Outdoor Blog
How to Empty a Portable Toilet While Camping
Camping isn’t all that its made out to be. It’s isn’t all sitting around the campfire, roasting smores and telling stories under a clear starry sky. There’s also the dirty work. Cleaning mud from the tent, drying soaking clothes, and yes, disposing of your human waste. Yes, mother nature tends to call a few times a day and she also prefers if after you’ve responded to her call to get rid of your waste in a way that doesn’t harm her. So, let’s have the dirty talk and learn how we get rid of our human garbage while camping.
Some of you guys may go for the traditional method when you’re out in the sticks. Shovel in hand you dig a small hole behind a tree and cower down, hoping no one sees you getting up to your private business. This method tends to work in forest camping spots as you have the cover of trees.
The ground also needs to be soft enough to dig it without putting further strain on your stomach muscles, hastening the call to nature – good luck desert campers! Those of you who like a few of your home comforts when you’re in nature may wish to invest in a portable travel toilet in order to conduct your business in a manner that is somewhat similar to how you would do it at home.

You can poo with a view once you learn how to you a portable camping toilet.
So what is a portable toilet?
Portable toilets come in various shapes and sizes. When choosing your camping toilet you should consider it’s weight, storage capacity, and how to dispose of the waste. There are three main types of portable toilets.
Bucket toilet
This is the most basic type of portable toilet and it comprises of what it says it does – a bucket. To use one of these you put a plastic bag inside and line it up just as you would for a garbage can. This means that the bag collects all of the waste and you don’t have to deep clean it wearing a hazard suit every time you go to empty it. One disadvantage of the bucket toilet is the lack of comfort. A separate detachable toilet seat can be purchased separately so you don’t have to practice squats before your trip.
Another disadvantage of the bucket toilet is that it doesn’t have the ability to separate waste form solids and liquids, so its best to save it for only number twos unless you want to have a liquid-filled bag, prone to bursting open at any moment.
Additionally, the bucket does not have an odor removing capacity meaning you’ll need to empty it regularly if you cannot handle the stench. Although it is not the best portable camping toilet, the main advantage of the bucket is that it is a low-cost option so it is ideal if you’re a budget or an infrequent camper. As well as this, it is light and simple to carry and set up, freeing up space in your car when traveling to your campsite.
The compost toilet
Compost toilets are fairly similar to a standard toilet due to it having a flush and they can be among the best portable toilets. The pedestal sits in a higher position than a bucket toilet does, meaning you have less strain on your thighs. Many of them also come along with a toilet seat meaning that they offer a great deal more comfort than a bucket toilet. Toilet paper holders come with some models meaning that you will avoid the potential problem of forgetting when walking from your tent during the night.
Often they have smell erasing components and your waste gets flushed away, meaning that you aren’t faced with everyone else’s waste when you go to do your business. The disadvantage of these toilets is that they are bulky so they take up a lot of space in your car. This can be problematic if your campsite is a long distance from where you parked your car. Compost toilets use substances such as ash and sawdust in order to bond the waste together and allow it to compost.
Chemical toilet
The portable chemical toilet is fairly similar to a compost toilet. Most models have the same features as the compost toilets with the main difference being that chemical toilets contain substances to eliminate the smell. These are the same type of toilet as the porta-potty toilets that you’ll come across at festivals and big public events. Chemical toilets are not as environmentally friendly and the waste collected needs to be disposed of in a suitable manner
What you should look for when buying a portable camping toilet
Disposal of waste: Perhaps most importantly, and being the ultimate purpose of this article is how the waste is disposed of. Chemical toilets normally have substances that turn your urine into a solid. This is practical as it makes the waste a lot lighter and it means that you have less chance of spilling it. Because the waste is hardened and bonded together by the chemicals it makes it easier to clean after you have emptied it.
The tank capacity: When you are selecting which toilet to purchase you should consider how long your camping trips are and how many people you tend to go with. If you normally go with a large group then its best to invest in a toilet that can hold a greater capacity in order for you not to have to empty it out once a day. If you tend to go on a short trip with maybe just or two more people then a smaller toilet is likely to be suitable. It may even be worth investing in more than one toilet if your group size tends to be big because believe me no one wants to have to do the worst task of camping twice in a day!
