View Full Version : My 2017 post hike hammock setup breakdown
I forgot I never posted this here, only on hammock forums.
My bad, gang
https://thetrek.co/appalachian-trail/thru-hiking-appalachian-trail-hammock/
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20180114/da7921b926365ce8c8df825ec760649b.jpg
That said I’d still take an under quilt again. They’re much more comfortable (for me) and are worth it for the great sleep I consistently got.
If I were going to thru-hike my Big 3 hammock setup would be:
Backpack: ULA Ohm 2.0 (30lb max) - 34 oz.
Hammock: SL 1.7 Blackbird XLC - 70D w/Dyneema 15' Straps - 25.3 oz.
Tarp: Hammock Gear - 11' CF Palace 9.14 oz.
TQ: JRB Hudson River Quilt (+1 oz.) 30° + (13° w/JRB liner) - 22.5oz.
Partial UQ: JRB Greylock 3 (+1 oz.) 20° w/ UQP + (13° w/JRB liner) - 19 oz.
Foot Pad: Dutch Folding Sit Pad .67 oz.
Luxury Item: JRB Fleece Quilt Liner (Summer Blanket) - 18 oz.
Around 8lbs.
I would swap out the 30° Hudson River TQ at some point for a 17.5 oz. 40° JRB Sierra Stealth but I would keep the liner/summer blanket.
May or may not bring Under Quilt Protector...I didn't see that in your gear.
Did you use one?
Nah no protector.
And I hear you on that winter palace; I yearn, I lust.
In any real heavy rainfall the bottom of my UQ got wet. It actually caused some concern and I’d constantly tough it to see how wet. It was mostly surface water from splash up (one reason I wanted the larger tarp) and literally never effected my warmth so, shrug.
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I wouldn’t think you’d need the liner.
It’s all about the under quilt; it’s more important. There were days I left the UQ on and shoved the top quilt up by my feet because it was too warm. One night it got colder early in the morning and I couldn’t get my quilt out - I’d tucked it in the ridgine and in my grogginess couldn’t get it straight so I just kicked it away and pulled my puffy over me and was content.
The foot pad is pretty important, especially if you use a 3/4 length UQ
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Nah no protector.
In any real heavy rainfall the bottom of my UQ got wet. It actually caused some concern and I’d constantly tough it to see how wet. It was mostly surface water from splash up (one reason I wanted the larger tarp) and literally never effected my warmth so, shrug.
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Good to know.
I use it more to block the wind from stealing warmth from the UQ.
I may take it off and do some more testing with these frigid temps.
I wouldn’t think you’d need the liner.
It’s all about the under quilt; it’s more important. There were days I left the UQ on and shoved the top quilt up by my feet because it was too warm. One night it got colder early in the morning and I couldn’t get my quilt out - I’d tucked it in the ridgine and in my grogginess couldn’t get it straight so I just kicked it away and pulled my puffy over me and was content.
The foot pad is pretty important, especially if you use a 3/4 length UQ
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My testing has revealed that the quilt liner is a critical piece in extending the warmth of my Hudson River TQ and adding to my overall comfort.
Here is some sample data:
41578
My UQ has yet to fail me from 60°-10° and I always use an UQP.
Damn quite the record keeping.
I never really had a wind issue. The only time my underquilt wasn’t enough was the third night with a wind chill of -10. No 20 degree quilt can survive that, but I was ok wearing all my clothes (read: miserable) with my feet inside my pack
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My PASS ratings are based on Comfort.
I don't want to be miserable.
Probably why I am attached to my quilt liner like Linus.
It's 25° right now and I am getting ready to head out with the Hudson River 30° TQ and the liner.