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Backpack Hunting
Raining in the Bivy Sack
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike 338" data-source="post: 863333" data-attributes="member: 41338"><p>I don't see any good way around this happening, depending upon the design of the bivy. A larger hood can channel the condensation around you but then you have a tent. Being wet in cold weather won't fly. I think that I'd take a small tarp and some cord and make a roof over the bivy and sleep with my head outside. I hunted the Oregon/Washington coast once and almost all the camps that I saw had a tarp rigged over their tents. After enduring the wet, cold conditions and putting on frozen clothes every morning, I saw why they went to the extra effort.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike 338, post: 863333, member: 41338"] I don't see any good way around this happening, depending upon the design of the bivy. A larger hood can channel the condensation around you but then you have a tent. Being wet in cold weather won't fly. I think that I'd take a small tarp and some cord and make a roof over the bivy and sleep with my head outside. I hunted the Oregon/Washington coast once and almost all the camps that I saw had a tarp rigged over their tents. After enduring the wet, cold conditions and putting on frozen clothes every morning, I saw why they went to the extra effort. [/QUOTE]
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Raining in the Bivy Sack
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