bluewombat wrote:Hi Earthling
Fascinating thread. I'm curious about why you chose the Western Mountaineering Megalite over something like their Ultralite. For an extra 140gms you get an extra 5 degrees to play with, and picking up that much more warmth might allow you one less layer in bed, not to mention a better safety/comfort margin. You could drop the sleeping bag liner to claw back 130gms. My tent/hut boots are simply polar fleece socks with some insulation mat glued to the bottom, the pair weighs 75gms which I suspect is lighter than a pair of Crocs, they work suprisingly well
cheers
bw
It was all to do with roominess bw. I like a bag with a little bit of room in it..not a full snug mummy. The megalite compared to the Ultralite should fit the bill.....umm...bod. Plus, I wont dump the liner, as I prefer to be able to clean a smelly liner, rather then the whole bag regularly, which is definetly not good for the down. Ive heard from reviews and others that the megalite is good for a few degrees below zero...cant remember the exact figures thrown at me (-4?)...but with a silk liner (-6?) and the option of throwing on some layers if it gets way cold(-13c coldest recorded in Tas) I should be easily comfortable to what ever Tas can throw at me.
I like your after walk foot wear idea! I just weighed the crocs, which came in at 345grams!...with a few layers of paint from spraying the house added on them....

. I will have to give your idea a go! Thanks for the input.
Corvus, Ive never had a quality pair of boots disintegrate to the point of not being able to wear them, I change them before that time comes. If that did happen though...Im sure I could improvise something to deal with the situation...without having to rely on a backup pair/crocs.