The size: The size of the toilet is also an important aspect to consider. If you are an RV camper extra consideration should be taken at this point as the dimensions of the RV toilet must be suitable to fit into your camper van. Make sure that it is the correct height if you want it to be a more comfortable experience.
It is also worth checking out whether or not it has a sturdy platform. One of the big dangers of doing your business outside is the ground is not always flat or stable meaning that you could be put in the misfortunate position of the toilet falling over when you’re using it! As aforementioned, make sure the toilet is not too heavy or bulky if you need to carry it over a long distance.
Privacy: Not all of us are like Tarzan and like to have a bit of peace and quiet when unloading our bowels. Maybe there are fellow campers pitched up nearby or there is not a wooded area to give you some privacy from your friends. Nobody wants to be the butt of all the jokes around the campfire later on! If you’re prepared to spend a little bit extra then you can purchase a toilet that comes with a shelter or you can buy one separately, making it almost like a home toilet.
How to empty the toilet
So, you’ve been elected by your camping buddies to get wid of your collective waste, let’s see how you get rid of it with minimum exposure to it and to do the job with your dignity intact.
We should all strive to be responsible campers and dispose of our waste and garbage so we can protect the natural spots we enjoy and also out of respect to our fellow campers. Human waste will decompose over time but it also contains toxins that can be harmful to other campers and for nature.
If you simply empty it onto the ground it will be hazardous for an amount of time, leaving a great stench and a poor fellow camper may have the misfortune of stepping on it. If you are camping without a toilet, then make sure that you bury it under the soil. If you are using a portable toilet then follow these steps to make sure you’re a responsible camper.
Step 1: Find the disposal sight
Most campsites should have a designated area where you can empty your toilets and clean them afterward. These are often discreet spots and a small distance away from the campsite. Once you’ve pitched up your tent take a small wander around the campsite in order to locate it for when you need to use it. It’s not advisable to save this until you’ve removed the cassette or waste tank as no one wants to be searching for where the disposal point is whilst carrying a heavy tub of excrement.
Make sure that you work out a stable path between the authorized disposal area and your tent to avoid slipping or getting stuck while you are carrying your waste as that is the last thing that you want. Also, consider emptying your portable toilet early in the morning or just before the sunset. These times should be quieter meaning you shouldn’t have to queue up to empty and clean your portable toilet.
Step 2: Preparing your portable toilet for unloading
The majority of portable toilets come with two tanks. A freshwater tank and a waste tank. It is best to opt for a two-tanked toilet as these are the easiest to empty. First of all, take off the catch that holds the water tank and holding tank together. When dealing with hazardous substances it is always best to use disposable gloves to minimize the chance of collecting bacteria. The tanks tend to lightweight as they are designed to be emptied when you’re in the backcountry but you may have to walk a far distance with them. If so, the best option could be to empty the tank on a more regular basis.
Step 3: Take your tank to the disposal area
Carefully take your tank over to the designated disposal area, taking your time to avoid any mishaps. Disposal areas can vary in differences. Some of them have open grids that you pour your waste onto and others come in a format that is like a trash dispenser with a lid on.
Remove the cap from the top of the spout of your waste holding tank and hold it carefully preparing it for emptying. Some waste tanks come with a rotating spout. The rotating spout pours the waste further away from your hands and standing position, minimizing the risk of getting splashed. If your waste tank does not have a spout then make sure to a further step back as to not risk getting splashed. Simply pour out the waste onto the grid or disposal tank until the waste has subsided.
Step 4: Washing your waste tank
Close to the waste disposal area, there should be a tap or hose to clear out your tank. Refill the tank with clean water, put the lid back on, and shake it a little to remove any bits that have stuck to the side. Empty the water back into the disposal area and keep repeating the process until the water starts to run clear.
Step 5: Return the tank
If you are still in the middle of your camping trip leave a little bit of freshwater inside and mix in the disinfectant toilet chemicals so it is ready to be used again. If it is a cleanup at the end of your trip then don’t follow this step. Carry the waste holding tank back to your portable toilet and replace it as it was before. If your water tank needs to be refilled then now is the ideal time to take it over to the tank or hose to do so. Dispose of your gloves and wash your hands thoroughly to ensure you haven’t picked up any harmful bacteria.

