DayTrip
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I recently purchased a Kammok Roo hammock which I have become absolutely obsessed with. Extremely comfortable, seems very durable, versatile set up options and set up is stupidly fast. Probably too late into the year to really take advantage of but next year this will definitely be riding in the pack for overnights and long, lazy summer hikes.
My big question in reading up on hammock camping is why quilts? It seems like just about everyone prefers quilts versus the normal sleeping gear (bag, pad, etc). Why can't you simply put a pad down in the hammock and jump in there with your sleeping bag and possibly a bivy sack? I've tested my gore tex bivy sack on snow in my back yard at well below zero temps wearing only the clothes I would have on a Winter day hike and I was comfortable (albeit only for 30-40 minutes). I'd think on a cool night in the 40's or high 30's jumping in my bivy sack with my usual layers would be fine with a z-fold or similar pad. Quilts seem like a pain in the ass to get rigged, don't appear to have any weight saving or space benefit and are pretty expensive.
What am I missing? Any experienced hammock campers want to weigh in on the topic. I should also point out that hammock camping for me would only be in good, dry weather with temps no lower than the high 30's probably. Not looking at this as a Winter option. Looking at it as a lightweight, fast and flexible sleeping system for the better weather months where I'd wear my insulating layers as my "sleeping bag". So I'd have the hammock, pad, tarp and bivy as the system. What are the flaws to this thought?
My big question in reading up on hammock camping is why quilts? It seems like just about everyone prefers quilts versus the normal sleeping gear (bag, pad, etc). Why can't you simply put a pad down in the hammock and jump in there with your sleeping bag and possibly a bivy sack? I've tested my gore tex bivy sack on snow in my back yard at well below zero temps wearing only the clothes I would have on a Winter day hike and I was comfortable (albeit only for 30-40 minutes). I'd think on a cool night in the 40's or high 30's jumping in my bivy sack with my usual layers would be fine with a z-fold or similar pad. Quilts seem like a pain in the ass to get rigged, don't appear to have any weight saving or space benefit and are pretty expensive.
What am I missing? Any experienced hammock campers want to weigh in on the topic. I should also point out that hammock camping for me would only be in good, dry weather with temps no lower than the high 30's probably. Not looking at this as a Winter option. Looking at it as a lightweight, fast and flexible sleeping system for the better weather months where I'd wear my insulating layers as my "sleeping bag". So I'd have the hammock, pad, tarp and bivy as the system. What are the flaws to this thought?