One of my all-time favorite pieces of gear is my Mountain Hardwear 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 Phantom 15 down sleeping bag. It鈥檚 nearly ten years old, yet it still performs as well as today鈥檚 newest down bags. It lofts up like a souffl茅, feels instantly cozy, and keeps me warm on subfreezing nights. In anything other than a dead-of-winter chill, it鈥檚 never left me shivering.
It weighs just one pound听15 ounces. And it fits my five-foot frame: there鈥檚 no surplus space at the bottom to suck away my body heat, and the mummy cut is cozy but doesn鈥檛 feel like a straitjacket. Like many women鈥檚 bags, the Phantom is narrower at the shoulders and wider through the hips than the typical men鈥檚 model.
I鈥檓 a fan of women鈥檚 bags in general. Over the past 15 years, I鈥檝e tested comfortable, smartly proportioned versions from Marmot, The North Face, REI, Sea to Summit, NEMO, and Kelty.
Some women, though, give this category an emphatic thumbs-down. Darcy Conover, a ski mountaineer based in Aspen, Colorado, who co-founded Corbeaux apparel, says her first and only experience with a women鈥檚 sleeping bag was a disaster. 鈥淚 was really excited about it, because it had more down in the foot area, where I am always cold, and was supposed to be roomier in the hips,鈥 she recalls. She used it on a trip to Vallecitos, in Argentina, where she climbed and skied Cerro Plata鈥攁nd shivered for six sleepless nights. 鈥淭he shoulders felt too tight, and it was just too short,鈥 says Conover, who is five foot nine.听She鈥檚 stuck with men鈥檚 models ever since.
Mountain Hardwear听has scaled back its high-end women鈥檚 options in favor of more unisex ones. While the brand still offers a couple of听women-specific bags, like the and , it discontinued the women鈥檚 Phantom in spring 2016 (when it was called the Phantasia). The Phantom is currently offered only in a unisex version. That鈥檚听because most female customers are looking for a product to withstand cooler temperatures, not a gender-specific cut, says听Robert Hollister, Mountain Hardwear鈥檚 equipment product line manager.
鈥淲omen don鈥檛 technically need a women-specific sleeping bag, but听rather a warmer option,鈥 says听Hollister. 鈥淲e discontinued the women鈥檚 Phantom because the high-end down-bag consumer is generally very savvy, and if that female Phantom customer runs cold, she can always select a [different bag rated to a lower temperature].鈥
Many women do run colder than men, and the evidence goes beyond anecdotal. European Norm (EN)听ratings, the听testing scale most sleeping-bag companies in Europe and the U.S. rely on,听have confirmed that most women need more insulation to stay comfortable. (The EN ratings ensure that sleeping bags from different retailers and manufacturers听are comparable in terms of temperature.)
For instance, on chilly nights Mountain Hardwear鈥檚听unisex Phantom 15 might keep me comfortable only if it鈥檚 20 or even 25 degrees out. If I want to stay warm at 15, I may need to buy the , which is comfort-rated to 3 degrees. But that鈥檚 a major step up in both insulation and weight: the Torch weighs in at 2 pounds听11 ounces. Since I鈥檓 shorter than the average guy, the Torch would also give me a lot of warmth-sucking dead space at my feet. I鈥檓 glad I snapped up the women鈥檚 Phantom while I could; otherwise, I鈥檇 have to wait until听spring 2019, when Mountain Hardwear will start offering shorter versions of its unisex bags. The new unisex short will be equivalent to my women鈥檚 regular.
Ultimately, the type of bag women need probably comes down to size. If I were five-11, like my 黑料吃瓜网 editor, Abby, I鈥檇 probably follow Mountain Hardwear鈥檚 advice and get the men鈥檚 Phantom Torch. It might turn out to be warmer than I need for most spring, summer, and fall听outings, even here in the chilly Rocky Mountains. But I could always open the zipper for venting, and the extra ounces wouldn鈥檛听impose a major weight penalty on shorter trips.
Still, I remain convinced that most women of small to average height and size would be better served by a women鈥檚 sleeping bag. I鈥檓 short听and hippy, and I sleep cold. No wonder I鈥檝e liked bags that address these three traits. I鈥檓 not alone. My friend,听cyclist Saris Mercanti, swears by women鈥檚 sleeping bags. 鈥淚鈥檓 way colder in a men鈥檚听or unisex听bag,鈥 she attests.
That鈥檚 why REI Co-op is among the companies that remain dedicated to women鈥檚 sleeping bags. 鈥淭hrough temperature testing, we know women generally sleep cooler than their male counterparts,鈥 says Paul Calandrella, Co-op Brand鈥檚 director of product strategy. 鈥淲e design women鈥檚 bags with more insulation to arrive at the same comfort level. Additionally, REI Co-op Brand sleeping bags are designed with body mapping to give people a more complementary fit where they need it most.鈥
I鈥檝e used the ($299 for regular length) on late-autumn, high-altitude trips in Switzerland鈥檚 Alps and Colorado鈥檚 Sawatch Range听and stayed delightfully cozy. It鈥檚 even available in a long length ($319) to give tall women the body-mapped insulation boost that Calandrella describes.
The ($280) is another bag that impressed me on weekend backpacking trips around Colorado and in Wyoming鈥檚 Tetons. The fabric feels nice and silky, the 800-fill down is DWR-treated to repel moisture and maintain full loft in soggy conditions, and a separate zipper at the foot makes it easy to escape mummified confinement by kicking your feet out the bottom of the bag. I found the curved upper zipper that stretches across my torso听to be tricky to operate during exits in the middle of the night, when I鈥檓 too groggy to remember that it听doesn鈥檛 extend down the side. (Old habits die hard.)听But the bag hits a nice balance for backpacking and car camping; it packs down small, yet the shell fabric isn鈥檛听so light and fragile that I worry about tearing it on a camp chair.