How to prevent sleeping bag from expanding in its bag
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I have bought a down sleeping bag that comes with two bags: one for storage and one for packing. The packing bag is not as small as it could potentially be, and it is shaped like waterproof bags, where you close it by rolling the top part and then clipping the two sides together.
While I can manage to initially pack the bag pretty tight, I have noticed that it expands quite a bit, taking any free space in my backpack. While it is not a big issue when hiking, I would prefer to be able to keep it as tight as possible at least for the time I am taking flights, as there luggage dimensions could be crucial.
So is there a way to keep the sleeping bag packed as small as possible for at least a short period of time?
backpacking sleeping-bags
add a comment |Â
up vote
11
down vote
favorite
I have bought a down sleeping bag that comes with two bags: one for storage and one for packing. The packing bag is not as small as it could potentially be, and it is shaped like waterproof bags, where you close it by rolling the top part and then clipping the two sides together.
While I can manage to initially pack the bag pretty tight, I have noticed that it expands quite a bit, taking any free space in my backpack. While it is not a big issue when hiking, I would prefer to be able to keep it as tight as possible at least for the time I am taking flights, as there luggage dimensions could be crucial.
So is there a way to keep the sleeping bag packed as small as possible for at least a short period of time?
backpacking sleeping-bags
1
This is a new one for me, possibly because our backpacks are always packed so tight that there is no room for the sleeping bag to expand. Try packing more stuff. :)
â ab2
Aug 28 at 19:48
1
@ab2 that's not helping when there are luggage dimensions to take into account, as mentioned in the question.
â JAD
Aug 29 at 6:38
@JAD correct, I usually do not have my bag completelly full when I am taking flights, since I need to leave room for water and food that I will add later when going on actual hike
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:17
add a comment |Â
up vote
11
down vote
favorite
up vote
11
down vote
favorite
I have bought a down sleeping bag that comes with two bags: one for storage and one for packing. The packing bag is not as small as it could potentially be, and it is shaped like waterproof bags, where you close it by rolling the top part and then clipping the two sides together.
While I can manage to initially pack the bag pretty tight, I have noticed that it expands quite a bit, taking any free space in my backpack. While it is not a big issue when hiking, I would prefer to be able to keep it as tight as possible at least for the time I am taking flights, as there luggage dimensions could be crucial.
So is there a way to keep the sleeping bag packed as small as possible for at least a short period of time?
backpacking sleeping-bags
I have bought a down sleeping bag that comes with two bags: one for storage and one for packing. The packing bag is not as small as it could potentially be, and it is shaped like waterproof bags, where you close it by rolling the top part and then clipping the two sides together.
While I can manage to initially pack the bag pretty tight, I have noticed that it expands quite a bit, taking any free space in my backpack. While it is not a big issue when hiking, I would prefer to be able to keep it as tight as possible at least for the time I am taking flights, as there luggage dimensions could be crucial.
So is there a way to keep the sleeping bag packed as small as possible for at least a short period of time?
backpacking sleeping-bags
asked Aug 28 at 10:20
april rain
1,8941629
1,8941629
1
This is a new one for me, possibly because our backpacks are always packed so tight that there is no room for the sleeping bag to expand. Try packing more stuff. :)
â ab2
Aug 28 at 19:48
1
@ab2 that's not helping when there are luggage dimensions to take into account, as mentioned in the question.
â JAD
Aug 29 at 6:38
@JAD correct, I usually do not have my bag completelly full when I am taking flights, since I need to leave room for water and food that I will add later when going on actual hike
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:17
add a comment |Â
1
This is a new one for me, possibly because our backpacks are always packed so tight that there is no room for the sleeping bag to expand. Try packing more stuff. :)
â ab2
Aug 28 at 19:48
1
@ab2 that's not helping when there are luggage dimensions to take into account, as mentioned in the question.
â JAD
Aug 29 at 6:38
@JAD correct, I usually do not have my bag completelly full when I am taking flights, since I need to leave room for water and food that I will add later when going on actual hike
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:17
1
1
This is a new one for me, possibly because our backpacks are always packed so tight that there is no room for the sleeping bag to expand. Try packing more stuff. :)
â ab2
Aug 28 at 19:48
This is a new one for me, possibly because our backpacks are always packed so tight that there is no room for the sleeping bag to expand. Try packing more stuff. :)
â ab2
Aug 28 at 19:48
1
1
@ab2 that's not helping when there are luggage dimensions to take into account, as mentioned in the question.
