by Wayne on Mon Jun 08, 2009 11:23 pm
Just coming back to this issue for a few moments. On our camping trips In April and May, we really felt the cold at night(hence the new bags). This was a new experience to us, dealing with the weather at this time of year. Normally we stick to the hotter months, but as the addiction takes hold you find yourself willing to set up camp in conditions your not always fully prepared for. I really do remember waking up shivering, unable to feel my nose, it was that cold.
Recently I was chatting to one of the assistants at the Yeomans Calver Campshow about bags and waking up shivering in the early hours and he had some valuable information.
One big mistake we are making is putting our airbed directly onto our groundsheet, even though its a sewn in groundsheet and I have a second groundsheet i lay on top(kind of an internal footprint, from an old tent). We should still lay a couple of mats under the airbed to insulate it from the floor. Without the mats the ground under the tent is drawing the heat directly out of the sleeping bags through the air chambers in the airbed. This would explain why we would wake up cold in the early hours, it took a few hours for the temperature to drop, the ground to cool and start to suck the warmth from the airbed and then in turn our sleeping bags. Reading this months Camping magazine and I came across the same piece of advice. There was some more tips on beating the cold which I will add later when I have the magazine in front of me.
Whilst the obvious point here is to insulate your airbed from the ground, it also shows that it pays to ask your camping concerns and questions to like minded people. Certainly the camping shows are a great place to chat and learn and these people are passionate about there jobs, for most its also there own hobby. But don't forget here is full of like minded people with a life time of tips and advice and the only silly question is the one you never asked. Anybody who is reading this as a guest, sign up and join us for a chat. Your already part of this friendly forum, you just don't realise it yet
Anyway, I'm going to pick up 2 mats, imagine if I had took my new bags camping in the next couple of weeks and had a really cold night. Whilst we might have been a bit warmer, we would have been disheartened that we had bought rubbish bags, when it was actually our inexperience that had failed us.
I'm going to pick up 2 cheapish mats, any advice on this one ?
Also, slightly out of left field, the kids sleep on camp beds, anybody think mats should be used here, I'm guessing we are OK because they are insulated from the ground ?
Nope, never took it out of the box. But, the salesperson said this tent was super easy to set up; even in windy conditions...