Early Spring Camping: Is Your Lighting Ready?
April in Canada is a tease. One day you're hiking in a t-shirt under blue sky, the next you're huddled in your tent listening to freezing rain hammer the fly. Early spring camping across the Canadian Shield, the Rockies, or the Maritimes means unpredictable weather, short daylight hours, and temperatures that can swing from 15°C to below zero overnight.
Your sleeping bag and layers will keep you warm. But the gear that separates a great spring trip from a miserable one? Lighting. The right headlamp, lantern, and flashlight setup means you can set up camp in fading light, cook dinner hands-free, navigate to the outhouse at 2 AM without waking your tentmates, and signal for help if something goes wrong.
Fenix has been engineering professional-grade lighting since 2004—trusted by Canadian corrections officers, BC Hydro field crews, Coast Guard teams, and Search & Rescue units across the country. Their gear is sold in 200+ countries and built to the standard that professionals stake their safety on. Here's what to pack for spring.
Quick Picks: Best Fenix Lighting for Early Spring Camping
| Best For | Product | Price | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Ultralight headlamp / warm white | HM65R-T V2.0 | CAD$131.95 | ★ 4.36/5 (44 reviews) |
![]() |
Night-vision / detachable flashlight | HM61R V3.0 | CAD$134.95 | Popular HM61R series |
![]() |
Max power / arrive after dark | HM71R | CAD$169.95 | ★ 4.88/5 (76 reviews) |
![]() |
Cold-weather base camp lantern | CL30R | CAD$149.95 | Cold-weather favourite |
![]() |
Versatile camp lantern / red + white | CL26R Pro | CAD$119.95 | Steady seller |
![]() |
Compact smart lantern / RGB | CL20R PRO | CAD$79.95 | Popular for daily & camping |
![]() |
Multicolour flashlight / camp atmosphere | LD36R | CAD$174.95 | Multicolor favourite |
![]() |
Digital focus / spot + flood in one | LD45R | CAD$184.95 | Digital focus innovation |
![]() |
Best backup / rechargeable + AA | LD22 V2.0 | CAD$90.95 | ★ 5.00/5 (75 reviews) — Perfect rating |
Headlamps: Hands-Free Is Non-Negotiable
Every camping task gets harder in the dark. Setting up a tent, filtering water, hanging a bear bag, cooking over a stove—all of these demand two free hands. A headlamp isn't just convenient, it's essential. And early spring conditions demand more from your headlamp than a summer car-camping trip ever will.
HM65R-T V2.0: The Ultralight All-Rounder · CAD$131.95
The HM65R-T V2.0 weighs just 140 grams—light enough that you forget you're wearing it during a full evening of camp chores. But the real standout for camping is its warm white mode. At 800 lumens on high, the warm white output reduces eye strain and creates a softer, more natural light around camp. No harsh blue-white glare bouncing off your tent walls or blinding your campmates across the fire.
With 1,600 lumens on turbo and a 170-metre beam distance, the HM65R-T V2.0 handles everything from a midnight trail walk to detailed map reading. The magnesium alloy body keeps weight down while standing up to the kind of bumps and drops that happen when you're fumbling with gear in the dark. IP68 waterproof means spring rain is irrelevant.
★ Rated 4.36/5 across 44 verified reviews. Campers consistently praise the warm white mode for evening camp use—it's the headlamp you reach for when you want serious output without the harsh glare.
→ Get the HM65R-T V2.0 — CAD$131.95
HM61R V3.0: Versatility with Red Light · CAD$134.95
The HM61R V3.0 is the Swiss Army knife of camping headlamps. At 1,800 lumens with 195-metre reach, it handles trail navigation with ease. But what makes it a camping standout is its dedicated red light modes—high (70 lumens), medium (15 lumens), low (3 lumens), and red flash. Red light preserves your night vision, which matters more than most people realize. Step out of your tent with a white headlamp on full blast and you'll spend five minutes blind-adjusting. Switch to red and you can see the trail to the outhouse without losing your dark adaptation.
The detachable lamp head doubles as a handheld flashlight—clip it to your jacket pocket, set it on a picnic table, or hand it to a tentmate who forgot their own light. At 167 grams, it's still light enough for all-evening wear. IP68 rated and built to handle a 2-metre drop.
One of the most popular headlamp series in our lineup—the HM61R family consistently ranks among the top sellers for a reason: it does everything, handles anything, and goes where you go.
