Four-season winter expedition tent for emergency preparedness and off-grid camping in Canada

Emergency preparedness for Canadian conditions

Build Real-World Readiness Before You Need It

Explore practical equipment for winter emergencies, prolonged power outages, remote living, evacuation planning and independent field operations. Build your system around shelter, warmth, sleep, energy, cooking and respiratory protection.

Four-season shelter Cold-weather sleep Portable backup power Multi-fuel cooking CBRN preparedness
Selected for cold weather, remote use and emergency resilience
Canadian Climate Cold-weather focused Equipment selected for snow, wind, freezing temperatures and remote environments.
System Approach More than individual products Shelter, insulation, energy, heat and protection should work together as one practical system.
Professional Gear Field-oriented selection Products selected for expedition, public-safety, remote-site and preparedness applications.
Canada-Wide Online access and support Product guidance and shipping options for customers across Canada.
Preparedness without fear or guesswork

Prepare for the Disruptions Most Likely to Affect You

Good emergency planning is not about predicting one specific event. It is about maintaining warmth, water, food preparation, communication, shelter and personal protection when normal infrastructure is temporarily unavailable.

A winter storm, extended outage, evacuation order, wildfire-smoke event or remote-property failure can create many of the same basic needs. A modular system lets you use the same equipment for camping, hunting, off-grid living and emergency response.

A useful preparedness system should answer six questions

  • Where will you safely shelter from wind, snow and precipitation?
  • How will you maintain body temperature while resting?
  • How will you cook food, heat water or melt snow?
  • Which devices or appliances require backup electricity?
  • What respiratory hazards are realistic in your environment?
  • Can the equipment be transported, deployed and maintained by the people who will actually use it?
Preparedness scenarios

Equipment That Remains Useful Beyond a Single Emergency

The strongest preparedness purchases are products that serve a real purpose during normal life and remain available when conditions become difficult.

01

Extended Power Outages

Portable energy for lighting, communications, chargers, selected appliances and essential low-power devices.

02

Winter Storms

Four-season shelter, insulated sleep systems and reliable cooking capability when temperatures fall below freezing.

03

Evacuation and Relocation

Transportable shelter, bedding and cooking equipment for a temporary move away from home.

04

Remote Property and Cabin Use

Independent energy, winter shelter and field equipment for cottages, camps and properties beyond municipal services.

05

Wildfire Smoke and Airborne Hazards

Properly selected respiratory equipment for specific particles, gases or hazardous environments.

06

Vehicle-Based Readiness

Compact equipment for winter travel, roadside emergencies, overlanding and travel through isolated areas.

Build a balanced system

Six Core Elements of Practical Readiness

Buying more equipment does not automatically create resilience. Start with your most important needs and confirm that each component is compatible with the rest of your setup.

01 / SHELTER

Weather Protection

Protection from wind, precipitation, snow and environmental exposure.

02 / SLEEP

Thermal Recovery

Sleeping bags and ground insulation appropriate to the expected temperature.

03 / HEAT

Temperature Control

Safe methods for maintaining warmth, heating water and preparing hot food.

04 / ENERGY

Backup Electricity

Power for essential electronics, communications, lighting and selected appliances.

05 / FOOD

Field Cooking

Reliable cooking capability with a fuel strategy appropriate to the environment.

06 / AIR

Respiratory Protection

Hazard-specific masks, filters and protective systems supported by training and fit.

Preparedness equipment categories

Build Your Equipment Around the Environment and Duration

Select products according to the number of users, expected temperature, transportation method, deployment duration and realistic hazards—not simply by choosing the highest specification available.

Nortent four-season expedition tent for winter camping and emergency shelter in Canada Shelter

Four-Season and Winter Shelter Systems

A dependable shelter protects occupants from precipitation, wind and environmental exposure. Winter tents should be chosen according to capacity, snow conditions, ventilation, setup method, packed size and whether a compatible stove system is required.

