expect at least a manly handshake, and a shoulder clap to reestablish connection, instead, you have a scene shot with a lot of vertical lines, indicating separation, distance, isolation, and a somewhat truncated, non-linear flow of conversation between them, with awkward gaps and silences, and unnatural speech patterns for them both. Fred doesn’t entirely turn around, and Morse hasn’t fully emerged from his cave. He reminds me of an eel, ready to dart back under a rock. We don’t see them truly face each other. They’re both protecting themselves.
It’s bittersweet and painfully awkward, as the two of them try to navigate this new reality without hurting the other or harkening back to better times which surely both of them miss terribly. 
pov the weird battle van stopped and guys began climbing out
during and after fallout new vegas, perrin spent his time taking broken cars to build his own dream van for courier deliveries, and to store his book collection. it's also a home on the road, when the group needs to road trip to save perrin from organ failure,
love this part of my life where the things that are difficult but challenging and good for me are things i can stop and skip and halfass, but the things that are difficult and painful and pointless are the things i have to live with no matter what
The tent Oli set-up is the Coleman OctaGo. According to Coleman, this adventure, cabin style tent requires advanced pitching skills that can be done in minutes by one person ;)
'Easy to pack and quick to pitch, the new OctaGo tent by Coleman® gives you simplicity to just pick up and OctaGo for a fun weekend away with friends, enjoy that music festival, or just step out into nature for a relaxing getaway. This fun tent has a multitude of uses, it can be dressed as a luxury glamping bedroom or a perfect tent for festival gatherings.'
This is a 3 person waterproof tent with the fly on. Without the fly, the whole canopy is mesh as are the 7 windows + door for great views when the sky is clear!
There was a vehicle called a Mac Calaster that could turn from a car into a tent REALLY fast and vice versa. Also like... half of everyone on earth had disappeared.