>>458995 I don't have an accurate scale to weigh it, but I have the double bottom version (lets breeze in but bugs haven't bit through it yet) of that hammock.
Don't have a picture of it with the tarp, but here is one with it packed without the bugnet and tarp. Without the net and tarp, it takes up about half the bag it comes in. With them, maybe two thirds? Enough to leave room for the straps and carabiners, anyway.
Their site should have the breakdown of what everything weighs somewhere.
I'm happy to answer questions, but my only experience is in swampy/marshy places that are too hot for tents and too wet for just a bugnet on the ground.
I freaking love the hammock but, unless you are looking for super specific features, anything is going to serve you well. The only thing I dislike with this one is that using the poles it comes with makes the hammock want to tip over when nothing is inside. Is perfectly stable in use, just is annoying to come back after a light rain and find your hammock flipped over collecting water.
Bugnets and tarps are a different story apparently, but I used to use a tyvek sheet, $20 hammock, and a chigger-proof net meant to be tied above a bed. It was functional, just cumbersome and a pain to set up. Fancy jungle hammock was a gift and I'm too much of a poorfag to have tried anything else.
>>459002 I have no idea how the weather in the Rockies compares, but during big storms I tended to set up low (so bushes would block the wind from driving rain up the underside of the tarp), spoon with my pack, and tie my boots together and to the hoop under the tarp. The other person who has the same hammock has left her shit on the ground underneath, used a waterproof bag, loosened the hipbelt so the pack would buckle around under the tarp, and left stuff in a little mesh hammock underneath the main one. Which method depended on the weight of her crap and the weather we expected.