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Can you suffocate in a sleeping bag?


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  • #1242434
    Greg Foster
    BPL Member

    @thefost

    This might be a dumb question, but can you suffocate in a sleeping bag? I was in my marmot helium this weekend and wanted to completely cinch down the head hole so that I was fully enclosed in the bag. I decided against it for fear of it not being "breathable" enough. Anyone know if it's safe to be completely enclosed?

    #1547572
    Jeff Jeff
    BPL Member

    @jeffjeff

    Can you actually cinch it down that tight? Why do so in the first place? You'll get wet and cold.

    #1547576
    Greg Foster
    BPL Member

    @thefost

    Why? Because I was cold and that seemed like the best way to retain heat at the time.

    I'm a side sleeper, so when I would cinch it down, the side/top of my head would block the tiny bit of hole that was open, so it would be effectively completely closed off.

    Hadn't thought about the inside of the bag getting damp…

    #1547600
    Kier Selinsky
    Member

    @kieran

    Locale: Seattle, WA

    I have a friend who regularly takes his 30* bag down to the low teens by cinching it as closed as possible and laying on his side in the fetal position inside it. he relies on his breath to help warm the bag, and has been doing this for years. YMMV, but he sees no reason for a true winter bag and reports that he's never ever been cold.

    But FWIW, I think he's a bit nuts.

    #1547601
    Jeff Jeff
    BPL Member

    @jeffjeff

    I'm a side sleeper too. It makes it really awkward when I cinch it down. I never bury my face in the bag, but I do get it fairly tight, but I leave my mouth near the opeing of the bag. Wake up on a cool morning and look at the frost around the opening on the outside of the bag. You don't want that inside.

    The best method I found was to get a bag with a stoute draft collar over and under your collarbone/neck area. Get that really tight and it seals off my main part of the bag. Then put on a balaclava and hat. I slightly cinch the hood down if I am side sleeping.

    I'd love to hear some opinions from other side sleepers. I am sure there are better solutions out there!

    #1547608
    Lori P
    BPL Member

    @lori999

    Locale: Central Valley

    This thread totally sets off my claustrophobia. I'm going to go hug my quilts now…. Just the thought of closing myself in a bag makes me feel suffocated. Side sleeping and claustrophobia have forever divorced me from the thought of owning another mummy bag.

    #1547610
    Roger Caffin
    BPL Member

    @rcaffin

    Locale: Wollemi & Kosciusko NPs, Europe

    > can you suffocate in a sleeping bag?
    No recorded instances that I am aware of.
    Plenty of people have slept *inside* their bag or *under* their quilt, while out walking or at home.

    Cheers

    #1547625
    Sarah Kirkconnell
    BPL Member

    @sarbar

    Locale: Homesteading On An Island In The PNW

    If you get that cold, get up and pee! Do some jumping jacks to warm up, then EAT and drink.

    Being dehydrated and hungry = being miserable. So does pee in your body. Also….if really cold and under prepared lay your rain jacket under you to block some of the cold. For me this has worked as a vapor barrier of sorts.

    #1547632
    Acronym Esq
    BPL Member

    @acronym-esq

    Locale: TX

    I don't think you can suffocate in a sleeping bag in the way you described. You may feel mild hypoxia symptoms tho.

    The real problem with breathing inside the sleeping bag is that your breath will rapidly increase the humidity of the air inside the bag. My experience is that high humidity cool air feels colder than low humidity air at the same temperature. More importantly increased humidity inside the bag raises the dew point inside the bag increasing the likelihood of condensation. Sleeping in water could be a real problem if you aren't using a vapor barrier.

    There are plenty of other techniques to warm up (more clothing, blanket, leaves, exercise, voiding, hugging, friction, fire). I try not to breath in my bag. YMMV.

    acronym 11/23/2009 11:14 PM

    #1547641
    Eric Blumensaadt
    BPL Member

    @danepacker

    Locale: Mojave Desert

    But there was a 54 year old total Dufus backpacking with our group going to Olancha Peak in the Sierra Nevada last summer that I only wish would have suffocated in his bag. The idiot got LOST B/C he failed to stay in camp and wait for our summit group to return. Grrrr!

    (Yeah, we knew after a few hours on the first day that he was not rowing with both oars in the water and that's why we literally took care of him – or tried to – all the time.)

    #1547642
    Joshua Gilbert
    Member

    @joshcgil2

    Locale: Seattle

    There was a case a couple of years ago I think, where some military contractors smothered an Iraqi general(memory is fuzzy, could have been Afghanistan) by shoving him head first in a sleeping bag. They may have also sat on his head. Morbid, but my point is I doubt you could do it yourself unless you got really creative; you would have to try.

    Condensation would be the real concern.

    #1547663
    Tony Wong
    BPL Member

    @valshar

    Locale: San Francisco Bay Area

    Greg,

    I have the Marmot Helium EQ and on my first trip in a tarptent in bad weather, my tarptent lost a stake and collapsed around me allowing about an inch of water to flood my tent.

    It was blowing so bad, I dared not exit my tent for fear that it would blow away.

    I simply layed on my side and completely cinched up the hood to the size of a blow hole and laid away in the driving rain and howling wind until I passed out from being tired.

