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| With my old Therm-A-Rest Ultralite and a tent full of mats ready for making a video |
I started thinking about mat and tent combinations for the first time last year. The idea had never occurred to me before because it had never been necessary. Why would the two items affect each other? Until fairly recently they didn’t but now some mats are thick enough to reduce headroom and end space in a tent, especially a lightweight solo one.
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| Camp on the Cape Wrath Trail with the Therm-A-Rest NeoAir XLite NXT. 2024 |
I decided to make a little video about this as I’d never seen it discussed anywhere. Then I thought I might as well talk about the different types of mats and my views on them and that became the main theme of the video. Mat thickness does appear at the end!
Reviewing the different mats I’ve used over the years and the advantages and disadvantages of each seemed a good subject for a written piece as well. So here it is, with photos from over the decades.
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| 1978 in the Cairngorms with a closed cell foam mat strapped to my pack |
Back when I started backpacking closed cell foam mats were all there were. The standard was the Karrimat, usually in bright yellow. They were 9mm thick and warm enough most of the time. There was a thinner green 3mm version too. I used this for a few years. How I ever slept on such a thin mat I can’t imagine now.
Closed cell foam (ccf) is tough and durable. That’s it’s big
advantage. CCF mats can be chucked on the ground with no fear of punctures and generally
treated roughly. They do lose a bit of thickness after much use and the edges
can get tattered. But they still work. Given that the cost is low in the first
place they’re great value for money.
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| Closed cell foam mats are great for just chucking on the ground and using as a seat or to put gear on |
Ccf mats aren’t very heavy (200-400 grams depending on thickness) but they are bulky. They’re usually carried on the outside of packs, which is convenient for using one during the day as a sitmat. The big drawback is that they’re not very comfortable. As there was no other choice I used ccf mats on hundreds of nights in my first decade of backpacking, including my first long walks, the Pennine Way and Land’s End to John O’Groats.
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| Camp on the Pacific Crest Trail with my first Therm-A-Rest self-inflating mat. 1982 |
Then around 1980 I discovered the existence of a new self-inflating mat called a Therm-A-Rest that was filled with open cell foam and said to be far more comfortable than ccf. I soon got one and discovered that the claims were true. The comfort was a revelation. No more ccf for me! (I wrote a piece about the invention of the Therm-A-Rest back in 2018).
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| With the Therm-A-Rest Ultralite on my Canadian Rockies walk. I was obviously confident in its durability. It lasted the trip. 1988 |
That first Therm-A-Rest was quite a bit heavier at 652 grams than ccf but I still took it on my Pacific Crest Trail thru-hike. I just loved the comfort. Cascade Designs, the makers of Therm-A-Rest, then brought out an UltraLite version that weighed 468 grams in the ¾ length version so I changed to this and took it on the Continental Divide Trail, Canadian Rockies, Yukon Territory and Scandinavian Mountains walks, totalling about 7000 miles and hundreds of nights. I also used it on all the shorter walks I did during the ten years it lasted. It is by far my most-used mat.
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| RidgeRest closed cell foam mat strapped under my pack on the Arizona Trail. 2000. |
I stayed with Therm-A-Rest self-inflating mats for many more years and walks. In all that time I only ever had two punctures, both quickly found and mended. I did go back to a closed cell mat, a Therm-A-Rest RidgeRest, for the Arizona Trail as I wanted to sleep out under the stars whenever I could and I reckoned there might be too many spiky things in the desert for a mat that could be punctured. With a ridged surface (hence the name) this was more comfortable than the flat ccf mats of earlier years but I still missed the comfort of a self-inflating mat and returned to one for future walks.
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| Original NeoAir, 2008 |
Until, that is, Therm-A-Rest reinvented the air bed with the inflatable NeoAir. This was said to be even more comfortable than a self-inflating mat as well as being lighter weight and more compact when packed. I was convinced. I still am but soon found a big disadvantage – durability. Over the years I’ve had inflatable air beds from half a dozen different brands fail, often out in the wilds where repair was difficult if not impossible.
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| Camp on the Pacific Northwest Trail with the inflatable mat that later failed. 2010. |
The first time an inflatable mat became a deflated mat was
on a cold stormy night on the Pacific Northwest Trail when I found myself
wrestling the mat into a freezing lake in the dark trying to find the leaks. I
did have a short thin ccf mat with me but also a quilt, the only time I’ve used
one on a long walk. You really need a warm mat with a quilt! I did manage to
find and patch the leaks though the mat still went down several times a night.
As soon as I could I swapped it for a self-inflating one.
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| In Death Valley with a NeoAir XLite mat and a foam pad to protect it. 2016 |
With a few mats the problem has been the internal walls tearing so one end of the mat swells up like a balloon. As well as making a mat difficult and then impossible to use this also led to the fear that it might explode during the night with an almighty bang.
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| In the Colorado Rockies with the Therm-A-Rest self-inflating mat Andrew Terrill loaned me after my inflatable mat failed. 2019 |
Three times on long walks I’ve borrowed old well-used
self-inflating Therm-A-Rest mats to replace failed inflatable ones. There was a
message there but it took me a while to learn it.
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| Keeping warm in an igloo on a Therm-A-Rest Prolite Plus & a Therm-A-Rest RidgeRest. 2007. |
I still use inflatable mats. I don’t trust them though so I always carry a ccf mat as well, , (usually a 190g Multimat Superlite 8), which rather cancels out the weight and packed size advantage of inflatables. And I am thinking of going back to a self-inflating mat despite the extra weight and bulk. I still have a Therm-A-Rest Ultralite and a Therm-A-Rest Prolite Plus. It’s time I used them again. The Multimat plus my lightest inflatable mat, the Therm-A-Rest NeoAir XLite NXT, weighs 560g, the Multimat plus the Prolite Plus is 640g. I have heavier ccf and inflatable mats I use occasionally but those are my lightest combinations. I don’t 120g is significant except maybe on long trips where weight really matters.
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| Sitting on the Multimat Superlite 8 with the NeoAir XLite NXT just visible in the tent. 2023. |
As well as being more durable an advantage of a self-inflating mat is that there’s still some insulation if it does deflate as it’s full of foam. They don’t even out bumps and dips in the ground as well as an air bed, though better than ccf, but they don’t fail often either. You also don’t need to think about headroom in a tent either. My thickest self-inflating mat is 3.8cm, my thinnest air bed 7.5cm. In a small tent with a 90cm high point and low ends the difference is noticeable.
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| This 9cm thick mat really restricted the space at the foot end and the headroom in this small tent |
Links to mats mentioned:









































