Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird that so many people who clearly don’t camp are in this thread. I’m actually sitting in a tent right now at temps of 37. My child has footy pajamas and is in their own sleeping bag and then in our large family sleeping bag as well. She’s slept perfectly. This is really not a big deal.
I thought this too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Seriously, PP, no one cares you're from the tundra. Lots of people don't like the cold and certainly don't want to sleep in it.
Where are you from that 40 degrees is considered so cold?
The comments in this thread are mind-boggling.
8 degrees away from freezing. Can you not count?
40 degrees is quite comfortable, particularly when you're out of the wind. Seriously, where are you from?
You people are insane. Or weenies.
I'd much rather go camping when the overnnight low is 40 as opposed to a low of 70 (which generally means it is 75+ degrees when you're trying to fall asleep).
Again, nobody is impressed with your tough girl act. It triggers giggles.
Anonymous wrote:Weird that so many people who clearly don’t camp are in this thread. I’m actually sitting in a tent right now at temps of 37. My child has footy pajamas and is in their own sleeping bag and then in our large family sleeping bag as well. She’s slept perfectly. This is really not a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:How do u co-sleep with sleeping bags? Agree that kids wriggle out of their bags at night.
Anonymous wrote:You HAVE to all strip down before bed and into completely dry clothes. If you are even slightly damp or sweaty from the day, you will freeze overnight. That means socks, underwear, hats, etc. All clean and bone dry.
Pack extra blankets to shove inside the sleeping bags, if there is room.
Anonymous wrote:If you are an experienced camper, than sure. Otherwise, probably not. I've done this a bunch, so I'm used to it and the kids are too. It's not so much the sleeping part- it's the potty at 5am or when you get up and the kids want breakfast and they're crying because it's cold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are wusses. I'm from Upstate NY. In the Adirondacks it gets into the 40s at night in the summer. Throw a few extra blankets on. You have a fire at night and in the morning. It's a fun adventure for the kids.
No one is impressed with you.
Your faux-toughie bit is laughable.
Seriously, PP, no one cares you're from the tundra. Lots of people don't like the cold and certainly don't want to sleep in it.
Where are you from that 40 degrees is considered so cold?
The comments in this thread are mind-boggling.
8 degrees away from freezing. Can you not count?
40 degrees is quite comfortable, particularly when you're out of the wind. Seriously, where are you from?
You people are insane. Or weenies.
I'd much rather go camping when the overnnight low is 40 as opposed to a low of 70 (which generally means it is 75+ degrees when you're trying to fall asleep).
Anonymous wrote:A hot water bottle at the foot of their sleeping bags will make it super cozy and comfortable. Go for it!