pozorvlak: (Default)
pozorvlak ([personal profile] pozorvlak) wrote2009-05-26 07:42 pm
Entry tags:

Another daft idea

Sleeping bags with sleeves, allowing for the following use cases:
  1. Cuddling in tents. Because I'm soppy like that.
  2. Sitting around in, say, a fscking cold flat in winter.
  3. Camping in cold situations, where you want to do your sleeping bag all the way up but don't want to risk being unable to unzip yourself later.
The sleeves should terminate in mittens, for Safety. To support use case 2, the mittens should perhaps be the type where the end can be folded back to reveal the wearer's fingers.

There's prior art: several brands of blankets-with-sleeves are commercially available.

[identity profile] pozorvlak.livejournal.com 2009-05-27 09:40 am (UTC)(link)
1. I think all my sleeping bags (three at the last count) have different-gauge zips, so that wouldn't work. I'll check, though. I'd also heard that double sleeping bags let in draughts and thus are less warm than two individual sleeping bags, but possibly this depends on the vehemence of the cuddling involved.

2. I haven't been inside your current flat, but ours is fscking cold. And damp - humidity above 70% most of the time. The thought of buying a dehumidifier for next winter has been mooted, as has the thought of moving somewhere drier (though finding such a place in Edinburgh may be tricky). Also, having got fat slowly and then got thinnish again fairly quickly, I'm a lot more sensitive to cold than I used to be.

3. Yes, but the upper section is a bit too narrow to move my arms about, and I get paranoid. Lengthening said tag with a bit of string is a good idea, though.

It would also be nice to have somewhere safe to put a nice cup of tea in a tent.

barrel sling around the cup (http://moblog.net/view/97490/knots-again-in-better-light), hang it off the roof. Note that there are two forms of barrel sling - one that's quicker to tie, and one that holds its shape when empty. You probably want the second one.

[identity profile] half-of-monty.livejournal.com 2009-05-27 02:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I thought they'd standardised the gauge of sleeping bag zips for this very reason. Haven't they? Silly them.

I suppose that double sleeping bags are a lot draughtier than single, but the whole shared body warmth effect is a *lot* warmer so I think you still win.

I am not especially wise in the ways of barrel slings. I suppose I can google for some instructions just as easily as you can, though.

[identity profile] pozorvlak.livejournal.com 2009-05-27 02:36 pm (UTC)(link)
One of my sleeping bags is (I think) 17 years old, so it may well be pre-standardisation. However, I haven't actually tried: I'll do so this evening.

The Blacks "buy one get one half-price" sale is calling to me...

[identity profile] michaelp-j (from livejournal.com) 2009-05-27 02:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Blacks also used to sell "sleeping bag expanders" for certain brands of sleeping bag: this is a piece of fabric about 15cm wide with zips on both sides, which enlarges a one-person bag to make it big enough for two people to be cozy in. The giant double sleeping bags (a la Coleman) are indeed rather drafty.

Double bivvy bags are virtually impossible to buy, but fortunately a lot of single ones are generous enough to get two people into.

[identity profile] pozorvlak.livejournal.com 2009-05-27 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
A slight refinement to the barrel sling idea: clove-hitch a karabiner to the handle part of the barrel sling (ie, the point from which the whole thing is suspended), and then you can easily clip it up. I'm assuming your tent is like mine and has a handy piece of line near the ceiling from which you can hang stuff.

[identity profile] pozorvlak.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 08:31 am (UTC)(link)
Using the Awesome Power of SCIENCE!, I have determined that my sleeping bags do not, in fact, zip together.