â JAD
Aug 29 at 6:38
@ab2 that's not helping when there are luggage dimensions to take into account, as mentioned in the question.
â JAD
Aug 29 at 6:38
@JAD correct, I usually do not have my bag completelly full when I am taking flights, since I need to leave room for water and food that I will add later when going on actual hike
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:17
@JAD correct, I usually do not have my bag completelly full when I am taking flights, since I need to leave room for water and food that I will add later when going on actual hike
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:17
add a comment |Â
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
15
down vote
Get a special bag for the sleeping bag. Your special bag should have compression straps. If it's also a dry bag, it should ideally also have a valve.
I have bought the compression dry bag PS10 with valve and belt from Ortlieb. It's like other dry-bags, but with a valve and compression straps. I use it as follows:
- Open the valve.
- Insert the sleeping bag.
- Roll up the top.
- Close the top.
- Use the compression straps to compress it as far as possible.
- Close the valve.
After the closing of the valve, the sleeping bag can not expand. This way, not only does my sleeping bag stay dry even if I fall into a river, but it also compresses much smaller than I could otherwise get it to compress, due to exactly the problem you describe.
It can work for other dry bags as well, but my sleeping bag bag is by far the largest dry bag I have and the only (large) one with a content that wants to expand, although I imagine it would work for down jackets as well. I used to have the sleeping bag inside its own stuff sack, then the stuff sack inside a dry bag, but recently I've dispensed with using its own stuff sack.
If you get a regular stuff sack, you can save money and weight, as the compression straps will be enough to compress the packed sleeping bag even after it's been closed, but on a water- and airtight dry bag the valve is a big bonus.
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
6
down vote
Just put some straps around the packing bag (plastic clasps to not damage your bags). You probably have those lying around already ;-)
(source)
Even (large) rubber bands can work, though they will have to re replaced for the next trip.
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
Going back more than 40 years, the answer is to have an air (and water!) proof portion of the packing system. I still use a black plastic garbage/garden trash bag liner inside the manufacturer-provided stuff sack. Then I can sit on the bag, forcing air out (and making the end product more rectangular rather than cylindrical for better packing) and seal the trash bag with a twist tie. No air goes in, so no expansion. No water gets in so comfy nights.
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
add a comment |Â
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
15
down vote
Get a special bag for the sleeping bag. Your special bag should have compression straps. If it's also a dry bag, it should ideally also have a valve.
I have bought the compression dry bag PS10 with valve and belt from Ortlieb. It's like other dry-bags, but with a valve and compression straps. I use it as follows:
- Open the valve.
- Insert the sleeping bag.
- Roll up the top.
- Close the top.
- Use the compression straps to compress it as far as possible.
- Close the valve.
After the closing of the valve, the sleeping bag can not expand. This way, not only does my sleeping bag stay dry even if I fall into a river, but it also compresses much smaller than I could otherwise get it to compress, due to exactly the problem you describe.
It can work for other dry bags as well, but my sleeping bag bag is by far the largest dry bag I have and the only (large) one with a content that wants to expand, although I imagine it would work for down jackets as well. I used to have the sleeping bag inside its own stuff sack, then the stuff sack inside a dry bag, but recently I've dispensed with using its own stuff sack.
If you get a regular stuff sack, you can save money and weight, as the compression straps will be enough to compress the packed sleeping bag even after it's been closed, but on a water- and airtight dry bag the valve is a big bonus.
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
15
down vote
Get a special bag for the sleeping bag. Your special bag should have compression straps. If it's also a dry bag, it should ideally also have a valve.
I have bought the compression dry bag PS10 with valve and belt from Ortlieb. It's like other dry-bags, but with a valve and compression straps. I use it as follows:
- Open the valve.
- Insert the sleeping bag.
- Roll up the top.
- Close the top.
- Use the compression straps to compress it as far as possible.
- Close the valve.
