Necessity of Sleeping Pads

rjley

FNG
Joined
Aug 17, 2023
Messages
11
Hello everyone,

I currently have the Nemo Dagger 2p Tent and the Nemo Coda 10 Degree sleeping bag en route to my home. I've never used a sleeping pad, and was wondering how necessary they are for longer camps while hunting out west. Is their added size and weight worth having the comfort?
 
Joined
Aug 23, 2014
Messages
5,377
Location
oregon coast
100% necessary

The wrong sleeping pad can ruin a good sleep system. It’s very necessary and should not be a piece that you compromise on, you want one that’s comfortable, durable, and has the right R value for the conditions you’re in. The right sleeping pad is almost as important as the right bag
 

chizelhead

Lil-Rokslider
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Mar 12, 2012
Messages
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PNW
Y. You can get lightweight ones for backpacking and heavier ones for car camping. They not only cushion your body, they add warmth. You can buy one from REI and take it with you. You can try sleeping without it and see how that goes. If you're fine and don't feel like you need it, you have a year to return it. I can't imagine sleeping without one.
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2017
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San Antonio
OP, the issue when the temperature drops is as you sleep on your sleeping back you crush down the insulation and don't get much buffer there because of it. The sleeping pads remedy this.
 

AKDoc

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May 16, 2015
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Alaska
100% necessary

The wrong sleeping pad can ruin a good sleep system. It’s very necessary and should not be a piece that you compromise on, you want one that’s comfortable, durable, and has the right R value for the conditions you’re in. The right sleeping pad is almost as important as the right bag
^^^^this^^^^

To the OP...remember that a sleeping pad is not only comfort it's also necessary insulation (R value)...especially true with your down sleeping bag, so don't skip on the R value of the pad you choose.
 
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Jul 30, 2015
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Lenexa, KS
Think of it this way: without an insulated sleeping pad, you just turned your 10 degree bag into a 50 degree bag, slept like shit, and potentially subjected yourself to unnecessary risk of hypothermia.
 
Joined
Feb 5, 2024
Messages
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Location
Texas
Like a lot of others have said its not about comfort in the sense of not sleeping on bumps, a sleeping pad creates an air barrier between you/your sleeping bag and a massive heat sink (the earth). If you sleep on the ground heat is going to transfer from you to the ground until your body and the ground are the same temperature, which is approximately never, you'll just be much colder all night.
 

rayporter

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Jul 3, 2014
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arkansas or ohio
if, during the night you find yourself tossing and turning constantly to warm up or you dont know why you are cold, your pad should be the first thing to upgrade.
 

cmahoney

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Joined
Jun 18, 2018
Messages
2,449
Location
Minden Nevada
Hello everyone,

I currently have the Nemo Dagger 2p Tent and the Nemo Coda 10 Degree sleeping bag en route to my home. I've never used a sleeping pad, and was wondering how necessary they are for longer camps while hunting out west. Is their added size and weight worth having the comfort?

You are hard core


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

Goafterit

FNG
Joined
Oct 7, 2020
Messages
2
Definitely worth it!! Sleep is extremely important! Being cold while trying to sleep is miserable. Makes for looooong nights. Lol. Ik.
 
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Aug 4, 2019
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North Carolina
Whatever you do test the damn thing right before you go. Sleep on it at least 1 entire night to make sure it holds air all night & doesn't have any small pin holes. And take a patch kit.
 
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
1,739
So most of us wouldn’t spend the night without one, but I will say a former marine hunting partner went three years without a sleeping pad and his sleeping bag wasn’t that great either. We finally pressured him into buying one for next season and a better sleeping bag. He’d just sleep on his pack or a sweatshirt lol.

He’d say he was cold but he still slept.
 

ianpadron

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Feb 3, 2016
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1,946
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Montana
Whatever you do test the damn thing right before you go. Sleep on it at least 1 entire night to make sure it holds air all night & doesn't have any small pin holes. And take a patch kit.

Patch kit x2!

My buddy had a hole in his pad on night 1 of a 7 day trip waaayyy back. We ended up having to build him a 'squatch nest out of pine boughs and he was still miserable. Neither of us had a patch kit, and after that trip we each carry 2 LOL. Would have been a 2 minute fix.
 

Seth

WKR
Joined
Jun 15, 2020
Messages
365
It’s a must have for warmth, even if it’s just a closed cell foam pad and not a more expensive insulated air pad. I put a high value on my sleep quality when out because it ties directly to my performance, so I spend accordingly. I’ll gladly pay a modest weight penalty for sleep quality as well.
 
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Maxhunter

WKR
Joined
Mar 31, 2012
Messages
397
Location
Wyoming
I live out west and I feel there a necessary item. Getting a good night rest will help with you be on your A game when hunting. Lots of good light weight options on the market. I use the

Ether Light XT Insulated Air Sleeping Mat​

 
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