[pct-l] Sleeping bag help, please
Edward Anderson
mendoridered at yahoo.com
Mon May 28 13:11:15 CDT 2012
Nope, not so. The Equinox Ultra-light Bivy is not lighter than the Cocoon Silk sleeping bag liner. The Bivy weighs 6.5 ounces vs only 4.7 ounces for the silk Cocoon. And the bivy is not useful in keeping the INSIDE of your bag clean. And, the Cocoon improves the warmth of the bag by 9.5 degrees. Of course, you could bring both and still only be carrying an extra 10.75 ounces. The Bivy and the Cocoon are designed to serve different purposes.
MendoRider-Hiker
________________________________
From: Diane Soini of Santa Barbara Hikes <diane at santabarbarahikes.com>
To: pct-l at backcountry.net
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Sleeping bag help, please
The nice thing about that section is it's fairly flat for a lot of
the way. I highly suggest you take the lake-blessed alternate route
and do not stick to the PCT. There will be a junction with a trail to
Twin Lakes. Take that. It's so much prettier and if you are slowing
your boyfriend down, he'll be much happier taking rest breaks next to
picturesque lakes than sitting under a tree on a featureless, dusty
dirt road. It is just as level as the main PCT, too.
I've found a 20 degree down bag to be perfectly adequate almost all
the time. I can extend it's range a tiny bit by adding a lightweight
bivy sack (I have the Equinox bivy). A bivy sack is not a little
tent, it's just a nylon bag and weighs very little (way less than a
silk liner that's for sure). I can extend the range by sleeping in my
rain pants and down jacket, too. And if I want real super toasty warm
luxury, I bring two sleeping bags. The 2nd one is a Jacks-R-Better 45
degree wearable quilt. Having such a huge pile of down on top of me
is wonderful and doesn't add that much weight.
Something in the 20-15 degree range ought to work out just fine.
Diane
On May 28, 2012, at 10:00 AM, pct-l-request at backcountry.net wrote:
> I
> am contemplating investing in a good down bag that would be more
> suitable
> to average Yukon conditions but also useful for my PCT section
> hike--maybe
> a 15 F (-10 C) bag. Would something like this be total overkill for
> Northern California in July, or just right for a cold sleeper?
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