The good thing about surveying from kayaks that can carry a lot is that you can transport a very Cush camp. We had our teepee and wood stove, canned food, pots and pans, vegetables, and even carried split wood into the field. We'd put our stove wood into buckets with lids to keep it dry between camps. We basically set up a new camp at the end of every day. We did use a couple of camps twice, but in general when it got to be around 5 PM we would start looking for a good place to camp. Philip was very picky about where we camped and every camp was in a flat soft place (though one of them was pretty wet!).
The cushy camp was nice because we had some nasty weather with high winds and rain. We stayed in the first camp for 2 nights because the weather was too adverse for kayaking. Nothing like a wood stove for drying out gear after a day spent hiking in the rain! And then later in the trip when it got sunny the nights turned cold. It frosted pretty hard two nights in a row. Nothing like a stove to melt the frost on a cold morning!
Wood stoves are really good for cooking real food. No freeze dried yuk for us! We had pasta and red beans and rice type meals. Slow cooked at medium heat on the wood stove. We used the jet boil type stove for boiling water. Patrick