  • Four-season expedition tents
  • Winter-capable shelters
  • Hot-tent configurations
  • Solo and group options
  • Vehicle-based base camps
  • Remote-property shelter
  • Hunting and wilderness camps
  • Emergency temporary accommodation
Military four-season folding camp mat on snow for winter emergency preparedness Ground insulation

Sleeping Pads and Ground Insulation

The ground can remove body heat rapidly. A sleeping pad adds insulation, improves comfort and helps protect the primary sleeping system from cold, moisture and uneven terrain.

22 × 74 in Full-length format
0.5 in Closed-cell thickness
R 2.1 Thermal rating
354 g Total weight
  • No inflation required
  • No valve or puncture risk
  • Fast deployment
  • Reflective secondary side
  • Emergency seating pad
  • Additional sleep-system layer
Sleep and recovery

Cold-Weather and Expedition Sleeping Bags

Choose a sleeping bag using the expected overnight temperature, insulation type, packed size, moisture exposure and the user’s personal tolerance to cold. The sleeping bag and sleeping pad must be considered together.

  • Synthetic and down insulation
  • Winter and expedition models
  • Compact emergency systems
  • Remote camp applications
Primus multi-fuel expedition stove operating in snow and cold weather Heat and field cooking

Multi-Fuel Stoves for Cold and Remote Environments

Multi-fuel systems provide greater flexibility when a single fuel source cannot be guaranteed. They are useful for boiling water, cooking meals and melting snow during cold-weather, expedition and remote-site operations.

  • Canister gas compatibility
  • White-gas capability
  • Kerosene capability
  • Diesel compatibility on selected systems
  • Cold-weather performance
  • Field-serviceable components
  • Water boiling and snow melting
  • Remote and international travel use
Full-face CBRN respirator with protective hood and filter Respiratory protection

CBRN Masks and Respiratory Preparedness

A full-face mask is only one part of respiratory protection. The facepiece, filter, seal, sizing, hazard type, shelf life, storage conditions and user training must all be considered together.

  • Full-face respirators
  • 40 mm filter platforms
  • CBRN filter options
  • Smoke and carbon-monoxide options
  • Protective suits and gloves
  • Decontamination support
Complete camp systems

Field Comfort and Off-Grid Essentials

Round out the core system with lighting, dry storage, hydration, cooking accessories, hygiene equipment and practical tools for extended stays away from normal services.

  • Dry bags and storage
  • Field cooking systems
  • Headlamps and lighting
  • Hygiene and camp comfort
Portable Canadian battery power system being transported during winter
Quiet portable energy

Backup Power for Essential Loads and Remote Use

Portable battery systems can support lighting, communications, charging, selected household devices and remote-site equipment without the noise and exhaust of a conventional combustion generator.

Capacity should always be selected by calculating the wattage of each device, the desired runtime and the available method of recharging. High-draw appliances and electric heating can reduce runtime very quickly.

Power Outages Lighting, phones, radios, internet equipment and essential low-power devices.
Remote Property Portable electricity for cabins, workshops and isolated sites.
Vehicle Support Charging and field power for mobile camps and overland setups.
Solar Integration Selected systems can be paired with compatible solar charging equipment.
Readiness planning guide

Define the Requirement Before Selecting the Equipment

A clear use case prevents overspending, reduces unnecessary weight and helps ensure the equipment can be deployed safely by the intended users.

Step 01

Identify the Users

Determine the number of adults, children or team members and account for individual mobility, medical and comfort needs.

Step 02

Define the Environment

Consider the lowest temperature, wind, snow, rain, terrain, altitude and distance from normal services.

Step 03

Estimate the Duration

A 24-hour outage requires a different energy, fuel and water strategy than a seven-day remote deployment.

Step 04

Choose the Transport Method

Backpack-carried, vehicle-based and fixed-property systems have very different size and weight limitations.

Step 05

Calculate Energy and Fuel

List every device and cooking requirement, then calculate expected wattage, runtime and fuel consumption.

Step 06

Practice Before an Emergency

Test shelter setup, stove operation, filter installation, battery charging and equipment packing under controlled conditions.

Responsible equipment use

Safety Matters More Than the Quantity of Gear

Emergency equipment should be selected, stored, maintained and used according to manufacturer instructions and the actual operating environment.

