by Biggles » Fri 15 Dec, 2023 4:37 pm
A rule of economics prohibits you from paying a little and getting a lot — wishing it the other way around is not unfortunately a probability.
Kathmandu is at the cheaper end of outdoor equipment retailing and a OK/decent place to start your look-see, notwithstanding some things I have seen there very recently (this week) which are astronomically priced without justification (sunshirts and surf smocks). The colours, as with many outdoor clothing and accessories, can either turn you on or turn you away — both things happen to me regularly in whatever store I go into. Still using my 2005-vintage SNOWGUM Coloir 500 Eiderdown sleeping bag — no longer available of course, but for coastal areas, something around 500 to 600 loft would be ideal, not knowing however if you are a hot or cold sleeper. The mountains are a different proposition, as is the particular season you intend to head up there. If winter is your ballpark, reconsider cheap sleeping bags in preference for those that offer more warmth/insulation and protection, likely at the expensive of bulk and splitting open your wallet... nothing is particularly cheap at the moment, and sleeping bags — and a lot of other stuff like sunhats, sunglasses and knickers, are something I sometimes look at for a laugh, rather than as a serious proposition to purchase.
Starting out can be a bit fraught, but one rung of the ladder at a time. When I started bicycle touring 43 years ago, my first sleeping bag was a K-Mart cheapie bought for $12; it rolled up the size of a king-sized pillow. It kept me snug in Central Victoria — just cheap polyester fill with rainbow coloured stripes on the outside. In later years it was used as a bunny rug for two dogs and two cats, all gone long ago, along with the tattered sleeping bag!
Conversation about the weather is the last refuge of the unimaginative.
—Oscar Wilde, 1890.