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Reviews > Sleep Gear > Sleeping Bags > Big Agnes Zirkel 20 degree bag > Field Test by Mara FactorBig Agnes Zirkel sleeping bagWeb site: http://www.bigagnes.com/ Tester: Mara Factor Gender: Female Height: 6’1" Weight: 195 Age: 36 Test Locales: Medford, MA (north of Boston); Long Trail, VT; Trail Days in Damascus, VA; and a couple of spots along the Appalachian Trail in NY and PA. Date: July 30, 2002 Email: m_factor@hotmail.com Web: http://friends.backcountry.net/m_factor Background: I have been hiking and backpacking extensively since 1989. Weekends frequently find me in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Longer trips I've taken include (but are not limited to) such diverse locations as Copper Canyon, Mexico; Annapurnas, Nepal; Olympic Mountains, Washington; Austrian Alps; Paria Canyon, UT and AZ; and a 1999 thruhike of the Appalachian Trail. Item(s): Big Agnes Zirkel sleeping bag - long Acquired: May 2002 as an adjunct test to the ongoing Horse Thief test Reputation: I became familiar with Big Agnes as a result of my participation on the BackpackGearTest list. Big Agnes is one of the few sleeping bag and pad manufacturers taking a lead with the concept of lightening bags by eliminating the mostly useless insulation that traditionally gets compressed under the hiker while sleeping. Description: The Big Agnes sleep system comprises an integrated sleeping bag and pad. The mummy shaped top bag has a sleeve on the bottom to accommodate the mummy shaped pads offered by Big Agnes. Please see my REM Air Core sleeping pad reviews for more information on the pad. The Zirkel sleeping bag is a 20 degree top bag. It has 775 fill down and a water resistant, breathable Pertex shell. It is cut generously wide, has a draft tube both at the zipper and at the bag/pad integration points, draft collar, and a hood with built-in pillow case, drawstring and Velro closure. As a top bag, it does not have any down in the bottom. Instead, it relies on the insulating power of the sleeping pad rather than including the down that would otherwise be crushed into inefficiency by bodyweight. I ordered the large to accommodate my height. Two features I have not tested include the ability to mate right and left zipped bags and the use of an additional fully integrated overbag rated to 40 degrees on its own. The bag came with a heavy coated nylon stuff sack and a large cotton storage sack. Specifications: Cotton storage sack: 11.5 x 30", 4 oz. Bag stuff sack: 8 x 15", 2 oz. Bag: 2 lbs 8 oz., weight from web site: 2 lbs. 5 oz. Loft: 2.75 to 3.25" as measured with the highly scientific (NOT!) yardstick and ruler method. This measurement was taken after a few weeks worth of use and related stuffing and unstuffing. While at home, the bag has always been stored in the storage sack. Fit: While many lightweight backpackers tend to go with short sleeping pads to save weight, given the integrated nature of the bag and the pad, it is necessary that the matching pad and bag be used to optimize performance. The 78" long bag and pad are generously cut for my frame and could easily accommodate taller and/or larger people. Field use: Design observations: I have problems zipping the bag beyond the shoulder area. This difficulty appears at the point where the zipper curves upward to meet the hood. Even outside the bag, I have sometimes have difficulty zipping the bag past this point. With extra effort, it zips properly, but on cold nights, or with cold fingers encased in gloves or mittens, this may prove frustrating. Because I only have this difficulty when the bag is integrated with the pad, I am reasonably confident this has nothing to do with the zipper and is just a stress point in the design. When using a conventional bag and pad, if you want to sit up, the pad stays on the ground and the bag stays with you and keeps you cozy. With the Zirkel the pad either comes up with you and pulls back against you or you have to unzip the bag and sit up without the bag. Similarly, I like to stretch my back by pulling my knees to my chest. With the incorporated pad, I can no longer do this. The Zirkel is roomy enough that some people with short legs may still be able to do this back stretch. With my long legs (38" inseam), the pad would have to bend with my legs and that just does not work. As a side sleeper, I'm used to taking the bag with me as I turn from side to side. Among other things, this always ensures that the opening stays in front of my mouth and nose. With the Big Agnes, the bag stays