Offline
Hi,
I did have a question on Hammock camping. I was wondering in the spring and fall (early May to early October) if having an under quilt is necessary for warmth?
thanks.
Offline
I find even in the warmer months I need something under my down sleeping bag due to the compressed feathers. I use an old thermarest for this purpose.
I'm the spring this is an absolute must. I don't know how synthetic bags perform in this scenario.
Offline
I hammock camp all year round in Algonquin and I can assure you that even in the summer you would likely need some type of insulation under you. I use a 20 degree underquilt in the summer and then a 0 degree underquilt in the spring and fall. In the winter I'll combine both underquilts and that works really well. I've used a pad as well but personally I found it a bit awkward and at times it would slip out from under me. Underquilts are the way to go! I would strongly suggest you get one that is a wide and long model for colder temps. It will wrap up around you a bit and give you extra coverage where you need it...
Offline
For people that hammock camp with a pad, do you use your pad inside the bag or out?
In the summer, I use a thermorest accordian pad on cooler nights. It's a bit of pain to use though and I have a hard time keeping it on the diagonal without it refolding itself.
I want to try out my self inflating pad. I'm thinking that it'll be easier to stay on top of it if it's inside my bag. My concern is it spreads my bag out so I could lose some warmth(?). I have a 0degC bag so I don't have a lot of room to play with temperature wise in late September. I do have a liner that I plan to use in addition though.
Any thought?
Offline
Both of my hammocks are double layer so when I do use a pad (summer) it goes in between. I use a cheap, blue, closed cell foam pad.
Offline
Hammock on bottom then self-inflating thermarest then synthetic sleeping bag on top. I've slept in the snow and was warm enough. Bag rated to twenty Fahrenheit. I've used a rectangular thermarest instead of the mummy-shaped because that's what I had. It generally stays in place but you need to develop your skill of getting in and out without mucking everything up.
Offline
I have a double layer Hennessey Asym Zip. I use a thermarest pad as I haven't upgraded to a quilt yet. A week ago on big Crow my thermometer read 3C in the morning and I was toasty all night. Down bag rated to -7. I hammock year round and only thing that changes is my bag. Have a -30 bag for winter. Works great.
Last edited by Shayne74 (9/20/2020 12:00 pm)
Offline
As an update, my 0C bag, liner, and 1.5" self inflating pad kept me warm enough this weekend in QE2. I wish the pad was a little wider though. Temps were close to freezing.
Offline
JoeScmoe wrote:
As an update, my 0C bag, liner, and 1.5" self inflating pad kept me warm enough this weekend in QE2. I wish the pad was a little wider though. Temps were close to freezing.
This is where you will really notice the benefit of an underquilt vs a sleeping pad. The quilt wraps up around you. My winter underquilt is an extra wide version so it's almost like a cocoon of downy goodness The problem with the underquilt though is that ANY sag under you (like even 2 inches) and you will feel a cold spot. They can be tricky to get dialed in perfect so they are snug up under you correctly.