FEATHERED FRIENDS DOWN SLEEPING BAGS. No finer fart sack has ever been made.
Sleeping bags are not what they used to be.
In 1991 I bought a North Face Blue Kazoo down sleeping bag at the Seattle REI. Paying full retail for anything was a huge extravagance for me, which is part of why I remember it so well. The other reason I recall the event with such clarity is because that sleeping bag was one of the single best purchases I ever made. Over the next decade it went with me to Burma, Thailand, India, Nepal, China, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Tibet. I lived in it while working as a river guide, tree faller and wild land firefighter. Many years I slept in that bag over 300 nights. I still have it…it’s the emergency bag that lives in my airplane, and I often pull it out for extra insulation on cold trips.
Eventually the nylon got so abraded around the hood draw string that the string pulled completely free and I decided to replace it. As you might suspect, I went out and bought another North Face Blue Kazoo. It was NOT the same…
Sleeping cold is just flat-out hell on earth, and there's no need for it.
The nylon was inferior, the stitching sub-standard, the down coarser. After one year my new Blue Kazoo looked about as bad as my old one looked after ten years of hard travel. I sent it back to North Face with a letter saying I simply was not satisfied with my new bag, and to their credit they refunded me the purchase price with a North Face gift card, so I can’t fault the company. But I didn’t buy another NF bag, either. I gave the gift card to my brother for Christmas…
And it’s not just North Face…I’ve had similar less than stellar sleeping bags from Marmot and Sierra Designs…two companies that have always been synonymous with quality. The manufacturing standard just doesn’t seem to be what it was 25 years ago. On the plus side, through discount outlets you can find a North Face or Marmot or Sierra Designs or several other brands of sleeping bag for very substantial discounts. I’d be inclined to say that if you wait for a good bargain, the value-for-money to a casual user can be very, very high, even if the manufacturing isn’t what it used to be.
I don’t spend 300 nights a year in my sleeping bag anymore, but I do average around 50 to 75 nights a year in my bag, and I wanted something better than the mass-produced offerings from the big companies. I wanted a bag as good as my 27 year old Blue Kazoo. Enter Feathered Friends.

Feathered Friends have been hand sewing down garment in Seattle, WA since 1972. They make a super-premium product, combining the best materials available with innovative designs, a plethora of size options, and tiptop-quality sewing. In the 90’s when I was playing on the roof of the world, Feathered Friends was THE bag for people who were sleeping above 20,000 feet. Their top line materials makes a bag that weighs less and packs smaller than other bags in the same warmth category, and while all down products loose feathers now and again, FF bags are the tightest I’ve ever seen.
Feathered Friends offers bags rated from just below freezing to negative 60 degrees fahrenheit, and they have women-specific bags as well. I don’t want to go into too many details in case there are children or fundamentalists reading this, but men and women are built differently, and they have different thermal requirements as well. The Feathered Friends website has the best resource for choosing a sleeping bag I’ve ever seen, covering about every factor you can imagine.

The down side (haha…punny) to Feathered Friends should be pretty obvious: They cost more. My Feathered Friends Swift Nano was a full 50% more than my North Face Blue Kazoo, with a similar temperature rating (though the FF is definitely warmer). And you won’t find Feathered Friends at the discount warehouses like Sierra Trading Post or Campmore. In fact, you probably won’t find Feathered Friends products discounted anywhere, ever. I got real excited when I saw that one of the few retail stores that sell Feathered Friends was having a store-wide sale. The sale included every single item in the store…except Feathered Friends products. They just don’t discount them.
I’ll say flat out that Feathered Friends products are worth the money, just like Snap-On tools are worth the money. Whether they’re worth the money to YOU is something only you can decide. If you’re curious, here’s the link:
http://featheredfriends.com/
A few words on sleeping bags in general:
Sleeping bags come with a temperature rating, which is handy for comparing different bags from the same manufacture, but that’s about it. If you buy a bag rated to 20 degrees and then get cold when it’s only 30 degrees, it’s not because the bag is defective. There are so many variables affecting how warm or cold a person sleeps that it’s just impossible for a company to accurately forecast how much insulation it’s going to take to keep YOU warm enough. The same person will sleep fifteen degrees differently one night to the next depending on hydration, food consumption, previous energy exertion, and general health.
