Therm-a-Rest BaseCamp Self-Inflating Foam Camping Pad, Large – 25 x 77 Inches
Still sleeping on your ultralight backpacking mattress while car camping? The Basecamp mattress is here to remind you of how good it can be with the exceptional comfort and convenience of a robust foam core mattress. It offers excellent self-inflating convenience, exceptional all-season warmth and the top-notch support and stability that is exclusive to our time-tested self-inflating mattress construction. Grab one and see what you’ve been missing.
Product Features
Plush Fabrics: Light, soft fabrics make this sleeping pad exceptionally comfortable.
Thick: 2-inch (5 cm) thickness provides a high level of warmth and support for four season use.
Self-Inflating: Compressible foam core expands when sleeping pad is unpacked for easy self-inflation
Durable: Sturdy, classic design provides an outstanding value.
Good pad for cold weather, small enough to backpack with. I was using a 20″ wide military pad that I got from the local Army-Navy store for $10 and I always thought sleeping pads like this one were over-priced. However, I slept on this one last night and I’m glad I spent the money. It’s not as good as a regular mattress, but the padding helps, and there is a lot of thermal advantage (the low last night was 6F and I didn’t feel any cold from the ground). I got it for backpacking so I had to compromise on the padding part. Rolled up in it’s…
The classic BaseCamp might still be the best cap-camping pad available. I use this while car camping, since it is obviously very heavy for a backpacking sleeping pad (I use a vintage Therm-a-Rest Ridge Rest for that). Although it is not the thickest mattress Therm-a-Rest makes, it performs admirably sleeping on a sheet of plywood (to cover the ridged plastic bedliner) in the back of my pickup truck.I went with the classic BaseCamp because it was substantially cheaper than the newer LuxuryMap, which is an inch thicker, but the BaseCamp leaves me…
Kurt Smith
Good looking, but not built to withstand heavy use
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Good pad for cold weather, small enough to backpack with. I was using a 20″ wide military pad that I got from the local Army-Navy store for $10 and I always thought sleeping pads like this one were over-priced. However, I slept on this one last night and I’m glad I spent the money. It’s not as good as a regular mattress, but the padding helps, and there is a lot of thermal advantage (the low last night was 6F and I didn’t feel any cold from the ground). I got it for backpacking so I had to compromise on the padding part. Rolled up in it’s…
The classic BaseCamp might still be the best cap-camping pad available. I use this while car camping, since it is obviously very heavy for a backpacking sleeping pad (I use a vintage Therm-a-Rest Ridge Rest for that). Although it is not the thickest mattress Therm-a-Rest makes, it performs admirably sleeping on a sheet of plywood (to cover the ridged plastic bedliner) in the back of my pickup truck.I went with the classic BaseCamp because it was substantially cheaper than the newer LuxuryMap, which is an inch thicker, but the BaseCamp leaves me…