Having finished my work on the Propex system and abandoning the project of burning anthracite coal in the wood stove, I'm trying to figure out my next winter camping project. My latest idea is to do a backpacking trek with my tree tent to see whether I can figure out how to stay warm while sleeping six feet above the ground. I wanted to ask for ideas from the experts here on the ExPo portal. Any suggestions? My early thoughts are to use reflective emergency blankets above and below a 0F sleeping bag, plus an extra fleece blanket inside the sleeping bag, along with a 24oz Nalgene bottle filled with very hot water. The benefit of the tree tent is that I won't need to carry any sleeping pads (foam, aircell, etc). But the drawback is that I won't benefit from the insulating property of sleeping right on top of the planet earth. Interested to hear any ideas or suggestions. Thanks!
The principle of insulation is the same for everything, from house to vehicule to sleeping bag. What keep you warm is the hability to trap the largest layer of air and make so that it does not move. So a hous built in the same manner, that as 1 inch of insulation, will not be as efficient as the same house with 6" of insulation. That os ame inner vapor barrier and outer wind braker and etc.
Same apply with sleeping bag. The better you can keep tha air trap in thicket layer sleeping bag you can find, the warmer you will remain. But the draw back of a sleeping back, is that we have to lay down to sleep, and that thick layer becomes really thin, trapping less air, giving you less insulation letting you feel the cold from under. This is where a good sleeping pad come in. The thicker insulation you can have (think here micro bubble, cause just an air matress will transfert cold air from the ground directly to the surface where you sleep) the warmer you will be. Winter camping, 3/4" to one inch will be best, and the proof of that, is that if you sleep directly in the snow with a non efficient matress, you will be cold and you will leave a melted space under your self.
An other thing is that ice will form in the last remaining layer of you sleeping bag, that is the body humidity freezing in the cold layer, the one that touch the freezing air. To prvent thia, you need to create a sleep system, that will be a warm sleeping bag and a nylon or gortex or similar outer layer so the humidity will freeze inside that last layer and not in you sleeping bag.
And btw, emergency blanket are what the are, emergency blanket. They reflect heat (++), they trap air and protect from the wind (an other ++) but they also trap humidity big time (--) that make it hard to stay warm. I am a big fan, and carry many in all my bags and backpacks and vehicule. But will never sleep in one on purpose.
Just try one for fun in your beg of living room. I did.
As for sleeping in a hammock, it is not for me, but I have never tried it. I prefer my RTT latter.