GroundGrabba — Invented in the Australian Outback
GroundGrabba was born out of an Australian camping problem: David Levine spent fifteen minutes per stake yanking 3-foot rebar out of the desert at Burning Man. So he and his partner Susan Sparkes-Young built the alternative — a screw-in ground anchor you drive in with a cordless drill. Founded on the east coast of Australia, GroundGrabba now ships worldwide.
The full anchor lineup
Three core models cover different conditions: the Lite (lightweight, for tarps and lighter shelters), the Pro (heavier-duty, for tents and event canopies), and the Fang (the heavy-duty kit for vehicles, overland shelters, and high-wind scenarios). See Ground Anchors for the broader anchor category.
Trusted in the toughest substrates
Sand, snow, loose dirt, and frozen ground all defeat conventional stakes. GroundGrabba's two-helix screw-in design drives in deep enough to hold force that would pull standard stakes free in seconds. Used by overlanders, festival event crews, hunting outfits, and shelter teams.
Pair with overland and shelter kit
GroundGrabba lives alongside shelter accessories (tarps, paracord, tensioners) and vehicle recovery gear. For overland rigs, pair anchors with Pro Eagle jacks and Atwood mil-spec paracord for a complete on-vehicle stabilization kit.
Starting with GroundGrabba? The Lite 4-pack handles most tent and tarp setups. Step up to the Pro for heavier shelters or windier conditions. The Fang covers vehicle and event-scale anchoring.