Hi All!
A few of you have contacted me to ask "What's next, Danneaux?" wrt my SOL (Short On Luck) kit now I have abandoned space-type bags/blankets.
I've decided to take another direction toward my SOL kit, for those times when I either bite off more than I can chew for a day-long round trip, have a failure or injury of some sort, or just wish to spend the night wild-camping if the fancy strikes me. An unplanned, spur-of-the-moment overnighter can be a lot of fun if you've prepared in advance.
After a lot of thought and less then stellar success with the emergency bivy-bag arrangements, I have decided what I need is an sorta-ultralight camping kit. With care, I believe I can fit the needed components on my rear rack and in the rack-top bag on my Nomad.
Here are my refined requirements:
= I want to be able to sleep warm down to freezing (32°F/0°C).
= I want to be able to sleep dry if it rains and out of the wind as well.
= I want to be able to cook hot meals (at least three of them) and be able to eat them inside my tent if needed (cooking outside; I just will.not.cook inside a tent in any way, shape, or form. I used to do clinical supervisions, and I have seen enough people who were severely burned in tent fires to put me off the idea of cooking inside one).
= I wanted to put something together for a "reasonable" amount of money, using as much as possible gear I already have.
My dad kindly offered his 32 year-old Early Winters Pocket Hotel Gore-Tex bivy/tent to replace mine, which finally failed on my 2010 Great Basin tour after many years of use. It works fine, smells a little like the old urethane coating on the floor, and needs testing to prove its waterproofness, but is warm and tight and should work great if it proves to still be watertight. It weighs exactly 1kg/2.2lb complete with stuff sack, footprint, and stakes. So, assuming it still works, that's shelter sorted.
REI is currently running a Deal of the Week on sleeping bags at their outlet website:
http://www.rei.com/outlet/feature/Deal+Of+The+Week Looking through their offerings, I selected a Women's Long Sub-Kilo +15 bag filled with 750+ down. My sister has one in a Regular size; I generally go for a women's long bag as they have a smidge more fill in the head and feet where I get also get cold, and are warmer than the men's versions. This one fits to 6ft like the men's regular, but has 3 more ounces of down. It arrived today and looks good. There's
no way in this world it is going to be a 15°F bag for me...wasn't for Sis, either. I think -- and her experience proved -- outside a tent in the open on a good pad it is good to freezing and that's about it, unless you start taking extra measures like adding fleece liners and such. That's just about the temperature range I'm aiming for, and tonight is expected to hit 32°F/0°C exactly, so I'll be in the backyard with the usual wildlife and Iduhnno how many of the neighbor lady's 23 cats (she keeps adding them...) to see if it does the job. If so, that's the bag checked off the list for USDD$160, and useful/usable as a 3-season bag for regular touring also. It weighs in right at 900g/2lb. With a compression sack, I think I can get it down to the size of 1.5 grapefruits. Not bad.
I'm trying the bag on my usual 1kg double-chamber cross-cored/solid Nemo Tuo pad tonight, since I know it is warm and if the bag doesn't work on it, it won't work with anything. If I have success, then I will substitute a Thermarest ProLite Regular pad at about half the weight (455g/1lb) tomorrow night, which is also supposed to be cold.
I will probably toss in my Coccoon Expedition silk liner at 120g/4.2oz and my Coccoon HyperLite pillow at another 68g/2.4oz.
For eating hot meals, I have my little Pocket Kitchen that weighs in right at 458g/1lb with the Heineken beer can penny-stove, simmer ring, priming pan, pot stand, folding sectional windscreen in nylon case, lighter, enough methanol in a bottle for three meals, a folding polycarbonate foon, a dish towel, Swiss Army Knife Classic, P-38 can opener, two Evernew anodized alu bowls and a lid/dish/pot insulator, a pot lifter, and a stuff sack. See:
http://www.thorncycles.co.uk/forums/index.php?topic=3850.msg16915#msg16915 If I wish, I can substitute my Chinese made "orange-box" propane-butane stove and a 110g cartridge of fuel for a total of 330g/11.8oz in the stove alone; heavier than the meths outfit but enough fuel for about 45 minutes' burn time.
The total adds up like this...
1.00kg = bivy/tent
0.90kg = sleeping bag
0.46kg = pad
0.19kg = silk liner & insulated air pillow
0.46kg = Pocket Kitchen
------
3.01kg Total
Hmm...3.01kg/6.63lb...not too bad to accomplish all my goals. Add the weight of a couple straps and my rack-top bag (which I carry anyway) and a few little packets of dehydrated soup and hot cocoa or apple cider mix or tea and the water I usually carry on my bike, and I've met all my goals. With any luck, I'll be warm, dry, and comfortable and not just "surviving" as in a Space-type sack or blanket. Not bad! I recruited my father to stand by the bivy/tent for scale in the attached photos below.
I plan to test tonight wearing most of the clothing I'd likely have with me --
- jersey
- riding shorts
- quarter-socks
- lightweight fleece balaclava
- nylon-faced wool long-sleeve jersey
- wool tights
- lycra tights
Depending on weather, I might also have my rain gear with me -- waterproof jacket, DWR pants, shoe covers, Gore-Tex overmitts, and a helmet cover. Those could be added to the clothing above if desired.
I'm well-hydrated, nicely fed from supper, and sleepy as I approach midnight, so things should go pretty well. It is 12.8°C/55°F at the moment, and will hit 0°C/32°F about 4:30AM. My wet-bulb hygrometer shows 35% humidity, and there' sa 14mph north wind. I've got an hourly temperature data-logger outside the tent, another inside, another inside the top of the bag, and another at the foot, also inside; can't do these things halfway. Report t'morrow; g'night, All.
Best,
Dan. (For Physics! And, um, "Adventure" even if only in the backyard tonight...)