Keep your waste disposal a clean and hygienic process.
Emptying a compost toilet
Compost toilets are different from chemical toilets as no substances are used. If you were to empty a chemical toilet into nature, not only the excrement but the chemicals inside can be environmentally harmful. Compost toilets use substances such as sawdust and ash to break down the harmful toxins found in human waste. This makes it appropriate to be disposed of in nature
Your compost toilet normally has a biodegradable bag installed to catch your solids. Once this is full, remove and tie the waste bag carefully. From this point, you have two options. It is legal to dispose of human waste in the general trash – for example, diapers and dog poo are disposed of in this manner – so feel free to use the campsites trash bins for this.
If no bins are available and you’re out in the wilderness then your second option is to bury it. Make sure that you bury it at least 10 inches deep. The deeper the better. The bag is biodegradable so it will dissolve fairly quickly once buried. Take note that because these bags are biodegradable they are made of thinner material. Don’t wait too long before emptying them or they could split if they are too heavy!
Composting toilets have a dry flush and there is no water tank. Instead, the waste is split into two different sections, solid waste, and liquid waste. The liquid section can be disposed of in the same manner as we mentioned for the chemical toilets, at the designated disposable area. If you are in the wilderness then you can also carefully empty this out into the ground as urine is safe to dispose of and won’t be a threat to the environment and future campers.
Final Verdict:
Emptying your portable toilet when camping tends to be the most stressful and least pleasant part of a camping trip, yet it is necessary. There is no worse camper than those who are not responsible when clearing their mess and ruining great camping spots for other people and for nature.
It is important to know how to dispose of your waste correctly and safely and to get into a good practice of doing it. Campsite restrooms are not always pleasant and are often poorly maintained, meaning that many of us put our reliance on portable toilets. We hope you don’t have too much fun doing this job, but we certainly wish you the best in your toilet emptying endeavors!
Bonus tip: Check out this useful video to get an idea of how simple emptying a portable toilet can be!
Outdoor Blog
TOP-5 Custom Bushcraft Knives That Can Replace a Camp Hatchet
If you’re serious about cutting pack weight without losing capability, you’ve probably asked yourself: can a heavy knife actually replace a hatchet? The honest answer is — yes, but only if you pick the right blade. Here’s what actually works in the field.
What Makes a Knife Capable of Replacing a Hatchet?
Three things matter most: blade thickness, geometry, and steel toughness. A knife that can replace a hatchet needs a spine of at least 6–8 mm, a flat or Scandi grind that transfers force efficiently into wood, and a steel that won’t chip when you’re batoning through a knotty birch log at -10°C. Anything thinner than 5 mm will flex under hard batoning. Anything with a hollow grind will wedge and stick.
Balance matters too. The sweet spot sits roughly 1–2 cm ahead of the guard. That forward bias gives you chopping momentum without making the knife feel like a club.
The Top 5: Ranked by Real-World Capability
1. Noblie Custom Knives — Bespoke Heavy Bushcraft Blades

Noblie sits at the top because they do something most production houses can’t: build a knife to your exact field requirements. Their heavy bushcraft knives are hand-forged from high-carbon steels — typically D2, CPM-3V, or Damascus — with blade lengths from 180 to 280 mm and spine thickness up to 9–10 mm. That’s hatchet territory.
The geometry is where Noblie earns its place. Their craftsmen use a full flat grind transitioning to a convex edge — a combination that splits wood cleanly while maintaining enough edge geometry for fine carving. Think of it like a wedge-shaped door stopper: the wider the taper, the more efficiently it converts downward force into lateral splitting pressure. That’s exactly what you want when you’re processing firewood without a hatchet.
Field scenario: A solo trekker on a 10-day Scandinavian winter route replaced his 600 g hatchet with a Noblie 240 mm CPM-3V blade weighing 380 g. Over the trip, he processed firewood daily, built two lean-to shelters, and split kindling every morning. The blade held its edge through the entire trip without touching a strop until day 8. Net weight saving: 220 g — small on paper, significant over 10 days.
Noblie knives are not cheap. Expect to pay $400–$1,200+ depending on steel and handle materials. But you’re buying a tool built for your hand, your tasks, and your conditions.