After the closing of the valve, the sleeping bag can not expand. This way, not only does my sleeping bag stay dry even if I fall into a river, but it also compresses much smaller than I could otherwise get it to compress, due to exactly the problem you describe.
It can work for other dry bags as well, but my sleeping bag bag is by far the largest dry bag I have and the only (large) one with a content that wants to expand, although I imagine it would work for down jackets as well. I used to have the sleeping bag inside its own stuff sack, then the stuff sack inside a dry bag, but recently I've dispensed with using its own stuff sack.
If you get a regular stuff sack, you can save money and weight, as the compression straps will be enough to compress the packed sleeping bag even after it's been closed, but on a water- and airtight dry bag the valve is a big bonus.
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
15
down vote
up vote
15
down vote
Get a special bag for the sleeping bag. Your special bag should have compression straps. If it's also a dry bag, it should ideally also have a valve.
I have bought the compression dry bag PS10 with valve and belt from Ortlieb. It's like other dry-bags, but with a valve and compression straps. I use it as follows:
- Open the valve.
- Insert the sleeping bag.
- Roll up the top.
- Close the top.
- Use the compression straps to compress it as far as possible.
- Close the valve.
After the closing of the valve, the sleeping bag can not expand. This way, not only does my sleeping bag stay dry even if I fall into a river, but it also compresses much smaller than I could otherwise get it to compress, due to exactly the problem you describe.
It can work for other dry bags as well, but my sleeping bag bag is by far the largest dry bag I have and the only (large) one with a content that wants to expand, although I imagine it would work for down jackets as well. I used to have the sleeping bag inside its own stuff sack, then the stuff sack inside a dry bag, but recently I've dispensed with using its own stuff sack.
If you get a regular stuff sack, you can save money and weight, as the compression straps will be enough to compress the packed sleeping bag even after it's been closed, but on a water- and airtight dry bag the valve is a big bonus.
Get a special bag for the sleeping bag. Your special bag should have compression straps. If it's also a dry bag, it should ideally also have a valve.
I have bought the compression dry bag PS10 with valve and belt from Ortlieb. It's like other dry-bags, but with a valve and compression straps. I use it as follows:
- Open the valve.
- Insert the sleeping bag.
- Roll up the top.
- Close the top.
- Use the compression straps to compress it as far as possible.
- Close the valve.
After the closing of the valve, the sleeping bag can not expand. This way, not only does my sleeping bag stay dry even if I fall into a river, but it also compresses much smaller than I could otherwise get it to compress, due to exactly the problem you describe.
It can work for other dry bags as well, but my sleeping bag bag is by far the largest dry bag I have and the only (large) one with a content that wants to expand, although I imagine it would work for down jackets as well. I used to have the sleeping bag inside its own stuff sack, then the stuff sack inside a dry bag, but recently I've dispensed with using its own stuff sack.
If you get a regular stuff sack, you can save money and weight, as the compression straps will be enough to compress the packed sleeping bag even after it's been closed, but on a water- and airtight dry bag the valve is a big bonus.
edited Aug 29 at 9:33
answered Aug 28 at 10:38
gerrit
15.3k654153
15.3k654153
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
 |Â
show 1 more comment
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
any idea why my sleeping bag does not have a bag like that included already? I mean, all the other sleeping bags I owned had a bag into which it was somewhat hard to squeeze in my sleeping bag, and I could further compress it with the straps. All other sleeping bags, however, were synthetic. And the new one is by far the most expensive I have bought!
â april rain
Aug 28 at 11:18
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@aprilrain Strangly, my synthetic sleeping bag stuff sack has straps, but my down sleeping bag stuff sack does not. But after some poor experiences (such as a water container leaking inside my sleeping bag) I now have my sleeping bag always in a dry bag anyway, which adds an additional constraint. If you trust raincovers and the liquid containers inside your backpack, you can save money and weight by using a regular stuff sack rather than a dry bag.
