buckchaser
FNG
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2013
- Messages
- 74
Hello Rokslide. I'm looking to hopefully have folks chime in with their experience around the following scenario.
I have a Seek Outside Cimarron Light with their medium stove. My wife and I use it floorless for winter camping trips. I've also used it floorless for fall hunting trips, but the increasing prevalence of ticks and Lyme disease in my area has me reluctant to do so when the temperatures are not below zero and lots of snow on the ground. I'm hunting in Ontario, Canada so our weather conditions during hunting season are quite cold compared to most.
I'm looking for a enclosed sleep option within the shelter.
The first option is the Seek Outside 1/2 nest. Advantages would be that it allows a spacious area secure from ticks and other insects and it will obviously work seamlessly with the Cimarron being made by Seek Outside.
The second option is a minimalist bivy sack like the Outdoor Research Helium. I'm thinking advantages of this approach are easier to use while running the stove (much more clearance from the stove vs the 1/2 nest), more room inside the shelter when not sleeping, and the option to use the bivy independently on other trips (e.g. under tarp, in lean-to).
The weight on the bivy vs 1/2 nest is pretty comparable, but the 1/2 nest is literally 2-3 times bulkier packed than the bivy packed.
At this point I am leaning toward the bivy - but keen to hear the experience of others.
I have a Seek Outside Cimarron Light with their medium stove. My wife and I use it floorless for winter camping trips. I've also used it floorless for fall hunting trips, but the increasing prevalence of ticks and Lyme disease in my area has me reluctant to do so when the temperatures are not below zero and lots of snow on the ground. I'm hunting in Ontario, Canada so our weather conditions during hunting season are quite cold compared to most.
I'm looking for a enclosed sleep option within the shelter.
The first option is the Seek Outside 1/2 nest. Advantages would be that it allows a spacious area secure from ticks and other insects and it will obviously work seamlessly with the Cimarron being made by Seek Outside.
The second option is a minimalist bivy sack like the Outdoor Research Helium. I'm thinking advantages of this approach are easier to use while running the stove (much more clearance from the stove vs the 1/2 nest), more room inside the shelter when not sleeping, and the option to use the bivy independently on other trips (e.g. under tarp, in lean-to).
The weight on the bivy vs 1/2 nest is pretty comparable, but the 1/2 nest is literally 2-3 times bulkier packed than the bivy packed.
At this point I am leaning toward the bivy - but keen to hear the experience of others.