Noblie’s bushcraft line shares its DNA with their broader catalog of handcrafted bespoke blades — the same Damascus and high-carbon steels, the same ergonomic handle materials like Micarta and Carbon Fiber, applied to tools built for hard field use rather than display. Those who want to explore the full range of that craftsmanship — including EDC-oriented designs in premium M390 and Damascus steel — will find the collectible knives at Noblie a useful reference point for understanding what the workshop is capable of before placing a custom order.
Expert Tip from Marcus Webb, Wilderness Survival Instructor: “When ordering a custom bushcraft knife intended for hatchet-level work, always specify a convex secondary bevel. A flat grind alone will bite into wood and stick. The convex edge releases. That difference matters more than steel choice when you’re batoning in wet conditions.”
2. Bark River Knives — Bravo 1.5

Bark River’s Bravo 1.5 is a production-custom hybrid: made in small batches in Michigan, available in multiple steel options (A2, CPM-3V, CPM-CruWear), with a 6.5 mm spine and 152 mm blade. It’s shorter than a dedicated chopper, but the convex grind and robust geometry make it a legitimate batoning tool.
Choosing the Bravo 1.5 for hatchet tasks means accepting one trade-off: reach. At 152 mm, you’re working harder on larger diameter wood than you would with a 200+ mm blade. The upside is a more versatile everyday carry that handles fine tasks without feeling like overkill.
CPM-3V in this knife holds an edge through sustained hard use better than most steels at this price point (~$350–$450). It’s also forgiving — it bends before it chips, which matters when you’re driving it through frozen wood.
3. LT Wright Knives — Genesis

The Genesis from LT Wright is built around a 5.5 mm spine and a full flat Scandi grind — a geometry that splits wood with surprising efficiency for its size. Available in A2 and CPM-3V, it sits in the $200–$280 range.
The flat Scandi grind is the key here. It’s the same principle as a splitting maul: a consistent taper that pushes wood fibers apart rather than cutting through them. For batoning and feather-sticking, this geometry outperforms thicker knives with poor grinds.
The main compromise: the Genesis is not a chopper. Sustained overhead chopping will fatigue your wrist faster than a hatchet. Use it for batoning and controlled splitting — that’s where it genuinely replaces a small hatchet.
4. Fiddleback Forge — Bushcrafter

Andy Roy’s Fiddleback Forge knives are hand-ground in Alabama from 80CrV2 high-carbon steel. The Bushcrafter model runs a 5 mm spine with a high flat grind and a blade length around 127–140 mm.
80CrV2 is worth understanding. It’s a tool steel with vanadium added for toughness — it sharpens easily in the field with a simple stone, holds a working edge through hard use, and doesn’t require exotic maintenance. For a bushcrafter who sharpens by feel rather than by angle guide, this steel is forgiving and predictable.
- Excellent field sharpenability
- High flat grind handles both wood processing and food prep
- Comfortable handle geometry for extended use
Price range: $280–$380. Lead times can run 6–18 months — plan ahead.
5. Blind Horse Knives — Kephart Pro

The Kephart Pro is based on Horace Kephart’s original design, updated with modern steel (O1 or 80CrV2) and a 5 mm spine. It’s a lean, no-nonsense tool at around $200–$250.
Expert Tip from Sarah Lindqvist, Nordic Bushcraft Guide: “Don’t underestimate the Kephart geometry for wood processing. The drop point and flat grind let you use the full length of the blade in a slicing chop — a technique that compensates for lower blade mass. Practice the ‘draw chop’ and you’ll process kindling faster than most people do with a hatchet.”
The trade-off with the Kephart Pro is mass. At roughly 180–200 g, it lacks the momentum of heavier blades. You’re relying more on technique than physics. That’s a skill investment, not a flaw — but be honest about your experience level before choosing this over a heavier option.
