I have a te-wa 3-season and love it. It helped me down to 13 degrees, packs around the size of a nalgene bottle and is very well made.
I have a te-wa 3-season and love it. It helped me down to 13 degrees, packs around the size of a nalgene bottle and is very well made.
Syb
Enjoy the elevation
I posted a matrix of all the UQ's I could find for under $200
http://www.hammockforums.net/forum/s...ad.php?t=32916
I am still 18 but with 52 years of experience !
going back to the "cheap & light"... is DIY out of the question?
TinaLouise
I am looking at a diy IX underquilt. I don't really care if it is lightweight I just want it to be extremely compact. I want to have an Adventure Racing type backpack and everything needs to fit inside. Gunner thanks for the Matrix I just wish they had pack sizes listed.
"If animals could speak the dog would be a blundering outspoken fellow, but the cat would have the rare grace of never saying a word too much."
- Mark Twain
"FOR THE LOVE OF GOD! NO MORE WOOD!"
- Mancat
Does Leigh have a website and if so does anyone have a link.
"He who makes a beast of himself, gets rid of the pain of being a man." Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
Please check out the link below to show your love for hammocks!www.zazzle.com/hammocklife
Here is LeighLo's Link:
http://leighlounderquilts.webs.com/underquilts.htm
I have and IX underquilt and although it's very easy to make, very easy to attach to my hammock, very easy to keep dry, fairly lightweight.... it is not compackable!!! So if that's highly important to you, I wouldn't recomend the IX.
I've tried climashield and down quilts, the most compactable are the down ones. They are also the most expensive ones. If compactability is your highest requirement, you'd probably be happier and better off to get down. (this, of course, is just my opinion and worth just about 2 cents)
TinaLouise
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