    I woke up the next morning looking like Han Solo in carbonite with the tarptent plastered on top of me with small puddles of water.

    The only part of my thermarest prolite 4 pad that was dry was a 3 inch patch running along the middle where I was sleeping on my side.

    My whole bag was soaked on the outside, but I remained warm and dry due to the fact that I had seam sealed my sleeping bag, which was the only thing that saved my bacon!

    That said, I survived with nothing more than a blow hole that might have been an inch or two wide….all I know is that I just cinched the hood as tight as I could and bunkered down in my sleeping bag that night.

    Winds were strong enough on the ridge that were on that a friend's REI Half Dome bent a pole from being crushed by the wind, forcing him to spend the night in a pit toilet for his shelter….I count myself luckier than him that night.

    My advice is that yes, you could do it, but avoid it unless the "stuff" has hit the fan….the condensation build up might warm you up initially, but too much and you probably will start to collapse the loft of your down bag.

    Hope that this helps.

    P.S. Lesson learned….avoid setting up on a ridge, use large rocks to hold your stakes down, and don't pitch your shelter in a slight depression that turns into a swimming pool.

    -Tony

    #1547675
    Mark McLauchlin
    BPL Member

    @markmclauchlin

    Locale: Western Australia

    Tightly sealed bag makes for a horrible Dutch Oven :)

    On a serious note, go with the others advise on the fact that you will more than likely generate condensation inside the bag and become colder, ventilation is a good thing.

    #1547692
    Keith Selbo
    Spectator

    @herman666

    Locale: Northern Virginia

    "I'm a side sleeper, so when I would cinch it down, the side/top of my head would block the tiny bit of hole that was open, so it would be effectively completely closed off."

    I'm curious as to why you can't roll the sleeping bag on its side too so the blow hole would be over your mouth/nose.

    If you're healthy, you won't suffocate. A High concentration of CO2 will cause distress and wake you up the same way it wakes people with sleep apnea. The danger comes if there is some other condition like heart disease that the breathing stress exacerbates.

    #1547705
    Gary Dunckel
    BPL Member

    @zia-grill-guy

    Locale: Boulder

    PM sent to Tony

    #1547715
    Brad Groves
    BPL Member

    @4quietwoods

    Locale: Michigan

    I'm confused. Why would the side of your head be in the face opening? When you roll over to sleep on your side, you roll over with the bag. It stays in position on you. That's why the bag has insulation on the bottom. You should easily be able to cinch down to that proverbial blow-hole, roll on your side, and still easily get fresh air. I'm primarily a side sleeper and have been using bags as I describe for decades. It works great.

    #1547797
    Donna C
    BPL Member

    @leadfoot

    Locale: Middle Virginia

    Yes. You will die. Buzzards will eat you, leaving only the bones. You should get a quilt. LOL!

    #1547868
    joseph peterson
    Member

    @sparky

    Locale: Southern California

    yes I will burrow myself in a bag if I get too cold. I have never had an issue with condensation in my down bags. I have never backpacked east of Colorado though FWIW.

    And funny story Tony, brings back some memories lol

    #1547874
    Gregg Martell
    BPL Member

    @gmartell

    Locale: Mid Atlantic

    If you have a down bag, the insulation on the bottom will be flattened, if you were laying on your back before turning on your side, eliminating the insulating value of your bag. I flip side to side when I sleep and try to keep the botton of my bag on the pad. I just roll inside the sleeping bag. I've had some pretty cold nights when I failed to roll in my bag.

    Gregg

    #1547875
    Keith Selbo
    Spectator

    @herman666

    Locale: Northern Virginia

    My WM Alpinlite bag comes out of my pack compressed to virtual nothingness, but immediately begins to grow as if it were alive. I don't look, but I assume much the same occurs when I roll on my side because I haven't gotten suddenly cold.

    What kind of insulation do you have?

    #1547886
    Gregg Martell
    BPL Member

    @gmartell

    Locale: Mid Atlantic

    It's 600 down, so that may be the difference. I believe WM bags area all 750+? I'm a cold sleeper, so any loss of warmth is felt!

    #1547888
    Chris Morgan
    BPL Member

    @chrismorgan

    Locale: Southern Oregon

    This thread makes me think of the one problem I seem to have in cold weather – so I cinch everything down except my face, and I wake up in the middle of the night with a freezing nose. The solution I have found is to wear a beanie and pull it over my eyes and nose, but it is not a great solution. Anyone have any better ideas?

    #1547997
    Greg Foster
    BPL Member

    @thefost

    Thanks for the responses everyone =]

    I tend to roll from side to side a lot, so its much easier for me to roll within the bag without actually moving the whole bag. Maybe I should just try to learn to sleep on my back again (last time I gave up after about 5 days of sleep deprivation).

    Christopher – Maybe you would prefer a balaclava?

    #1548001
    Chris Collins
    Member

    @hobbitling

    how about a snorkel or breathing tube?

    You could get one of those CPAP nose cones that they give to people with sleep apnea, and just thread the hose out your sleeping bag "vent"

    #1548003
    j lan
    Member

    @justaddfuel

    Locale: MN

    As a pretty dedicated side sleeper, lately I have been practicing sleeping on my back and have found the greatest help to be putting a pillow/bunched up clothes under my knees. This helps immensely.

    Jay

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