Comparison: Key Specs at a Glance
|
Knife |
Blade Length |
Spine Thickness |
Steel Options |
Grind Type |
Price Range |
Best For |
|
Noblie Custom |
180–280 mm |
8–10 mm |
D2, CPM-3V, Damascus |
Flat/Convex |
$400–$1,200+ |
Full hatchet replacement, custom fit |
|
Bark River Bravo 1.5 |
152 mm |
6.5 mm |
A2, CPM-3V, CruWear |
Convex |
$350–$450 |
Versatile heavy-duty carry |
|
LT Wright Genesis |
140–160 mm |
5.5 mm |
A2, CPM-3V |
Full Flat Scandi |
$200–$280 |
Batoning, splitting, camp tasks |
|
Fiddleback Forge |
127–140 mm |
5 mm |
80CrV2 |
High Flat |
$280–$380 |
All-around bushcraft |
|
Blind Horse Kephart |
140 mm |
5 mm |
O1, 80CrV2 |
Flat |
$200–$250 |
Technique-driven processing |
The Steel Question: Does It Actually Matter?
For hatchet-replacement tasks, toughness beats hardness. A steel hardened to 64 HRC will hold an edge longer — but it will also chip when you drive it through a knotty log or hit a hidden stone. CPM-3V, 80CrV2, and A2 all sit in the 58–62 HRC range. They flex under stress instead of fracturing.
- CPM-3V — best overall toughness for hard batoning in cold conditions
- 80CrV2 — easiest to sharpen in the field, excellent for extended trips
- A2 — good balance of edge retention and toughness, widely available
Which One Should You Actually Buy?
If budget isn’t the constraint and you want a knife built specifically for your conditions — go Noblie. The ability to specify spine thickness, grind geometry, steel, and handle shape means you get a tool optimized for your actual use case, not a compromise designed for the average buyer.
If you need something available now, under $400, and proven in the field — the Bark River Bravo 1.5 in CPM-3V is the most reliable production option on this list.
The others fill specific niches: LT Wright for Scandi-style wood processing, Fiddleback for easy field maintenance, Blind Horse for traditionalists who prioritize technique over mass.
None of these will swing like a hatchet. But with the right technique — batoning, draw chopping, controlled splitting — any of the top three will handle 90% of what a small camp hatchet does, at a fraction of the weight penalty.
Outdoor Blog
How to Take Your Own Internet to Outdoor Events
You’ve got the permits, the lineup, the stage design, and the crowd — but when it comes to WiFi, outdoor events can turn from dream festivals to data dead zones in minutes. Reliable connectivity is now as essential as power or sound. Whether it’s a music festival streaming to TikTok, a food fair using mobile POS systems, or a corporate brand activation relying on live dashboards, the internet connection is what keeps the gears turning.
But the truth is this: counting on venue WiFi at a large outdoor event is a gamble. Hundreds of devices fighting for the same bandwidth can jam up the signal before the headliner gets on stage. Public networks only have one backhaul connection, so your production crew, security cameras, and vendors could all be fighting with concert-goers streaming YouTube in the crowd.
So, if your aspiration is to keep the event chugging along like clockwork, the genius move is to bring your own internet — designed specifically for the occasion, private, and controlled by your event staff.
Why Venue WiFi Fails When Crowds Arrive
Let’s start with the numbers. According to Cisco’s 2024 Annual Internet Report, the average person now connects four to six devices at live events — phones, wearables, tablets, scanners, and streaming gear. Multiply that by 5,000 or 50,000 people, and you’re looking at a digital traffic jam.
Outdoor locations have a very minimal amount of wired infrastructure. The majority utilize older systems or common fiber links, which were not designed for thousands of users at once. When the signal is over-stretched, latency increases, access points fail, and the network grinds to a halt.
For event organizers, this is not only inconvenient — it’s a safety and revenue gamble. POS terminals won’t work. QR ticket scanners crawl. Even backup communication programs freeze.
The Smarter Solution: Creating Your Own Network
Constructing a stand-alone network for an outside event may seem daunting, but technology has made it relatively achievable. Instead of relying on one provider or tower, professional crews now use several sources of the internet to deliver redundancy and stability.
Outdoor WiFi specialists use multi-carrier cellular bonding, satellite uplinks, and WAN smoothing to keep traffic consistent even when one source is down. It’s a lot like having several water pipes feed one tank — if one pipe gets stopped up, others keep the flow consistent.
The best configuration depends on three variables:
- Location: Urban park, remote valley, rooftop, or open desert all have different signal profiles and line-of-sight challenges.
