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Caring for Sleeping Bags
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How To Care For Your Sleeping Bag
Keep Your Sleeping Bag in Good Condition with These Easy
Tips
-
Cleaning
- Machine Washing
- Hand Washing
- Drying
- Mistakes to Avoid
-
Care
Cleaning
Every sleeping bag, down or synthetic, must be cleaned. Accumulated body
oils, trail dust
and grime all serve to decrease the effectiveness of a bag's insulation, and
increase
obnoxious odors and fiber-weakening microbes.
Machine Washing
- For down bags, use mild soap or specially formulated down soap.
For synthetic bags, use a mild detergent or cleaning agents designed for synthetics.
- Scrub the head and foot section before washing
the entire bag. Wash warm and rinse cold with the minimum recommended amount of cleaning
agent in a front-loading machine only.
- Be sure that all soap or detergent is thoroughtly rinsed out. This may mean
running two or more rinse cycles.
Hand Washing
- Wash with warm water in the bathtub using a mild detergent for synthetics
and a specialized cleaner
for down.
- Knead water through the bag thoroughly and carefully scrub the head
and foot. Don't expect to
remove every stain from the shell and never use commercial stain removers.
- Once the bag is
clean, begin draining the tub and press the soapy water out of the bag with
your hands. Do not lift the bag and do not wring it.
- Rinse thoroughly, making sure all of the cleaning agent
is out of the bag. Refill the bathtub with clean, cold water at least three
or four times to be sure you have adequately rinsed away all the detergent. If soap remins in
the fibers, it will cause the fill to mat.
Drying
- Once you have completed the final rinse, gently roll the bag to press out
as much water as
possible. Do not wring.
- Carefully place the bag into either a
large pillowcase
or a plastic clothesbasket. If you try to lift it without support, you
risk tearing the
baffles and ruining the bag.
- Take a supply of quarters to the nearest
laundromat. Tumble dry in a large commercial dryer on medium-low heat. The
dryer must be
large enough for the bag to be tossed around freely.
- Dry slowly and
thoroughly with
some terry cloth towels and two tennis balls thrown in. The terry cloth
minimizes static electricity and
speeds the drying process, while the tennis balls fluff the fill.
- Plan on two
to four hours
total drying time.
Mistakes to Avoid
- Do not use a top-loading washing machine
- Do not use strong soap or detergent
- Do not use your home dryer
- Do not attempt to lift your bag from one end when wet. Lift the entire
bag all at once.
- Do not hang dry in the sun. UV damages nylon.
- Do not ever dry clean your synthetic fill bag. Dry cleaning will
irreversibly damage the fill.
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Care
Want to extend the useable life of your sleeping bag? The following are a
few tips to help you:
- Always stuff your sleeping bag, never roll it. Stuffing is actually
easier on the fabric and fill.
- Be gentle with your sleeping bag when removing it from the stuff sack,
never yank it.
- Store your bag uncompressed in a large, breathable storage sack or
king-sized pillowcase. Hanging it or storing it flat also works.
- Wear a T-shirt, shorts and socks to bed. The clothing protects
the inside of your bag from damaging sweat and body oils.
- Never lay your bag directly on the dirt; use a ground cloth.
- Air and fluff your bag after each use and never leave it compressed for
long periods.
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