I’m new to all this. Sounds like when using a sleeping bag in a hammock, where ever is pressed against the bottom and compresses the bags ‘loft’, you’ll have a cold spot .
My question is: Does this happen regardless of the rating of the bag?
I’m new to all this. Sounds like when using a sleeping bag in a hammock, where ever is pressed against the bottom and compresses the bags ‘loft’, you’ll have a cold spot .
My question is: Does this happen regardless of the rating of the bag?
The harder I work, the luckier I get.
The same is true for tents, that's why you have to use a Therm a Rest or simular pad under you for insulation. And it doesn't matter what it's rated for. Big Agnes sleeping bags just leave the fill out of the bottoms because they figure it's just added weight anyhow.
You can use a pad under you in a hammock but it's hard to get on or stay on and it doesn't breath so you'll get wet spots. I've tried lots of stuff over time, best bet in my opinion is a guilt system. An under quilt for a hammock rides on the outside so your weight isn't compressing it so it maintains it's full loft. Actually over night it gets thicker due to that gravity thing. And you can adjust it for different temps. My favorite thing about a quilt system in getting in the hammock (I have a Hennessy). You just climb in, in your sleeping clothes, and pull the quilt over you as you need it. No fighting to get in the bag, it's sweet. And I imagine the bigger you are the harder that is.
Last edited by btourer; 05-20-2007 at 13:55.
If you must choose between two evils, opt for the one you've never tried before
My Tom Claytor has a sleeve in it for a thermarest. It seems to stay put well. But I haven't had the chance to try an underquilt yet. For what it's worth, at 288# I suppose I quallify as a "Big Guy" too. Welcome to the hangin' life! Peace, Ritz.
Why didn't someone tell me sooner? I don't HAVE to sleep on the ground!
6 feet over,
Yes, pretty much any bag will compress. That is why people use pads &/or underquilts.
I was wondering how long it would take some pad lover to jump me for that one. Hence the reason I added "in my opinion"
If you must choose between two evils, opt for the one you've never tried before
I've never seen any that you could put under it. All the pads examples I've seen were made for laying on. With the exception of the Hennessy SS system. But that pad is just a foam insulator that's stuck between two layers of nylon.
Last edited by btourer; 05-20-2007 at 15:48.
If you must choose between two evils, opt for the one you've never tried before
If you have a Hennessy SuperSystem you can put another, or different, pad between the hammock and the undercover successfully. The undercover will hold it in place and if you put it on top of the SS pad the SS pad will grip the other pad and keep it from sliding around.
Also, the sleeping bag you have will work well as a top quilt, and especially if it has a full length zipper. Just lay in the hammock, put your feet in the bottom of the bag and pull the bag over you and tuck the sides around your shoulders. I use mine that way and you actually get more insulation on top of you since all your bag is on top.
Welcome to the hangin' gang. There's a fair learning curve but you can pick most of it up by reading this site. The rest is trial and error and testing, testing and more testing. The back yard make a great test ground because you can bail out and go inside if something is not working.
Stoikurt
"Work to Live...Don't Live to Work!"
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