Keep in mind that most of these techniques assume dry weather. If it's raining or snowing, the steps are the same, but you'll have to do them inside your tent or vestibule. It is also assumed that you have a sleeping bag rated for around the same temperatures you're likely to be experiencing, but the techniques demonstrated here can give you some wiggle-room with that. Remember: being prepared is always step one.
As always, anyone see something I'm doing wrong, could be doing better, or should be doing that I'm not, let me know!
Also, with the exception of the two intro pics, they're all staged on a closed course by professionals, but rest assured that these techniques do work. Hopefully, they'll help you get a better night's sleep, and in doing so help you better enjoy the great outdoors.
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Signing UpStep 1: Put on Your Fly.
The fly also provides a vestibule, which is an extremely useful thing to have, especially in windy or rainy situations.
On the downside, it does block your view of the stars, but I can forgo marveling at the majesty of the cosmos if it means not freezing to death.














































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Maybe these tips don't help you, but this is a guide for less advanced campers. Please bear that in mind before casting aspersions.
The 'warming drink' before bed? Try Jello with half the water...hot, sweet and easy to digest.
The water bottle trick is a solid one. Two weeks ago I led my scout group on a survival camp with 31 degree overnight low. I filled my canteen with boiling water at night, tight lid, and threw it at the bottom of my bag as a footwarmer.
The next morning, our camp water was frozen but the water I kept in my bag was my body temp, eaisly made ito coffee. It wams you to sleep, you then keep it warm at night, and then it warms you up again.
DO NOT use an inflatible mat. they leach heat into the ground
If you do need to wear clothes to stay warm, I'd suggest just getting a better sleeping bag or a wool blanket (wool wicks away moisture), or you could wear wool clothing. I prefer the better sleeping bag because it's less weight, but if that's not of any concern then a nice wool blanket would work perfectly.
Unfortunately combining the steps is a fair bit less convenient for that half of people with female urinary tract, though still doable if they're careful.
It's much more efficient than wearing something big and bulky and warm.
I think that fur coats & hats are ok to a point....but the industry in this country has gotten out of hand. they process way too many animals, for things that most people would never buy in the first place, and the ones that would(most of them) are not there to begin with....they have more $$$$$ than common sense.
I do hunt, and I do make things out of the skins...but everything I kill, goes into my freezer for food at a later point in time. I try not to waste ANYTHING. not the fur, bones, feathers, NOTHING. the stuff I make from what is left of the animals & birds I kill, I sell.
2.65 / 1.9 = 139% increase in density.
So if rocks are available and you have a fire, you should have already built a heat wall to reflect the radiant energy of the fire at yourself from the far side of the fire. Why not use those same rocks again to stay warm through the night.
You could also start a small fire, dig a trench a few inches deep and your body wide, piling the dirt all to one side... then build the fire along the length of the pit. and put in rocks.. then when it's time for bed you knock the dirt over the fire putting it out and trapping all the heat underneath. Put your sleeping back on top and roast away.
But sleeping on rocks & hot coals is what I always do...works every time. :)