→ Get the HM61R V3.0 — CAD$134.95
HM71R: The Powerhouse · CAD$169.95
The HM71R delivers 2,700 lumens and a 230-metre beam distance. That's serious reach—enough to light up an entire campsite clearing or scan a distant treeline. If you're the kind of camper who arrives after dark and needs to find a flat spot, string up a tarp, and get organized fast, this is the headlamp that turns night into day.
The HM71R also includes a red flood mode at 5 lumens with an impressive 400-hour runtime—a night light you can leave on all weekend without worrying about battery. The flood beam option at 500 lumens is ideal for close-range camp tasks where you need wide, even illumination rather than a focused spot. Weighing 207 grams, it's heavier than the ultralight options but still comfortable for extended wear. Like the others, IP68 waterproof and 2-metre impact rated.
★ Rated 4.88/5 across 76 verified reviews—the highest-rated headlamp in this roundup. If you want the absolute best performer and you're willing to carry a little more weight, the HM71R is the answer Search & Rescue volunteers reach for when conditions get serious.
Lanterns: Lighting Up Camp
A headlamp follows your eyes. A lantern lights up a space. For cooking, eating, playing cards, or just sitting around talking, a good lantern turns a dark campsite into a comfortable living room. Early spring means you'll spend more time in that "living room" than summer campers—darkness arrives earlier and stays later. Don't underestimate how much a good lantern improves your whole trip.
CL30R: The Cold-Weather Workhorse · CAD$149.95
The CL30R was built for exactly the kind of conditions early spring camping throws at you. Its cold-resistant battery compartment keeps lithium-ion cells performing when temperatures drop below zero overnight—a real concern in April across most of Canada.
At 650 lumens on turbo, the CL30R illuminates a 35-metre diameter area, enough to light an entire group campsite. But the real value is in the lower modes: 100 lumens for 38 hours, 50 lumens for 70 hours, or a 10-lumen eco mode that lasts 300 hours. That's over 12 days of light on a single charge at the lowest setting. The flexible battery configuration—one, two, or three 18650 cells—lets you balance weight against runtime for your trip. The USB power bank function means your phone stays charged even off-grid. Hang it from a ridgeline with the included lanyard, mount it on a tripod, or set it on the camp table. IPX7 waterproof.
The CL30R is a cold-weather favourite among Canadian campers who've been burned by lanterns that fade when the temperature drops. When overnight lows hit -5°C, this lantern keeps performing while others don't.
CL26R Pro: Dual Light Sources, Maximum Versatility · CAD$119.95
The CL26R Pro packs two light sources into one compact lantern: white light for working and red light for preserving night vision. The seven LED groups provide multiple lighting combinations—top light, front light, or downlight—so you can direct illumination exactly where you need it. Need to read a map without disturbing the tent? Front light on low. Cooking dinner? Top light on high.
The magnetic top sticks to any metal surface for instant hands-free lighting, and the retractable hook hangs from tent loops, branches, or ridgelines. At 650 lumens max with a 408-hour runtime on the lowest setting and a 125-hour red mode, the CL26R Pro outlasts most camping trips by a wide margin. It also doubles as a power bank via USB Type-A output. Weighing just 199 grams without the battery, this is a lantern you'll pack on every trip.
A steady seller that earns repeat customers—once you've used a lantern with both white and red output on the same trip, going back to white-only feels like a real downgrade. The red mode alone is worth it.
→ Get the CL26R Pro — CAD$119.95
CL20R PRO: Smart Ambient Light · CAD$79.95
The CL20R PRO is the most compact lantern in this lineup, weighing just 122 grams—lighter than a deck of cards. But what sets it apart is its dual light system: white LEDs for practical illumination and RGB LEDs for ambient colour lighting. The RGB Chase, RGB Flow, and Stepless RGB modes create atmospheric lighting effects that transform your campsite from purely functional to genuinely inviting.
The built-in 5.8 GHz radar sensor is a clever touch—the lantern turns on automatically when you approach and powers off when you leave, saving battery without lifting a finger. Perfect for the middle-of-the-night tent exit. At 400 lumens maximum with a 320-hour moonlight mode, you get practical camp light and atmosphere in a pocket-sized package. The magnetic base sticks to cookstoves, vehicle hoods, or metal tent poles. IP65 rated for spring showers.
Popular with daily users and campers alike—the radar sensor is the kind of feature that sounds gimmicky until you use it on your first 2 AM bathroom run. After that, you wonder how you camped without it.
