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The North Face Chrysalis Sleeping Bag: 15 Degree Down
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The North Face Chrysalis Sleeping Bag: 15 Degree Down
The North Face Chrysalis Down 20F Sleeping Bag masterfully traps in warmth in cold autumn conditions. Its trapezoidal baffle construction, down-filled draft tube, and face tube maximize heat retention by eliminating escape through seams, zippers, or the head opening. The North Face cleverly built the Chrysalis with ground-level side seams, so rising heat has nowhere to escape. The North Face tests the European goose down at three stages of production for loft and moisture resistance to ensure you enjoy the highest possible quality of insulation. Sleeping pad retention loops secure your pad to the mummy bag, keeping you from rolling off mid-slumber.
Bottom Line: Chrysalis is another word for cocoon. Sleep in this and you'll see why.
Talk shop with all the gear freaks out there: ask 'em questions, upload/browse photos, and give your 2¢.
does this bag compress down fairly small? like how small?
does this bag compress down fairly small? like how small?
By: JJ STrat
June 28, 2009
This bag packs down fairly small, the stuff sack size is 8" X 17" so you can count on it packing down to at least those dimensions or smaller.
By: David Madsen
6 days ago
This looks like a smart buy but I have never realy understood
This looks like a smart buy but I have never realy understood how the temp rating works, I know it varies from company to company so as this bag says 20F does that mean it will keep a camper about the same warmth at 50F or 25F, then starting getting colder?
By: Robert Taylor
June 27, 2009
Awesome Bag
By: desighost2166255
May 19, 2008
I like this sleeping bag, being that it's my first sleeping bag and i'm doing car camping from time to time... I slept in it last night at 50F and I was comfortable. I would like to have more leg room but you can't really do much about that with a mummy bag. Stuffs really good in the stuff sack that came with the bag.
All in all satisfied with the quality.
i am 5' 8" and will probably be a little over6'wich
i am 5' 8" and will probably be a little over6'wich size should i get
By: Jonah
May 7, 2009
The Reg will fit you just fine.
By: Andrew
May 7, 2009
What type of pad would you recommend for this bag?
What type of pad would you recommend for this bag?
By: DavidPuff
April 14, 2009
It really depends on the conditions you are anticipating. For shoulder seasons (early spring / late fall), I've found the Thermarest ProLite 4 to work quite well and to be adequately warm. If you're going out in full winter conditions or anticipate sleeping on snow, I would add a cheap closed cell foam pad as well. It is somewhat of a subjective topic though, and everyone will have different opinions on what works for them.
By: James C Watts
April 14, 2009
Comfy bag, warm in the cold
By: bar3055299
June 18, 2009
Great bag for the price! We slept in 30-40 degree nights and the bag was warm with just a long sleeve shirt and thin long pants on. The bag compresses in its compression sack very nicely and dries out quickly if it gets a little wet. I'm 6-2 and fit into the long bag well. I would have liked a zipper on the foot box to allow my feet to breath when it got warm, but I guess you can't have it all. Great bag overall.
How much does the long version weigh?
How much does the long version weigh?
By: APG
January 27, 2009
Andrew,Here are the weight specs for the Chrysalis longFill weight: 1 lb 9 oz (695 g)Average weight: 3 lbs (1360 g)Mahalo, Sumo
By: Sumner Ohye
January 28, 2009
Is this ample for June-Aug for backpacking the Colorado Trail,
Is this ample for June-Aug for backpacking the Colorado Trail, I'd be hammocking w/tarp?
By: Kathy
December 9, 2008
Hey Kathy,I should think so - will you have a sleeping pad in the hammock? Whenever I hammock I always feel like it takes away several degrees as opposed to sleeping on the ground, and sleeping with a pad in your hammock helps with that (that and wearing clothes while you sleep). - Greg
By: Greg Goodson
December 9, 2008
hammocking does take away a few degrease just add a pad and you should be
fine
maybe add a liner or wear a add a polypro layer
By: Jonah
May 7, 2009
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