- Bandwidth Demand: Are you providing power to a 50-person AV crew or streaming to a million online viewers?
- Duration: A day-long music festival versus a week-long brand tour will change the way you plan power, cooling, and redundancy.
Professional crews will often pre-deploy with site surveys — gauging carrier strength, spectrum congestion, and potential sources of interference such as LED walls or nearby broadcast towers.
Lessons from the Field
Outdoor WiFi would be a niche specialty, but in today’s world it’s simply part and parcel of modern event production. In the last decade, TradeShowInternet’s teams have helped support hundreds of big outdoor festivals and corporate activations, and there have been a few hard-won lessons along the way.
There was the time crews climbed a half mile up the flank of a Santa Fe mountain with over 200 pounds of gear to put in a solar-powered relay antenna for Red Bull’s Guinness World Record truck jump. A second assignment involved digging cable trenches through snake country in Los Angeles for Christian Dior’s fashion show.
When Univision taped La Banda on the beach in Miami, technicians climbed a 20-foot truss into a lightning storm to raise antennas. These are probably war stories, but they represent reality: each outdoor location introduces its own wildcards. Wind, weather, terrain, and local RF noise all push the limits of planning.
The lesson? Experience is as important as gear. Knowing when to use additional directional antennas, when to flip to satellite failover, or how to protect a router from 100-degree heat isn’t something you can read in a manual.
The Technical Side: How Redundant Networks Keep Events Alive
This is how seasoned outdoor internet crews engineer reliability into temporary networks:
Multi-Carrier Bonding: Equipment stitches together data from multiple cellular carriers (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, etc.) to maximize bandwidth and fill signal gaps.
- WAN Smoothing: Packets are duplicated and relayed on secondary paths to prevent noticeable drops or hiccups in live streams.
- Satellite Integration: Especially when out at remote sites or in mountain events where cell phone reception is spotty.
- 5G + LTE Hybrid Units: Combining newer high-bandwidth 5G networks with more predictable LTE offers well-rounded throughput.
- Portable Mesh Access Points: Create overlapping areas of WiFi that eliminate dead spots across vast grounds or over tented locations.
- Power & Weather Protection: Ranging from Pelican case enclosures to solar power solutions, all of which ensure uptime regardless of adverse weather conditions.
It’s a multi-layer strategy — not one device straining the load, but several working in tandem to handle bandwidth, robustness, and coverage.
Why Your Vendors, AV Staff, and Guests All Need Their Own Network Layer
External events normally have three distinct user communities that require the internet:
- Production and AV Personnel – operation of live feeds, mixing panels, lighting, and communications programs.
- Vendors and POS Devices – card transaction processing, QR menus, and inventory software.
- Guests and Media – posting, uploading, or taking part in brand interaction activity.
Mixing them all on one open WiFi is risky. It provides security vulnerabilities and causes too much congestion. The preferred method is network segmentation, creating separate virtual networks that prioritize mission-critical traffic (production, POS, security cameras) and restrict non-mission-critical use like social browsing.
This is exactly how professional outdoor WiFi & Internet solution companies like TradeShowInternet build event systems. They design bespoke topologies that match the unique demands of every event, whether a food festival, marathon, or big corporate activation.
Budgeting and Planning: What Organizers Should Know
According to EventMB’s 2024 Event Technology Report, 73% of event planners say maintaining a reliable connection is important to attendee happiness, yet less than half have a standalone internet budget in place upfront while planning. That’s a recipe for last-minute scrambling.
For all to run smoothly, the network plan needs to be created alongside stage design and power planning — not an afterthought.
Some planning advice:
- Start early: Conduct site surveys at least 30 days ahead of the event.
- Prioritize wired backbones: Use fiber or Ethernet in production areas whenever possible.
- Segregate guest WiFi: Utilize bandwidth caps or sponsored captive portals to control usage.
- Redundancy: Cellular + satellite bonding is well worth the investment for mission-critical space.
- Post-event review: Collect performance data to inform next year’s plan.
Real-World Use Cases
Outdoor connectivity is not just for music festivals. It’s a necessity for:
- Marathons and triathlons – for timing chips, live maps, and emergency co-ordination.
- Outdoor conferences or summits – where executives require office-grade internet to make presentations.
