north-north-west wrote:Re the beanie at night: get a Buff. Use it as a hood over the beanie. As long as the edge is up to the crown of your head, it'll stay in place overnight. Might not work as well with down as you'd probably lose a fair bit of the loft.
Hadn't thought of using a buff. I've got one somewhere. Might even be sufficient head cover on its own.
Moondog55 wrote:Or buy a scrap of fleece and some nylon or polyester ripstop and make a windproof balaclava
Windproof balaclavas are VERY warm. Alternatively simply an add-on hood for you existing jacket
The Uniqlo parka will be on sale soon I imagine and that could be another cheaper option also
Hadn't thought of that either - I have a windblock beanie somewhere. But the real winner in that suggestion MD is that I have a detachable hood from a Polartec Windblock jacket. Not U/L, but I can fix that by not weighing it

If necessary I can try that, and if the results are good I could look at a lighter alternative. I also have couple of old PaddyMade ear bands made from a double layer of Polartec, which would work very well with a chin strap/tie - could simply pull them over a beanie. Long roll down beanies are another option, but mine is in merion and although very cosy and comfortable, is quite a bit heavier than fleece.
Moondog55 wrote:Are you contemplating a SB cover or bivvy as part of the system?
I have a Pertex "Bivy" which is really a sleeping bag cover. I carry it only occasionally (220+ grams), and I just like the belts and braces approach of having something in reserve in the event of tent problems, massive condensation, or something else hitting the fan. I wouldn't plan on using the cover as a regular part of the system, only as backup. It hasn't yet been used in anger.
In response to my email, FF have suggested that the concept should work fine at my anticipated temps with my PHD pullover, so it's probably crunch time.
Strayed a little from the half bag idea, but not that far, as the warmest part of the Vireo is the lower half, and the more lightly filled upper half should reduce heat loss by providing one piece of insulation from shoulder to toe. Probably better for me than a pure half bag, and should let me use a lighter jacket than would be possible with a half bag.
FF also confirmed that the materials in the slightly heavier Nano are more robust than those in the "stops out" U/L. That suits me, and saves some $$
I have I missed anything, or am I good to go ???