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Brian,
Good eye!
Yes, I do have the discontinued Yellow eVent bivy with the green 2.0 silynylon bottom and in wide. (There used to be a wide and long option....now it is a combined option)
The bottom is really bomber as advertised in 2007.
Still looks new without and scrapes or abrasions on it.
I have even used the bivy in a snow trench while learning to snow camp with the Sierra Club this past February and had Zero condensation. (See Yosemite Photos of Crocker Point)
Jay,
To answer you question, how comfortable is it sleeping in a bivy?
It takes a little getting used to in that my sense of personal space had to be mentally re-adjusted.
The generous amount of bug netting really allows good ventilation, breathing, with a view of the stars above; which is a bit of a novelty considering that I have been used to being inside a tarptent with no view.
The only time that I "freaked out" in the bivy was while testing out the bivy in Lake Tahoe in the snow at a motel.
While the family was inside nice and warm, I thought that it would be a good idea to sleep out in the snow with my MLD Poncho Tarp as an A Frame and in my bivy with a 15 degree marmot helium down bag, bivy, and every stitch of clothing that I thought I would take in the snow.
I zipped up the bivy just so that I had a small blow hole to breath from.
Somewhere around 2 am, I woke up freaking out and just had to open it up and get out for a stroll.
Temps were at 5 degrees F, so I was happy with the bivy and my clothing/sleep system.
Key to my comfort is using the guyline loop at the top of my bivy...which you can see attached to my poles in one of the photos.
This really increases the interior head space inside the bivy and keeps the bug netting off my face.
I do have a wire built into my hood of my bivy, which helps, but using the guyline loop doubles the distance from my face and the bug netting.
In that respect, I could save 1.3 oz by removing the wire.
I am 5'6" ft (142 lbs) and I find that the space above my head easily has room for my 10 essentials bag, extra clothing, my shoes, etc.
The side zip also makes getting in and out easy, I would have a hard time using a bivy that did not have this feature.
So I don't feel like I am in a coffin...I use a Prolite 4 1.5 inch sleeping pad (hence why I got the wide version), I find that I still have room to move around, turn on my side, and roll over onto my belly if I want.
My friend, Jeremy, has the MLD superlight in regular and has the same sleeping bag that I have. He does find that the cut of that bivy with his fluffy bag leaves little room to move around.
If in doubt, go with the wide/long option for the extra space.
P.S. On my last trip, I spend most of my nights in the bivy, but with it zipped fully open and the top of the bivy folded back. No flying bugs to worry about at the time and I survived fine.
Hope that this helps.
-Tony
Edited by Valshar on 10/08/2008 12:56:47 MDT.
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