Camping is fab! You'll love it!
Most of it is pretty simple. Go to Blacks or any camping shop and buy the smallest of everything
I would advise on spending a bit to get Thermarests. They fold up really small if you get the lite version
http://www.thermarest.com/product_detai ... D=42&cID=1
and thus fit nicely in an Elise. Top product.
For sleeping bags, go to Blacks and get the ones which scrunch up to the smallest size. 2 of these fit nicely on top of the pax footrest and are fine for summer use.
Those are really just space saving tips. The most important thing I've learned the hard and expensive way is that all tents are not created equal.
Get something roughly the same shape as this:
http://www.outdoorsmagic.com/review/rev ... 7664194380
The key point to note here is that there is a sleeping space and a separate porch bit. That porch bit can make or break a holiday if you get rained on. You can still cook in it (carefully) if it really rains. Also, the side-located doors mean, unless it's raining from both directions, you can still have at least one door open in a shower, so you can still shelter if it rains without feeling like you're closed off from the world. When viewing tents, ask yourself if you could have a door open if it rained. If the door is sloped, the answer is no. Walk away. You'll be thankful you spent a bit extra if you get a rainy weekend. Also, it's easy to put your shoes on in the porch bit in the middle of the night when nature calls - not so with no-porch designs.
Also note semi-geodesic design (i.e. the poles cross over for extra stability). It's really rare to find a side-door, porchy, semi-geodesic design like that one, so happy hunting!
There are lots of little practical reasons we discovered why this tent shape is the best, most of which would take too many words to explain, so just trust me! If you do nothing else, buy a tent that shape. We've changed tents 3 times based on learning the lessons above, but are now happy. It won't take many nights of use (versus hotel / B&B) to pay for itself!
Other top tips are mostly stuff we've built up over the years, starting with cheaper kit, discovering design flaws and getting "what have they got" envy on campsites.
MSR dragonfly stove (awesome!) :
http://www.msrcorp.com/stoves/dragonfly.asp
Microfibre towels (they pack up really small and dry really fast).
http://www.roamingfox.co.uk/Lifeventure ... 16441.html
Also, Fd recently introduced me to compression sacks:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/SUMMIT-Sn240-Co ... 985&sr=8-1
for which I shall be eternally grateful.
And of course, no SE camper should ever be without these:
http://www.rei.com/product/634314
