by Ticklebelly » Mon 28 Nov, 2011 8:20 am
Looking for ideas to lose some weight in the sleeping bag department, I started by spending a night in the yard on a stretcher to test out trakkie daks, double socks, thermal top, and fleece vest. Overnight got down to 15 and about 3 in the morning I was looking for something light to put around my shoulders. Upshot was that on a recent 3 nighter, I still took the lightest bag (warmth wise and weight wise) but left the trakkies at home. Overnight temps on this latest were 17-18 and no wind because I camped in deep bush. Lay on the mat all night and only pulled the flap down in the early morning. The experience got me thinking again, so...........
Off to Spotlight and got 2100mm of 210gsm Polafleece. Nice redish colour and a teddy bear motif will get me in good with the ladies, I'm sure. Resdident expert has used her $1,000,000 sewing machine to seal the bottom (each side to the middle) and close the first 300mm from the bottom. Used quilt style, I slide the mat into the footpocket and pull the rest up over the body as required. Spent the night outside in really light weight pants, one pair of socks, and a tee shirt. Min was about 17 and I did take the socks off early in the night. This was on a stretcher and under a mossie net. I figure the tent would add a couple of degrees of comfort (think sleeping bag ratings). I will only take the fleece bag next trip with predicted warm minimums, and will have a extra pair of socks, a merino, a fleece vest, and the rain jacket as expansion opportunities. `Not quite ready to leave the current tent for something like a Tarp tent Contrail (although I do want one) and don't really like the bivvy bag idea but I feel pretty safe with the idea of reducing weight with the light weight fleece quilt as long as some emergency extras are available. I have been in the Barringtons in summer, trout fishing, and those storms can come in quick and COLD.
Weight saving - I knocked 200mm off the width of the Polafleece (finished width 1700mm) and turned the top 75mm for a finished length of 1900mm. Comes in about 600grams on the dodgy kitchen scales (give or take about 50grams). Stuffs very well and I will need to make a custom sack to get maximum smallness, but stuffed size will be about 40% of my light sleeping bag and save 800grams on that bag's weight as well. I am seriously getting down to a sub 7kg pack, before water, for an overnighter.
Also have had the thought that I could use this thing as an over bag in the cold to squeeze an extra couple of degrees out of the proper sleeping bag.
Ticklebelly