I tend to sleep pretty warm, while my wife with her 3% body fat and glacial metabolism needs an arctic weight bag if it drops below freezing. I find temperature ratings pretty generous, and she finds them laughable.
The quality and quantity of padding underneath you also makes a phenomenal difference in how warm you sleep…you simply cannot put enough insulation on top of you to compensate for laying on cold ground. The air mattress you sleep so well on during the summer might not work at all once the temperatures drop below zero.
DOWN VS SYNTHETIC:
Lots of people are scared of down bags because “they won’t work if they get wet”. Well, sort of. Like saying that sushi is just raw fish, the facts are technically correct, but they are vastly oversimplified. I’ve been using down bags almost exclusively for going on three decades, and I’ve never slept cold because my bag was wet, or felt like I needed a synthetic bag.
You have to get a down bag REALLY wet for it to quit insulating…something that’s damn near impossible to do if the bag is compressed in a stuff sack. Keep in mind that a huge amount of my backcountry travel is in a whitewater kayak, in the spring, without a tent…you just don’t get any more exposure to water than that.
After days and days of rain, bags do get damp, especially if there’s no opportunity to dry them out. But a damp down bag still offers a lot of insulation…more than enough in my experience. About the only situation I’ve read about where a down bag simply wouldn’t have worked is Steven Callahan’s 76 days adrift in a life raft. He had a synthetic sleeping bag that was continually soaked in sea water but which still offered insulation at night. Down would have been worthless in that situation.
Synthetic bags are less expensive, and they ARE better insulations when really soaked, but the problem is that they are much bulkier and heavier than down bags for the same amount of insulation. Synthetic insulation also breaks down and compresses faster than down, so the bags get cooler faster as the years progress.
TAKE CARE OF IT:
Regardless of what bag you have or what insulation it uses, there are some things that will help make them work better.
First off, keep them clean. All insulation is negatively affected by dirt and oils from your filthy, filthy skin. One of the best investments you can make is a bag liner. These are made from silk, cotton, or merino wool, and in addition to adding insulation, they keep the majority of your filth from getting into the insulation of your bag. I wash my merino wool liner after every trip, which is a lot easier than washing the sleeping bag.
At some point all bags need to be washed. Down bags require a specific down soap and either hand washing or a large front-loading washing machine that’s been meticulously cleaned of any residual detergent. If you’re using a laundry service machine, plan on running two or three machine-cleaning loads through it without detergent before washing your bag.
Second, dry your bag out whenever you can. If you’re up and at it early in the morning, you have no choice but to pack up a damp bag. How damp depends on the conditions, but just your natural perspiration fills your bag with moist air while you sleep. Especially if it’s below freezing, the first thing I do when I get out of my bag is to squeeze all the warm, damp air out of it.
I put my sleeping bag where I can get to it easily during the day, and at lunch or just whenever the sun comes out I’ll pull my bag out and let it dry as much as I can. This is super-effective in keeping your bag functioning at its best during long bouts of inclement weather.
No matter how cold it is, DO NOT tuck your head inside your sleeping bag. During the night you will exhale approximately 200ml of water in your breath, and if all that water is being captured by your sleeping bag, it’s going to become noticeably less effective. Keep your mouth out of your bag.
Finally, when you get back home dry and air your bag out for a couple days…Make sure it’s completely dry. Then store it in a large breathable cotton or mesh sack in a well-ventilated and dry area. Never store a sleeping bag in the stuff sack…it’s flat out not good for the insulation.
Feathered Friends premium sleeping bags:
Best for: frequent users; quality fanatics; weight weenies; year-round campers.