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Quote from: Wea300mag on December 06, 2013, 07:37:40 PMWhat are you using for a bag?This is the mattress I have been using in the cold after a recommendation by Actionshooter. It works very good in the cold.http://www.amazon.com/Exped-DownMat-Pump-Sleeping-Pad/dp/B0038WRMVW If I use the NorthFace Snowshoe with the REI Stratos inflatable mat, (R3.8 and weighs less than a pound.) in temps around zero degrees, I get cold hips. Everything else is just fine. I'm certainly warm, but I get sore hips. (I literally have no fat on my hips and sleep on my side) I don't blame the sleeping bag at all. I believe that the issue is that I need to insulate from the ground better when the ground is frozen. Like you point out a better sleeping pad... I never had this issue with any bag if I used my hammock. I tested a couple of combinations that only add a few ounces to my pack. A section of closed cell foam under my mid section takes care of the cold hips. I also tested an older synthetic bag with a super light liner bag with that extra foam to success in the cold. -That tells me I can ditch the Snowshoe that zips on the wrong side and is too long for me anyway. -Steve
What are you using for a bag?This is the mattress I have been using in the cold after a recommendation by Actionshooter. It works very good in the cold.http://www.amazon.com/Exped-DownMat-Pump-Sleeping-Pad/dp/B0038WRMVW
Steve, ever try the coldweather sleep outs with standard foam backpacking sleep mats?
Quote from: JackOfAllTrades on December 26, 2013, 12:40:20 PMQuote from: Wea300mag on December 06, 2013, 07:37:40 PMWhat are you using for a bag?This is the mattress I have been using in the cold after a recommendation by Actionshooter. It works very good in the cold.http://www.amazon.com/Exped-DownMat-Pump-Sleeping-Pad/dp/B0038WRMVW If I use the NorthFace Snowshoe with the REI Stratos inflatable mat, (R3.8 and weighs less than a pound.) in temps around zero degrees, I get cold hips. Everything else is just fine. I'm certainly warm, but I get sore hips. (I literally have no fat on my hips and sleep on my side) I don't blame the sleeping bag at all. I believe that the issue is that I need to insulate from the ground better when the ground is frozen. Like you point out a better sleeping pad... I never had this issue with any bag if I used my hammock. I tested a couple of combinations that only add a few ounces to my pack. A section of closed cell foam under my mid section takes care of the cold hips. I also tested an older synthetic bag with a super light liner bag with that extra foam to success in the cold. -That tells me I can ditch the Snowshoe that zips on the wrong side and is too long for me anyway. -SteveSteve, ever try the coldweather sleep outs with standard foam backpacking sleep mats? We swear by them, put two under you... An added advantage to these is that you can sit on them around a fire, or around on sharp edges and not destroy them. I am convinced airmats over cold ground do not work well, especially when you compress heavy at the hips and shoulders, almost no insulative value left when you compress them.
gave the new sleeping bag a good run last night. wouldnt say i was toasty warm, but i definitely wasnt cold. just wore base layers and a light stocking hat.
There ya go! Wind chill temps have been single digits at my place for four days now. -Steve
Quote from: JackOfAllTrades on February 06, 2014, 11:14:39 AMThere ya go! Wind chill temps have been single digits at my place for four days now. -Stevethermometer said 11, noaa said 12, and when i left for work, my car said 15. id say bag is pretty true to temp. i usually sleep cold.