Ultralight Sleeping
Bags
By Steve Gillman
Why ultralight sleeping bags? Because ultralight backpacking
is only made possible by cutting the weight of the "big three;"
the backpack, shelter and sleeping bag. The days of five-pound
summer bags are gone - at least for those of us who prefer to
go light.
There are several one-pound ultralight sleeping bags on the
market now. My own is 17 ounces. It actually weighs 19 ounces with the stuff sack, but
stuff sacks aren't always necessary. It can be stuffed
directly into my pack or put in a half-ounce bread bag.
It's a down sleeping bag, and has kept me warm down to
below freezing - warmer, in fact, than my four-pound bag
used to keep me.
It appears fragile, and I've babied it over the years, but
it may be tougher than I thought. I've used it from sea-level
to 16,000 feet, in all types of weather, usually camping under
a tarp, yet it still has its loft, and it appears almost new.
The zipper goes only half-way down, to save weight, and it's a
mummy bag, but I'm 6'3", 165 pounds, and I've always been
comfortable in it.
Sleeping bags weighing around a pound are summer bags, rated
down to 40 to 50 degrees fahrenheit. A quick check of the
newest bags out there, though, shows that even one or two of
the 0 degree bags are under three pounds now. These are down
filled bags, of course, as down is still the lightest
insulation for its weight.
Another big advantage of any down sleeping bag is it's
compressibility. Nothing packs smaller than down. However, a
good synthetic bag is probably better than down if you are
regularly getting it wet.
Several sythetic-fill sleeping bags now come close to down
in their warmth-to-weight ratio. At least one summer bag, using
Polarguard fill, weighs an even 16 ounces. That's amazingly
light for a synthetic bag.
Using Ultralight Sleeping Bags
Ultralight sleeping bags generally aren't tough. The lighter
the bag, the more fragile, but treat them gently, and they work
fine. I've used mine for many years, in snow and rain, from
Ecuador to California to Michigan, and it shows little wear.
Baby these things, and they can last a long time.
Steve Gillman is a long-time backpacker, and advocate of
lightweight backpacking. His advice, stories and sleeping bag
recommendations can be found at http://www.TheUltralightBackpackingSite.com
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