â gerrit
Aug 28 at 11:30
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
@april rain, I have Mountain Equipment Glacier Expedition sleeping bag. It has the same packing bag that you have. I pack sleeping bag to my backpack and backpack does not expand much especially if you have other staff in your backpack. I have never had any problems with luggage dimensions in airports (I have 80+20 backpack). Sometimes I wear my expedition boots and down jacket in airport to save space in backpack :))))
â user1209304
Aug 28 at 13:23
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
Most sleeping bags don't come with a decent compression bag. I've worked 8 years in an outdoors retail shop and never had one model with a good compression bag. Aftermarket brands aren't that expensive (should be under $40 USD) and you usually have a range of sizes to choose from depending on how bulky your sleeping bag is.
â Gabriel C.
Aug 28 at 13:44
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
The bag you link states it's rating as IP64--which if I'm reading it right isn't going to keep it dry if you get dunked.
â Loren Pechtel
Aug 28 at 23:25
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
6
down vote
Just put some straps around the packing bag (plastic clasps to not damage your bags). You probably have those lying around already ;-)
(source)
Even (large) rubber bands can work, though they will have to re replaced for the next trip.
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
Just put some straps around the packing bag (plastic clasps to not damage your bags). You probably have those lying around already ;-)
(source)
Even (large) rubber bands can work, though they will have to re replaced for the next trip.
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
Just put some straps around the packing bag (plastic clasps to not damage your bags). You probably have those lying around already ;-)
(source)
Even (large) rubber bands can work, though they will have to re replaced for the next trip.
Just put some straps around the packing bag (plastic clasps to not damage your bags). You probably have those lying around already ;-)
(source)
Even (large) rubber bands can work, though they will have to re replaced for the next trip.
edited Aug 28 at 13:52
answered Aug 28 at 13:16
Jan Doggen
49813
49813
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
Going back more than 40 years, the answer is to have an air (and water!) proof portion of the packing system. I still use a black plastic garbage/garden trash bag liner inside the manufacturer-provided stuff sack. Then I can sit on the bag, forcing air out (and making the end product more rectangular rather than cylindrical for better packing) and seal the trash bag with a twist tie. No air goes in, so no expansion. No water gets in so comfy nights.
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
Going back more than 40 years, the answer is to have an air (and water!) proof portion of the packing system. I still use a black plastic garbage/garden trash bag liner inside the manufacturer-provided stuff sack. Then I can sit on the bag, forcing air out (and making the end product more rectangular rather than cylindrical for better packing) and seal the trash bag with a twist tie. No air goes in, so no expansion. No water gets in so comfy nights.
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
add a comment |Â
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
Going back more than 40 years, the answer is to have an air (and water!) proof portion of the packing system. I still use a black plastic garbage/garden trash bag liner inside the manufacturer-provided stuff sack. Then I can sit on the bag, forcing air out (and making the end product more rectangular rather than cylindrical for better packing) and seal the trash bag with a twist tie. No air goes in, so no expansion. No water gets in so comfy nights.
Going back more than 40 years, the answer is to have an air (and water!) proof portion of the packing system. I still use a black plastic garbage/garden trash bag liner inside the manufacturer-provided stuff sack. Then I can sit on the bag, forcing air out (and making the end product more rectangular rather than cylindrical for better packing) and seal the trash bag with a twist tie. No air goes in, so no expansion. No water gets in so comfy nights.
answered Aug 28 at 21:40
Jon Custer
765410
765410
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
add a comment |Â
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
actually, not a bad answer, I already pack a couple trash bags for storing my backpack in while I am inside my tiny tent, just not sure how good they are in keeping the air out, but I guess I will have to try and see (:
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:23
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
@aprilrain Thicker trash bags can be easily used with a vacuum to compress clothing and other compressable stuff at home. Make it two layers for extra strength and it keeps out air nicely. This is more useful if you're simply travelling as obviously you won't have a vacuum outdoors
â SztupY
Aug 29 at 12:03
add a comment |Â
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1
This is a new one for me, possibly because our backpacks are always packed so tight that there is no room for the sleeping bag to expand. Try packing more stuff. :)
â ab2
Aug 28 at 19:48
1
@ab2 that's not helping when there are luggage dimensions to take into account, as mentioned in the question.
â JAD
Aug 29 at 6:38
@JAD correct, I usually do not have my bag completelly full when I am taking flights, since I need to leave room for water and food that I will add later when going on actual hike
â april rain
Aug 29 at 8:17