
Skystrider wrote:My favorite is my Mountain Hardwear bag. It is synthetic and has accordian expansion built into it. When I turn on my side or curl up my legs, the bag automatically expands or contracts to fit my position. Most comfortable bag I have ever been in.

denalipilot wrote:Skystrider wrote:My favorite is my Mountain Hardwear bag. It is synthetic and has accordian expansion built into it. When I turn on my side or curl up my legs, the bag automatically expands or contracts to fit my position. Most comfortable bag I have ever been in.
Did they get back into that, or do you have an older one? I have a -20F King Tut of theirs from about 12 years ago with the same feature. It was called "Crazy Legs" at the time. The baffles were constructed out of Lycra. They stopped that construction shortly after I got mine- word was that Sierra Designs held a patent on the design, and shut down Mountain Hardware even though Sierra Designs wasn't actively manufacturing any bags with that feature at the time. I agree with you, it's a great feature. It's great to be able to sit up, cross your legs, and play cards in your sleeping bag on day seven of a snow storm.

Skystrider wrote:denalipilot wrote:Skystrider wrote:My favorite is my Mountain Hardwear bag. It is synthetic and has accordian expansion built into it. When I turn on my side or curl up my legs, the bag automatically expands or contracts to fit my position. Most comfortable bag I have ever been in.
Did they get back into that, or do you have an older one? I have a -20F King Tut of theirs from about 12 years ago with the same feature. It was called "Crazy Legs" at the time. The baffles were constructed out of Lycra. They stopped that construction shortly after I got mine- word was that Sierra Designs held a patent on the design, and shut down Mountain Hardware even though Sierra Designs wasn't actively manufacturing any bags with that feature at the time. I agree with you, it's a great feature. It's great to be able to sit up, cross your legs, and play cards in your sleeping bag on day seven of a snow storm.
We have the same bags. At the time they offered a longer version which I got because I could stuff my next day's clothes at the bottom so they were warm the next morning. My bag still looks new after a fair amount of use. Mountain Hardware really seems to make some nice gear!

Mine is down, but it's holding up equally well. Plus, the orange color of the Dryloft shell just exudes warmth


Nizina wrote:Good lord, DP. Couldn't you just picture a bunch of guys doing the "bunny hop" around the camp fire in those things -- the Rock Wren?![]()
Nizina

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