→ Get the CL20R PRO — CAD$79.95
Flashlights: Reach, Power, and Backup
Headlamps and lanterns cover most camp lighting needs, but a quality flashlight fills the gaps. Checking on a noise at the edge of camp, scanning a lake shore, lighting up a trail marker from a distance, or simply having a backup when your headlamp battery dies—a flashlight earns its place in the pack.
LD36R: Camp Atmosphere Meets Serious Output · CAD$174.95
The LD36R delivers 3,600 lumens of white light with a 385-metre beam distance—serious power for scanning treelines, shorelines, or trail markers from camp. But the LD36R's party trick is its six RGB colour modes: sunrise red, arctic green, neon purple, aqua blue, twilight pink, and sunset orange. Add the included AOD-04 diffuser tip and the LD36R transforms from a high-powered flashlight into a tent lantern or reading light with colour ambiance.
The tripod socket lets you mount it as a stationary camp light, and the stepless colour mode lets you dial in exactly the colour you want. At 231 grams with 65 hours of runtime on eco mode, the LD36R pulls double duty as your primary flashlight and your atmosphere lighting. IP68 waterproof.
The multicolour favourite for campers who want their site to feel like more than just a survival exercise. Six RGB colours, a diffuser tip, and 3,600 lumens of reach—this one does everything.
LD45R: Digital Focus for Any Distance · CAD$184.95
The LD45R solves a common camping flashlight dilemma: do you want a tight spot beam for distance or a wide flood for close-up work? With the LD45R, you get both. The 270-degree rotatable toggle switch provides stepless digital focusing between spot and flood—twist for a focused 480-metre beam to check a far-off trail marker, then twist back for a wide flood to illuminate your cooking area.
At 2,800 lumens on turbo, the LD45R is the most powerful single-cell flashlight in this roundup. The OLED smart display shows remaining runtime, brightness level, and battery status—critical information when you're three days into a backcountry trip and need to manage your power. One-handed operation, USB Type-C charging, and IP68 waterproofing. At 302 grams, it's not a featherweight, but it's a flashlight that replaces two.
The digital focus system is a genuine innovation—not a marketing claim. Spot to flood in a single twist, on a light that puts out 2,800 lumens. No other flashlight in this price range does this.
LD22 V2.0: The Backup That Never Dies · CAD$90.95
The LD22 V2.0 is the flashlight that belongs in every camping pack, period. Why? Dual power. It runs on either the included rechargeable battery pack (800 lumens, 214-metre beam) or two standard AA batteries that you can buy at any gas station between your house and the trailhead. When your rechargeable runs out on day three, pop in two AAs and keep going.
At just 96 grams, the LD22 V2.0 is barely noticeable in your pack or jacket pocket. The tactical tail switch gives you instant activation, and the side switch handles mode selection through five brightness levels plus SOS and strobe. The two-way body clip attaches to a hat brim for an improvised headlamp or to a pack strap for hands-free walking. IP68 waterproof, 1-metre impact resistant, and a 220-hour runtime on eco mode. It's the light you lend to the person who forgot theirs—and the one you reach for when everything else is dead.
★ Rated 5.00/5 across 75 verified reviews—a perfect score. The highest-rated product in this entire guide. 75 people bought this flashlight and every single one gave it five stars. That's not a marketing claim; that's 75 real campers and outdoor users who have zero complaints.
→ Get the LD22 V2.0 — CAD$90.95
Comparison: At a Glance
| Product | Type | Max Lumens | Max Distance | Weight | Key Feature | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HM65R-T V2.0 | Headlamp | 1,600 | 170m | 140g | Warm white mode | CAD$131.95 |
| HM61R V3.0 | Headlamp | 1,800 | 195m | 168g | Red light + detachable | CAD$134.95 |
| HM71R | Headlamp | 2,700 | 230m | 208g | Red flood, 400h runtime | CAD$169.95 |
| CL30R | Lantern | 650 | 35m dia. | 412g | Cold-resistant, 1–3 batteries | CAD$149.95 |
| CL26R Pro | Lantern | 650 | 15m | 199g | White + red dual source | CAD$119.95 |
| CL20R PRO | Lantern | 400 | 15m | 122g | White + RGB, radar sensor | CAD$79.95 |
| LD36R | Flashlight | 3,600 | 385m | 231g | 6 RGB colours + diffuser | CAD$174.95 |
| LD45R | Flashlight | 2,800 | 480m | 302g | Digital spot/flood focus | CAD$184.95 |
| LD22 V2.0 | Flashlight | 800 | 214m | 96g | Rechargeable + AA backup | CAD$90.95 |
Build Your Spring Camping Kit
Not sure where to start? Here are three field-tested kit configurations at different price points. Each one covers the minimum viable setup (headlamp + lantern + backup flashlight) that Fenix recommends for Canadian spring conditions.