- Food truck festivals and markets – all vendors need POS access.
- Film and TV productions – production villages rely on low-latency connections for uploads.
- Races and motorsport events – telemetry, live scoring, and media streaming.
Each of these environments needs a different trade-off among coverage area, upload speed, and mobility.
Why Experience Matters for Outdoor Internet Installations
Each outdoor location is unique. Trees, humidity, metal buildings, even bodies of water can affect wireless performance. Having individuals who’ve done hundreds of installations means fewer surprises and faster repairs when something unexpected happens.
That’s where TradeShowInternet, a leading outdoor WiFi & Internet solution company, comes in. The company has built up networks on deserts, beaches, helipads, mountain ridges, and pop-up brand villages — keeping organizers, vendors, and AV teams connected wherever the event is hosted.
Outdoor Blog
Outdoor Event WiFi: The New Backbone of Open-Air Experiences
A concert in the canyon. A film night under desert stars. A bustling waterfront food festival with 10,000 guests. Across the country, outdoor events are turning parks, coastlines, forests, and fields into memorable destinations. But there’s one service now as essential as power, permits, and porta-potties: outdoor event WiFi.
Whether for ticket scanning, mobile POS systems, sponsor activations, or live-streaming performances, WiFi for outdoor events has become the invisible support that keeps everything running. Without it, payments stall, communication falters, and digital engagement stops.
Why Outdoor Event WiFi Is Mission-Critical
The outdoor events sector, from farmers’ markets to endurance races, is growing quickly. Allied Market Research predicts global festival revenues will exceed $50B by 2030. These venues offer unique charm, but they also pose a challenge: a lack of built-in internet infrastructure.
“Outside doesn’t mean offline,” says Emma Castillo, a production manager for festivals, film nights, and open-air corporate launches. “We rely on temporary internet for outdoor events to manage our security communications, allow vendors to keep selling, and ensure our livestreams don’t drop.”
Cellular service can struggle with the demands of thousands of devices. Some remote locations may not have any service at all. That’s where outdoor event WiFi solutions come in—portable, scalable, and designed for unpredictable weather.
How Outdoor Internet Keeps Events Moving
Today’s outdoor events rely on connectivity in ways that go far beyond letting guests post on social media:
- Mobile POS & Cashless Payments – No signal means lost revenue for vendors.
- RFID & Access Control – Real-time validation at gates and VIP areas.
- Streaming & Social Content – From TikTok reels to sponsor livestreams.
- Sponsor Engagement – QR contests, AR activations, and digital signage updates.
- Safety & Logistics – Staff communication, emergency alerts, GPS tracking.
A recent Event Manager Blog study found 63% of sponsors now require guaranteed internet access before committing. Attendees want it too; more than half say connectivity is a key factor in their event satisfaction.
Outdoor Event WiFi Solutions in Action: “Lights on the Lake”
In June, the lakeside town of Lakeshore hosted a three-day open-air film festival. The views were stunning, but no wired internet was available, and mobile service barely worked.
The technical crew set up:
- Multi-carrier 5G bonding for vendor and guest networks
- Long-range weatherproof access points covering the pier and food court
- A private secure network for organizers and emergency staff
- A satellite uplink for backup
The festival processed thousands of transactions, streamed Q&A sessions with international filmmakers, and even operated a live voting app without a single connectivity failure.
Industry Perspective: Connectivity as a Core Utility
According to WiFit founder Matt Cicek, changes in event technology priorities have been significant:
“Five years ago, internet at an outdoor event was seen as a nice-to-have. Now, it’s as essential as running water and electricity. From safety coordination to sponsor returns, there’s too much at stake to leave it to chance.”
The Future of Temporary Internet for Outdoor Events
As events become more complex, WiFi for outdoor events from service providers like WiFit will play an even larger role. Expect advancements like:
- Solar-powered network kits for sustainable operations
- AI-managed bandwidth that adjusts to real-time crowd size
- Edge computing for instant AR and interactive attractions
For event planners, the message is clear: the quality of your internet connection is as important as your stage, lighting, or sound system. The next time you’re booking a venue, remember—the crowd may be watching the performers, but they’re also looking at their screens. They expect both to work perfectly.
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