tents are boring, heavy and take too long to set up.
I've spent this summer pretty much living out in the woods. Or rather sleeping most nights out in the woods, and working by day. The alternatives have been a 3x3 m tarp and a lightweight Tentipi tent (the old Tåpp jakt 5, so the smallest size).
Booring; yes, you can't see the woods around you.
Heavy: a bit more, but also takes much more room in the pack. But a minimalist solo tent (e.g.
Hillebergs Akto) would not be as bad compared to the tarp
Time: It takes me less than 15 minutes from arriving at a campsite until I'm inside the tent, with all my gear sorted and doing whatever I want to be doing (cooking, inside the sleepingbag, whatever).
the last thing i want to do in the morning when its raining is to muck about folding it in a certain way so it fits in its bag, tarps you can tear down and stuff it into a bag in a minute or so.
It is about equal in my mind. Once you know a tent it is fairly quick, and if the stuff-sack is an undersized evil thing make a new one, larger but with compression straps.
does anybody else think that tents kinda spoil the outdoor experience a bit? i think being zipped up in a tent excludes you from the outdoors, its a bit like trying to bring home with you if you get what i meen.
In my mind there is one big advantage to a tent; the mozzies mostly stay on the outside. This gives you a better nights sleep with no chemicals, which is nice. And even with a separate net you then have to share your breakfast with the mozzies (you eat the food, they drink your blood).
On the other hand you can see what is around you with a tarp, see sunrise and sunset, look at the birds, pick some bilberries while still in your sleeping bag.
It all boils down to; what is the most important aspect; a predictable good nights sleep in dense clouds of mosquitos, or the nature experience. In the latter case I'd pick the tarp almost every time, in the former the tent does have some advantages. I think the campfire style tents (be they synthetic and lightweight or (poly)cotton and fire-resistant) is the ideal compromise, and after this summer I intend to make one llight weight version and one cotton version.
On the topic of synthetic ones; a friend had a look at the Finnish shelters that PKRL (?) has mentioned here. His review was; needs some more reinforcements to last, and has an Al-coated inside (a bit of a "return to the 80's", as some kinds of kit looked here then). He also suggested that if I wanted something like that I should make it myself, unless I wanted it ready out of the box right now.