So far I have ascertained:
- There are some mountains called the Adirondacks
- In the Adirondacks there are a number of publicly owned/maintained shelters that are a 3 sided structure of wood.
- There is a tarp setup that uses a square tarp that is called an "Adirondack Wind shed" (or shelter).
At somepoint, someone coined the term for the tarp config. I am trying to work out who and when, roughly. Because this is as much a history/etymology question, I originally posted it in the bushcraft chatter section, not the kit section. As this isn't so much about a piece of kit, as the history behind it.
J
Hi J, the Adirondack Guide Shelters that you have been talking about were only officialy built in 1917, however the Adirondack's had a booming trade in Hunting, Fishing and Canoeing from around 1800. It would be fair to assume that not all shelters that were constructed at the end of the day would have been standard lean-to's built wholely of wood scavenged or cut at the end of a day canoeing or hunting.
It's also worth looking at the baker tent being effectively a canvas variant of the Adirondack shelter.
I can find no incedence or definitive time when setting a tarp up was associated with this shelter type, however I would have thought that it would have been attributed to the Guides between 1800 and 1900 prior to fixed / semi permanent shelters being built.
The hunters lean-to shelter was marketed as the Whelen lean-to in 1925 and when you look at the configuration of one of those, they originated from the french trappers, there's a print from 1835 of one which is more or less identical.