This is the nuclear solution to an annoying problem with wind on camping trips:
By which I meant the tent, not camping in my living room.
Went camping last weekend with the scouts up to Carter Lake. We arrived late Friday night, and had to take a site without tree cover. We got Wyoming level winds which were killing tents left and right. My own beloved Big Agnes Copper Spur didn't take damage, but the poles kept buckling in the nastiest wind gusts. Winds kept changing direction as well, so I couldn't really orient it or guy it into the wind. The other issue is that the winds were strong enough to blow the snow under the rain fly and through the mesh walls, so I woke up to the inside of my tent looking like a powdered donut.
These issues are infrequent, but they have similarly bit me in the rear during camping excursions to Pawnee and Great Sand Dunes, both of which blew fine grit right through the mesh walls of the Copper Spur. This trip was the last straw though. I am a middle aged man with disposable income and an internet connection, so I solved it in the appropriate manner; googling 'expedition tent for high wind and grit'. Which was a fascinating excursion down the rabbit hole of tents for polar expeditions and summiting K2 and Ranier. But of the options I could actually attain at the local REI with the 20% coupon, that left the Trango 3.
11 pounds, 32 possible stake points, solid walls and doors. This is complete, unnecessary overkill. And I love it. Will probably be used four times a year, max, and definitely not for any hike-in trips. But when the others are pouring grit out of their sleeping bags and trying to patch poles with gorilla tape and prayer, I will be sitting in dry, dust and snow-free comfort in my arctic rated tent.