Bivvy Bag Camping
One of the most lightweight forms of camping outdoors is
bivvy bag camping, where you do without the need to carry a
tent along with you.
A bivvy bag (some spell it bivy, with one V) will
keep your sleeping bag dry from any light rain and dew. Since
it is also waterproof underneath, the bag presents a barrier to
the cold moisture that rises up from underneath your body while
you are asleep.
The word bivvy is a soldier's abbreviation for the
French word bivouac, which can be both a noun and a
verb. Soldiers are taught to bivouac down for the
night. They make a bivouac (shelter) to protect
themselves as best they can from the elements. This is done
where carrying and setting up proper sleeping tents would be
too time-consuming. However, a bivvy bag is
just a bag. It is compact, lightweight and
ultra-convenient.
Most good bivvy bags include a zip-across insect netting to
keep the mosquitoes and no-see-ums from eating you alive while
you sleep. The best bivvy bags use a breathable but waterproof
fabric which allows water vapor to escape yet stops water
droplets from coming in. The original type of special fabric
was made by Goretex™, but there are other — and cheaper —
fabrics available nowadays which stop water droplets, but pass
water vapor.
I own two camping bivvy bags. One cheap and one expensive.
The top-quality bivvy bag is made of Goretex™ and has been
woven or printed in Australian Army desert camo. It cost me
about $400 at a specialist camping outfitter in Kent Street,
Sydney, a few years back. The other bivvy bag I own is a cheap
blue and black one that's made in Korea. I think the brand name
was Rhinoceros... It cost me about $50, and this bivvi doesn't
have an insect mesh like the Aussie one does. They are both
great for lightweight camping or for hiking.
You can use a bivvy bag to camp out in most weather,
although driving rain will get in and soak you from the head
and shoulders area. This would be most uncomfortable, so some
kind of mini-tarp would be a good idea to give extra protection
from the rain if bad weather is expected.
A bivvy bag will also work to keep you warm and dry even in
the snow. However, you will still need to have a thick enough
sleeping bag that is rated for those very cold temperatures.
And the same bivvy bag will work very well as a survival bag,
something that will keep you dry and hopefully stave off
hypothermia (exposure) if you are ever caught out in the wilds
while hiking in changeable weather.
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