Again, great work, Ray. I think this is a good way to go for me, too. So I can have a "main" quilt with a comfort around 35 degree F. Which is lighter and packs smaller (and is less expensive). And if I may go on an adventure on which I expect lower temperatures I'll take the second "sheet-quilt" with me. 🙂 Now that I saw your video and gave it some thoughts it seems so obvious: we do the same thing (layering) with our clothes. So why not with the sleeping system 😀(what we already do, regarding the R-rating of mats: layering them also pushes the R-rate up).
Again, great work, Ray. I think this is a good way to go for me, too. So I can have a "main" quilt with a comfort around 35 degree F. Which is lighter and packs smaller (and is less expensive). And if I may go on an adventure on which I expect lower temperatures I'll take the second "sheet-quilt" with me. 🙂 Now that I saw your video and gave it some thoughts it seems so obvious: we do the same thing (layering) with our clothes. So why not with the sleeping system 😀(what we already do, regarding the R-rating of mats: layering them also pushes the R-rate up).
@@KUJ81 Thanks again! You are correct about the mat. The Thermarest is my go to cold weather mat. It’s expensive but well worth it.