Like your article. All part of picking the correct camp site. Well phrased for the inexperienced. A good remind to us "old sourdoughs".
Like your article. All part of picking the correct camp site. Well phrased for the inexperienced. A good remind to us "old sourdoughs".
Thank you so much! Lots of great advice. I need advice about how to mark this as a favorite. I tried the FAQs with no luck.
BTW, I made my whoopie slings with a hot color for the head (orange) and a cool color (blue) for the feet, so that I can easily orient my hammock the way I want to. (I'm using snake skins.) The color coding really makes things easy!
Makes Sense, but does not make Cents. $700 seems way too steep. My 20 degree bag $200, and generic air pad $20 do plenty. I am a car camper with AWD. I get as far as the National Forest Roads will take me. I have been comfortable down to 35F and don't see a reason to go camping if it gets colder than that. I sleep / wear merino wool. Ibex clothing is top notch gear www.ibex.com . You can comment that it is expensive gear, but I can do more than sleep in it. Looks good out on the town, and does not leave the funk of polyester dri-fit. Could the old coot be sippin too much whiskey before bed time. Those night sweats could be a sign of cancer (serious). Honestly, I would love your setup, but it is budget prohibitive. Not every camper has got discretionary funds like the OP.
Ounces to Grams.
www.jacksrbetter.com ... Largest supplier of camping quilts and under quilts...Home of the Original Nest Under Quilt, and Bear Mountain Bridge Hammock. 800 595 0413
Well written article. As a hammock newbie it helped me to understand the use of under quilts year round and site selection - using the winds to my advantage.
Thank you!
Good information. I winter (hammock) camp and have never (don't own one) used an under quilt. "Never"
Peter Pan thank you for taking the time and effort to share this info. Im just beginning this journey and this article helps me a lot.
Birds make nests from sticks, but pad and insulate the nest with feathers and down. He is saying not to insulate with things that are stiff and uncomfortable, i.e. pads. They have too much structure and aren't comfortable... no to mention being hard to stay on top of. An underquilt will, without exaggeration, change your hammocking life. Period. The moment I got the ad out of my hammock and strapped on an underquilt I knew things would never be the same again.
Cheers,
The Goat
Bookmarks