How to make spike camps more comfortable?

I always bring a stove, worth the weight to me to get started in the am. Start the stove and heat the water for a hot breakfast from your sleeping bag in the tent. It will warm it up, and a hot breakfast (I usually do oatmeal, added protein scoop, dried fruit and/or nuts ) and hot drink and I am ready to get up and out.
I never think of a stove as optional when spike/backpack hunting. It's key for morning (coffee, hot meal) and evening (warm meal, warm drink to recharge, hot water in a nalgene in the sleeping bag to warm it up). It can also help thaw frozen boots in the morning that can be really hard to get on and thawed with only your body heat.
 
I upgraded to a thick (3"+), warm, comfortable pad and bag. Hot meals you enjoy are a plus. Comfortable pillow AND a second pillow/dry bag. As a side sleeper with low back issues, I sleep with the second pillow between my knees or under both knees. I stuff the pillow with my puffy jacket, base layers and socks for the next day. When I wake up, all those items are toasty warm from being in my sleeping bag all night. That makes getting up and dressed much easier on a cold morning for me.
 
You know what else sucks, living 11 months knowing you didn't get it done. That drives me getting up each morning. Also, sleeping in a backpacking spike camp setup is a learned ability. You get better at sleeping well the more you do it. This is where someone who does a lot of backpacking during the summer smokes people who just try to backpack for 7 nights a year. Doing it more means its more normal for you.
 
You know what else sucks, living 11 months knowing you didn't get it done. That drives me getting up each morning. Also, sleeping in a backpacking spike camp setup is a learned ability. You get better at sleeping well the more you do it. This is where someone who does a lot of backpacking during the summer smokes people who just try to backpack for 7 nights a year. Doing it more means its more normal for you.

Agree here. It usually takes me 2-3 nights before I can fall asleep quickly and get good rest... regardless of how hard I worked on that day. It probably doesn't help that I live at 40' above sea level and only get to hunt at higher elevation 7 - 14 days a year (9,000'-12,000').

Foam ear plugs and sleep aids also help me get better rest (Melatonin or Advil PM).
 
I never sleep good on a backpacking pad... Hunting season is only once a year... I suffer through it and go hunting. sometimes a mid day nap is in order.
 
For me the morning is the best - finally time to get up after what is often a long night. By night 2 or 3 I'm usually sleeping better. I have read that "sleeping with one eye open" is a real thing.

Agree with the hot beverage/breakfast in bed crew. Also, keeping things extremely organized and clean seems to help me. I try to live better out there than in my daily life.
 
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