>>1707394https://youtu.be/EKlFbMGTJVYAlso I'm not a big fan of Coleman †bh but I have to admit they make the right shit for the right kind of customer. As a kid who traveled in a camper with my parents, Coleman stuff was good. As an adult I always packed my gear out into the woods, so I stayed away from Coleman. Too heavy and bulky.
BUT now that I have a pickup with a cap, I'm 4WD camping instead. I've got it setup comfy as a hotel room in the back now (albeit cold and drafty) and Coleman-tier products are perfect for me once again. Last weekend I froze my tits off in the mountains because I was using my ultralight hiking sleeping bag which is great in my hammock with an underquilt, but pointless in the back of the truck. I was all cramped up in this tight little bag, shivering, when I had all the room in the world to sprawl out in a hilariously oversized and overweight cloud of canvas and flannel. So, I'm keeping the mummy bag for when I'm hammocking but I just bought a hilariously oversized and overweight cloud of Coleman canvas and flannel. Can't fukken wait to spend a rainy, 0ºC night with this thing.
Also to mention the brands I've been happiest with:
DD Hammocks
Snugpak
Coghlans
Feuerhand
Timberland
Carhartt (idgaf, the canvas jackets with sherpa lining are the oyster's ice skates)
I stay away from ultralight blue and pink brand name shit and /fa/out/ shit like North Face and Kathmandu