Starter Kit — CAD$300.85
Best for: Car campers, first-time spring campers, weekend warriors on a budget.
- HM65R-T V2.0 Headlamp — CAD$131.95 — Warm white, 140g, IP68
- CL20R PRO Lantern — CAD$79.95 — RGB + radar, 122g, magnetic base
- LD22 V2.0 Flashlight — CAD$90.95 — ★ 5.00/5, rechargeable + AA backup
You get a versatile headlamp, a smart auto-sensing lantern, and the highest-rated backup flashlight money can buy. This kit handles everything from camp chores to 2 AM bathroom runs.
All-Season Kit — CAD$404.85
Best for: Experienced campers, multi-night backcountry trips, shoulder-season conditions.
- HM61R V3.0 Headlamp — CAD$134.95 — Red light + detachable lamp head
- CL26R Pro Lantern — CAD$119.95 — White + red, 408h runtime on low
- LD36R Flashlight — CAD$174.95 — 3,600 lumens, 6 RGB modes, diffuser tip
Red light on both the headlamp and lantern means full night-vision protection. The LD36R doubles as atmosphere lighting and a serious power beam. This kit handles spring, summer, and fall.
Maximum Kit — CAD$524.85
Best for: Group leaders, SAR-adjacent activities, cold-weather basecamp setups, those who refuse to compromise.
- HM71R Headlamp — CAD$169.95 — ★ 4.88/5 (76 reviews), 2,700 lumens, 400h red flood
- CL30R Lantern — CAD$149.95 — Cold-resistant, 300h eco mode, power bank
- LD45R Flashlight — CAD$184.95 — Digital spot/flood focus, OLED display, 2,800 lumens
- LD22 V2.0 (backup) — CAD$90.95 — Because serious campers carry a real backup
The HM71R is trusted by Search & Rescue. The CL30R keeps performing when overnight temps go sub-zero. The LD45R's OLED display tells you exactly how much runtime you have left. And the LD22 V2.0 is there when you need a reliable backup with zero drama.
Spring Camping Lighting Tips
- Pack redundancy. Bring at least two light sources. A headlamp plus a flashlight is the minimum. If one fails, you're not in the dark.
- Protect your night vision. Use red or warm white modes around camp. Your eyes take 20–30 minutes to fully adapt to darkness—one blast of white light resets the clock.
- Keep batteries warm. Lithium-ion batteries lose capacity in cold weather. Sleep with your headlamp in your sleeping bag, or choose a lantern like the CL30R with cold-resistant design.
- Carry backup power. AA batteries from the gas station, a spare 18650 cell, or a flashlight like the LD22 V2.0 that accepts both rechargeable and disposable batteries.
- Hang your lantern high. A lantern at head height or above casts fewer shadows and covers more ground than one sitting on the picnic table.
- Charge before you go. Top off all rechargeable batteries the night before your trip. It takes ten seconds and prevents the most common lighting failure in the backcountry.
- Use eco modes. You rarely need full power around camp. A 30–50 lumen eco mode is plenty for cooking and eating, and extends battery life dramatically.
Get Ready for Spring
Early spring camping in Canada rewards the prepared. The crowds haven't arrived yet, the bugs aren't out, and the landscapes are raw and beautiful—snow-capped peaks reflected in ice-edged lakes, rivers running high with meltwater, forests just starting to green up. But the conditions demand respect, and good lighting is part of that respect.
Fenix has been building gear that professionals stake their safety on since 2004. Canadian corrections officers carry it on shift. BC Hydro crews use it in the field. Coast Guard teams trust it in conditions that would break anything less. The same gear that lives up to those standards works just as hard for your spring camping trip—and you can get it from a Canadian retailer that stocks, ships, and stands behind every unit.
Whether you need a featherweight headlamp for backcountry trekking, a cold-resistant lantern for base camp, or a dual-power flashlight that never quits, explore the full Fenix lineup at fenixtactical.com and get your lighting sorted before the first trip of the season.
→ Shop All Fenix Lighting at Fenix Tactical — Free Shipping Available








