- Pack cover:If your backpack isn’t waterproof, cover it with a TFPTTOB.
- Emergency tie-downs:If you pull gently on opposite ends of a TFPTTOB as if you were pulling taffy, it will slowly stretch into a long string. It won’t be terribly strong, but it’s good enough to hold your bundle together for a few hours.
- Tent fly pull-outs:To get some air circulation between your tent fly and the tent, you need to pull the edges of the fly away from the tent. Use TFPTTOB strings for this.
- Rope:For a stronger kind of cord, braid several long TFPTTOB strings together.
- Ground cloth:Protect your tent from the soggy, soggy ground and the foggy, foggy dew by spreading s few TFPTTOBs under the tent.
Hiking and Biking Uses 1-5,
6-10, 11-15,
16-20, 21-25,
26-30,
31 Camping Uses 32-36,
37-41, 42-46,
47-51,
52-54 Picnicking Uses 55-59,
60-64, 65-69,
70-74 Entertainment Uses
75-79, 80-84,
85-88 Natural History and
Interpretive 89-93,
94-98,
99-100 And Finally, but not least
101
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