I currently use my Borah gear 7x9 silpoly tarp and Dimma bivy for everything, usually a low a-frame type setup in bad weather.
My exact same setup!
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I currently use my Borah gear 7x9 silpoly tarp and Dimma bivy for everything, usually a low a-frame type setup in bad weather.
For what it’s worth, having something like a tarp over the top of the Bivy would provide the room to cook without the moisture buildup. Peeing would definitely be a bigger challenge though!I can’t keep the inside of a tent dry in the rain with trips outside to pee and cook. I gotta hand it to you bivy guys - you’re tougher than us tent sleepers.
I guess you’ll just have to pack in a gallon jug to pee in, and leave it on the road on the way back home?! LolFor what it’s worth, having something like a tarp over the top of the Bivy would provide the room to cook without the moisture buildup. Peeing would definitely be a bigger challenge though!
Pissing is the easiest thing in a tarp, don't even have to get out of your bag. Probably my favorite feature of floorless shelters.For what it’s worth, having something like a tarp over the top of the Bivy would provide the room to cook without the moisture buildup. Peeing would definitely be a bigger challenge though!
Why not something like an MLD Bug Bivy 2 paired with a tarp? Gives you protection from bugs, breathes a bit better than a bivy, and gives you improved protection from the rain when you do need to deploy the tarp.I’ve been thinking about reducing weight for my shelter and sleep system. One thing that has my interest currently is using a bivy. I already have a tarp (that I haven’t used yet) and was thinking that a tarp with a bivy would be a good combo and would accomplish my goal. However, the more I started thinking about it, I wondered if the tarp and bivy are serving the same purpose (keep me and my quilt dry while sleeping). Would it be better to go with one vs. the other to minimize things I’m carrying and further reduce weight?
Am I missing something? If the conditions don’t call for precipitation, does a person really need the tarp? If conditions do call for rain and I bring the tarp, should I also bring the bivy? In what situation would a person need both? I know wind might be a consideration, but how big of a consideration is it?
I’ve always used a traditional tent, so this would be unchartered territory for me.
Wow, that is light.Borah Gear: Ultralight Bivy
borahgear.com
5 oz
That sounds real attractive to me. My setup is small, but not that small!The only sleep systems I use anymore, for all my mountain hunts, are a DCF Borah Gear bivy and a DCF tarp of some sort. My lightest sleep system weighs just over 11 oz. and is not much bigger than my hand, when in its stuff sack.
Ha! I think I may go this route. I really like my hot tent when it is cold though so I need to figure that out.I ended up going with a tarp and a piece of tyvek this fall in late Sept. / early Oct. I had brought a tent as well, but the weather forecast didn’t call for rain so it didn’t got in my pack. The set up worked out great, but it was a full moon for the nights I was hunting and I woke up in the middle of the night and I thought someone was shining a spot light on me.