thatsjet
Well-known member
I was about to post a thread asking how to stay warm without a hot tent. I think i have some ideas now, even without “snapping the radish”... whatever that is.
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What’s your sleep system consist of?I was out Sunday night, -10 or so was the forecast, some wind but it quieted down around midnight. It was good hunting, sorta...elk everywhere but couldn't pin down a bull. I did watch a heavy 180-ish muley for a bit and had a lot of big country to myself. It was fine, condensation was a pain but it goes with the territory.
--For cold weather, Thermarest X-therm, down bag, double wall tentWhat’s your sleep system consist of?
What bag do you use?
Do you sleep inside a bivy inside your tent to keep condensation off your bag?
If you had something along the lines of a WM bison or puma with the gore Tex shell would you be comfortable taking that on week long trips without a bivy to protect from condensation?
Is there a more cost effective or packable option than western mountaineering?
(buy once cry once/resale value and basically just have the ability to anything I want to do outdoors in the future)
Im not saying I’m buying one of these tomorrow, but I’m thinking I might start trying some fly in/out, ski/camp trips and I’d like to be able to save as much room in my pack as possible so I can carry it on the plane so it would be cool to upgrade from my current liner, 30 degree, 10 degree, bivy setup.
and that’s just too much shit to get tangled up in.
The last 2 nights of my recent trip I ditched the liner and bivy and wore my puffy coat and insulated snow pants and was much more comfortable than I was in the 4 bag setup.
condensation on my bag without a bivy to protect it was an issue though.
I sleep very cold- actually I am just very cold, pretty much all the time.What’s your sleep system consist of?
What bag do you use?
Do you sleep inside a bivy inside your tent to keep condensation off your bag?
If you had something along the lines of a WM bison or puma with the gore Tex shell would you be comfortable taking that on week long trips without a bivy to protect from condensation?
Is there a more cost effective or packable option than western mountaineering?
(buy once cry once/resale value and basically just have the ability to anything I want to do outdoors in the future)
Im not saying I’m buying one of these tomorrow, but I’m thinking I might start trying some fly in/out, ski/camp trips and I’d like to be able to save as much room in my pack as possible so I can carry it on the plane so it would be cool to upgrade from my current liner, 30 degree, 10 degree, bivy setup.
and that’s just too much shit to get tangled up in.
The last 2 nights of my recent trip I ditched the liner and bivy and wore my puffy coat and insulated snow pants and was much more comfortable than I was in the 4 bag setup.
condensation on my bag without a bivy to protect it was an issue though.
View attachment 170718
As far as resale value I guess I just thought it was the right thing to say whilst trying to justify spending $1000 on a sleeping bag.I sleep very cold- actually I am just very cold, pretty much all the time.
To sleep in conditions like Snowy did, I'd need at least two pads, and at least two sleeping bags, plus sleeping in my Down Coat and thick hat. I have a 30 deg and a 0 deg REI bags, both are old and both haven't held up great to hard use. I wish my 30 was a little wider to make it easier to slip the 0 inside of it, or vice versa, currently they're the same cut. I also prefer the double wall, which I feel helps with the condensation problem. If I could do it again, I'd go 20 deg and -5 or -10 deg on the bags, but mainly because I'm a cold blooded lizard.
One last thing, if you're going to be doing this long term then who gives a chit about resale value?
LMAO!As far as resale value I guess I just thought it was the right thing to say whilst trying to justify spending $1000 on a sleeping bag.
x2I sleep very cold- actually I am just very cold, pretty much all the time.
To sleep in conditions like Snowy did, I'd need at least two pads, and at least two sleeping bags, plus sleeping in my Down Coat and thick hat. I have a 30 deg and a 0 deg REI bags, both are old and both haven't held up great to hard use. I wish my 30 was a little wider to make it easier to slip the 0 inside of it, or vice versa, currently they're the same cut. I also prefer the double wall, which I feel helps with the condensation problem. If I could do it again, I'd go 20 deg and -5 or -10 deg on the bags, but mainly because I'm a cold blooded lizard.
If it’s not storming or blowing like heck do you sleep with the vents mostly open or closed?The biggest benefit of good resale is that if it's not working quite right for your needs, you want to try another high end company, or there's a new technology you feel is worthwhile, you're out minimal funds. One of the big reasons I use Swarovski glass.
As far as temp ratings for a given set of conditions, it's very personal; I don't disagree with any of the above. No real way to know until you get out there with it. I had a Lynx -10* and I just about never used it. In a four season double wall you can get a good 10-20* bump from the outside temp and block 99% of the wind unless it's ripping.
I leave mine pretty open when possible yes, especially with two people inside. Some designs are better at pushing moisture than others. I have a Kaitum, which has a similar vent layout to your Nammatj. IME it's a pretty good design for limiting condensation. I had an Allak for about 8 years and it was as good or slightly better on condensation. The Nallo wasn't as good with moving condensation, I think because the foot vent is like 3' higher than the opening in the fly and unless you have the fly rolled up at the bottom it doesn't create enough gradient or air movement. We're splitting hairs though...those are all incredible tents, as are many others.If it’s not storming or blowing like heck do you sleep with the vents mostly open or closed?
I was using a nammatj 2 with the vents fully open with dead calm conditions and still getting a bit of condensation build up.
In the picture of my bag with the ice on it I had slept with the vents aprox 2/3rds closed and i felt like it led to more condensation.
It was my understanding that you want to leave the vents open as much as possible for this reason.
is that right?
some thought on your set up:I sleep very cold- actually I am just very cold, pretty much all the time.
To sleep in conditions like Snowy did, I'd need at least two pads, and at least two sleeping bags, plus sleeping in my Down Coat and thick hat. I have a 30 deg and a 0 deg REI bags, both are old and both haven't held up great to hard use. I wish my 30 was a little wider to make it easier to slip the 0 inside of it, or vice versa, currently they're the same cut. I also prefer the double wall, which I feel helps with the condensation problem. If I could do it again, I'd go 20 deg and -5 or -10 deg on the bags, but mainly because I'm a cold blooded lizard.
One last thing, if you're going to be doing this long term then who gives a chit about resale value?