The Gear Junkie: The Sqivvy
By STEPHEN REGENOLD
It looks like an outhouse made of nylon. Or else it’s a strange tent for tall people. But the Sqivvy, a new shelter product from Logan, Utah, isn’t a tent at all. You can’t comfortably sleep in it. Pop it open and stake it out, and you’ll notice an oversight rendering the shelter all but obsolete for camping: There is no roof.
The Sqivvy, which costs $89.95 and is sold at www.sqivvy.com, is marketed as a “portable pop-up privacy shelter.” Its genesis was with a trail runner who needed to change clothes in a public place. He was sick of pulling on shorts while hiding in his car. “I had a eureka moment,” said Paul Vaslet, company founder.

The Sqivvy
Vaslet’s epiphany led to the creation of a 4 × 4-foot shelter that’s about 7 feet tall. It comes in a package the size and shape of a bike tire, unfolding instantly to pop into form when you throw it into the air.
While it comes roof-less, the company includes an add-on fly to cover the top. There’s a removable floor, internal pockets for gear stowage, and a single screen window. The door zips open in a giant C shape, letting you leap in and out while changing before a run in a city park, or pulling on bike shorts beside your parked car, or at a beach before running out to play in the waves.
Since its release, Vaslet said the Sqivvy’s use has evolved. He cites cyclists who warm up inside a Sqivvy before the start of a race. Photographers shoot from inside it during bad weather. You can use it as an ad hoc shower room while camping.
Vaslet employed a Sqivvy on a recent Grand Canyon rafting trip as a portable outhouse, stashing a bucket toilet inside.
I set up a Sqivvy on a frozen lake in Minnesota while dog sledding. It kept me out of the wind while fiddling with ropes and harnessing a troublesome dog.
After unpacking the shelter and letting it pop open, a friend steadied it in the wind. I staked it down, pulling a guy line from each corner and burying stakes in the snow.

The Sqivvy with its optional roof attachment
There was moderate wind and the Sqivvy — a boxy and non-aerodynamic shelter with flat walls — stopped the air like a sail. Its guy lines flexed, and the walls shuttered. But the Sqivvy never blew down.
At one point, while I was warming up inside, a gust beat a wall inward, the fabric bowing in before popping back to shape.