Stove and Fuel Safety

Never operate a liquid-fuel or combustion stove inside a closed tent, vehicle or unventilated room. Fire, burns and carbon monoxide can cause severe injury or death.

Respirator Limitations

Filters do not provide oxygen and may not be appropriate for every gas, concentration or environment. Proper fit, filter selection and hazard assessment are essential.

Power-System Sizing

Confirm continuous output, surge requirements, battery capacity, charger compatibility and actual runtime before relying on a portable power system.

Winter Shelter Ventilation

Maintain the ventilation specified by the shelter manufacturer, especially around moisture, combustion appliances and stove-ready tent systems.

Sleeping-System Ratings

Temperature ratings are affected by clothing, metabolism, humidity, shelter, wind exposure and the insulation beneath the sleeper.

Storage and Inspection

Inspect seals, filters, fuel bottles, batteries, fabrics and expiration dates regularly. Replace damaged or compromised components.

Product-selection assistance

Need Help Building a Balanced Preparedness System?

Tell us how many people you are preparing for, your expected climate, transportation method and intended duration. We can help direct you toward the most relevant product categories.

Individual equipment Assistance selecting a tent, sleeping pad, stove or respiratory system.
Family planning Category guidance based on group size and expected conditions.
Remote properties Equipment for cabins, hunting camps and isolated sites.
Professional requirements Separate support is available for organizations and institutional buyers.

Request Product Guidance

Include the number of users, expected temperature, intended duration and transportation method for a more relevant response.

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Do not submit confidential, classified or security-sensitive information through this public form. Product guidance does not replace professional emergency planning, medical advice, respiratory-protection training or local authority instructions.

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Preparedness equipment FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What equipment should a Canadian household keep for a winter power outage?

Priorities generally include safe lighting, communication, drinking water, food that does not require complex preparation, warm clothing, sleeping insulation, backup charging and a safe method for preparing hot water. The exact system depends on the home, heating system, region and expected outage duration.

What makes a tent suitable for four-season use?

A four-season tent is generally designed with greater structural stability, weather protection and winter-oriented features than a typical summer tent. Capacity, ventilation, wind resistance, pole structure, snow management and compatibility with a tent stove vary by model.

Do I need both a sleeping bag and an insulated sleeping pad?

Yes. A sleeping bag primarily insulates around and above the body, while a sleeping pad reduces heat loss into the ground. A warm sleeping bag used on an inadequately insulated surface may still result in significant heat loss.

Why choose a multi-fuel stove instead of a standard gas stove?

Multi-fuel stoves provide greater fuel flexibility and can perform better in cold conditions than some standard canister systems. They are particularly useful for remote travel and longer deployments where one specific fuel may not remain available.

Can a portable battery system replace a gas generator?

It can replace a combustion generator for selected loads and runtimes, but not every application. Battery capacity, continuous output, surge output and recharge time must be compared with the devices that need to be powered.

Is a CBRN mask useful for wildfire smoke?

Some respiratory systems may offer suitable particulate, gas or carbon-monoxide protection when equipped with the correct cartridge, but no single filter protects against every hazard. Confirm the exact contaminant, filter rating, limitations and manufacturer instructions.

How should preparedness equipment be stored?

Store equipment in a clean, dry and accessible location according to manufacturer temperature and humidity requirements. Inspect batteries, filters, fuel components, fabrics, seals and expiration dates on a recurring schedule.

Should preparedness equipment be tested before an emergency?

Yes. Set up the tent, test the sleeping system, confirm power runtimes, learn stove procedures and practice fitting protective equipment before relying on it. Training often reveals missing adapters, tools, fuel or accessories.

Start With the Essentials. Build Capability Over Time.

Explore shelter, sleep, energy, cooking and protective equipment selected for demanding Canadian conditions and practical off-grid use.

Product specifications, availability, pricing and lead times are subject to change and confirmation. Emergency and protective equipment must be used according to manufacturer instructions. Respiratory products, combustion appliances, batteries and winter shelters have application-specific limitations. This page provides general product information and does not replace professional emergency-management, medical, fire-safety, respiratory-protection or public-authority advice. Online sales and product support are provided by Fair D Canada.