[pct-l] Tent vs Bivy Sack
Swope Christopher
sswwooppee at gmail.com
Mon Jan 16 23:31:47 CST 2012
Carry a shorty pad, use your pack as insulation under your legs. I'd bring a tarp, but I guess that might depend on the kind of bivy you end up choosing. A tarp will provide a spot to cook that's not directly being rained upon even if it's not dry.
Most bivy systems use a tarp, I think.
On Jan 16, 2012, at 10:14 PM, Tim Gustafson <tjg at tgustafson.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> So I went for a "training" trip this weekend at Henry Coe park with my
> Eureka Solitaire tent. The tent was woefully inadequate for the cold
> temperatures overnight - I'm not sure exactly, but I would say it got
> down to perhaps 25 degrees or so. There was a significant
> accumulation of ice crystals inside and outside the tent. Since it is
> a 3-season tent, it doesn't ever "seal shut" - the tent is no-see-um
> mesh covered with a second layer that is essentially a rain fly, but
> since the rain fly doesn't zip shut (it stakes to the ground
> separately from the rest of the tent), there was no good seal around
> the perimeter of the tent and I got a constant draft through the tent
> all night. I wound up "cocooning" myself into my sleeping bag and
> holding closed the top as I slept.
>
> So I'm thinking about perhaps purchasing something that would be more
> suitable for 4-season use, and I was wondering if I should get a
> 4-season backpacker tent, or maybe go for the bivy sack option. The
> bivy sacks are way lighter than the 4-season tents I'm finding, they
> pack smaller, and they're a lot cheaper too.
>
> I'm not thrilled with the prospect of my pack and boots getting rained
> on, but I suppose I could fix that with a waterproof pack sack, or
> perhaps a tarp that I could erect a simple shelter for them in the
> event of rain.
>
> Does anyone have any wisdom related to using a bivy sack rather than a tent?
>
> --
>
> Tim Gustafson
> tjg at tgustafson.com
> http://tgustafson.com/
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