in place and I turn inside the bag. Not unexpectedly, this may be a problem on colder nights. When discussing this, I always joke about my not yet figuring out how I can breathe through my ear. Sure enough, if it's cold and I close the hood, there's no way for my mouth and nose to stay at the opening. For temperatures around freezing, so far I've been able to get away with wearing a thick hat or balaclava so that I do not have to tightly close the hood. Time will tell if this will work down to the full range of the Zirkel bag. The built-in pillow case left me skeptical at first. Initially, I put my fleece jacket in it. I pulled the fleece jacket out almost immediately as I preferred the soft fleece against my face and did not like the fact that the pillow was "tied down". Later, in the interest of lightening my load and making it smaller, I switched to a synthetic filled jacket instead of fleece. Unlike with fleece, the slippery nature of the shell material is not conducive to folding the jacket into a nice pillow that stays properly folded. In this case, the built-in pillow case allows me to stuff the jacket in the sleeve and prevents it from sliding out of the sleeping bag while I sleep. Unfortunately, I find that while the jacket fills the pillow sleeve nicely, once stuffed, the hood no longer fits around both my face and pillow. While this is not an issue in warmer temperatures, in marginal temperatures, this may prevent me from using the jacket as a pillow in order to use the hood as effectively as possible. Temperature observations: First of all, keep in mind that I am a "cold" sleeper. The Zirkel is rated to 20 degrees. At Trail Days, I was camping in my Nomad tent. We had everything from warm days in the 70s to wet rainy nights, to nights where the temperatures dipped below freezing, even at ground level, as evidenced by the frost on the grass early in the morning. On the coldest night at Trail Days, I crawled into my bag wearing just a light shirt and underwear. While my legs were still comfortable, my hips and butt, where they pressed against the bag as I lay on my side, got cold very quickly. I pulled on some light fleece lined Lycra bike tights and was warm for the rest of the night. The tights were not necessary on the warmer nights. Each morning, I woke up to a tent coated with condensation. Given the thickness of the pad and the length of the sleeping bag, both the head and foot portion of the bag came into contact with the wet tent walls. The Pertex fabric did a great job of repelling the water. This test alleviated most of my concerns about using a down sleeping bag in environments along the east coast that are typically wet and humid. Camping under the stars at the RPH shelter in New York on a cold night on my way home from Trail Days, I assumed I would wake up to some condensation on the exterior of the bag itself. That ended up not being the case. I did wake up cold early in the morning and could tell I was cold from the lack of insulation beneath me. The addition of a closed cell foam pad on top of the Big Agnes pad made all the difference. On the Long Trail, I experienced everything from warm, dry nights to cold, wet nights and did a bit of experimenting. I used the system in the conventional sense with the pad inserted into the sleeve on a warm night and found myself either too hot or too cold – and sometimes at the same time. I ended up pulling on light tights so that I could keep body parts exposed without getting bitten by mosquitoes or black flies. On another warm night, I did not put the pad in the sleeve and was free to use the bag more as an unzipped quilt and ended up with the "bottom," uninsulated, layers on top of me. As the night got cooler, I shifted the bag so the down was on top of me. This works well to prevent overheating in the 20 degree bag on a warm night. On one marginal night, I left the pad out of the sleeve and ended up having a night with some cold blasts as I shifted and opened up some gaps between the down bag and the pad. I recommend using the integrated pad and bag as designed on marginal nights. On the cooler nights, using the bag and pad as intended, the bag stayed uniformly warmer. One night, I woke up to a violent wind driven rain blowing directly into the shelter. As I was alone in the shelter and the shell of the bag was getting wet, I moved to the back of the shelter and went back to sleep. The bag was dry by the time I got up in the morning. Pluses:
Recommendations for Big Agnes' consideration:
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