A portable version of your pillow at home
Pillows tend to be the most overlooked item in your kitlist. Yet, without one, it’s nearly impossible to get a comfortable night’s sleep. If you’re able to get comfy at all, that is. Instead, give your head a little bit of luxury with the Campmeister Deluxe Pillow from Big Agnes. Super plush and cosy and delivering a 12-cm thick cushion for a more supported sleep, it’s the closest thing you’ll get to an inflatable version of your pillow at home — only that it’s super light, tiny to pack away and fits perfectly in the hood of your sleeping bag.
- Inflates to over 12 cm thick, giving you at-home levels of comfort in the great outdoors
- Made from four-way stretch nylon with high tear strength and puncture resistance
- The pillow is soft to the touch and cosy against your skin
- Comes with built-in advanced heat-reflective technology for added warmth
- Antimicrobial treatment inside the pillow prevents microorganism growth
- Comes with a stuff sack
- Two-way valve allows for quick and easy inflation and super-fast deflation
- Four-way stretch nylon with high tear-strength and puncture resistance
- Aviation grade TPU lamination technology for ultimate durability
- Total Weight: 88 g
- Packed Size: 11 x 8 x 5 cm
- Dimensions: 51 x 36 x 12 cm
- Sustainability Through Longevity - All Big Agnes gear is guaranteed against manufacturing or material defect
Big Agnes is a small, independent US outdoor brand out of Steamboat Springs, Colorado – a small ski-town that we’ve never visited but which we like to imagine is full of mountain-loving, trail-hiking outdoorsy types. That would make sense, since the company makes some of the best ultralight backpacking gear around, including the award-winning Copper Spur, Tiger Wall and Fly Creek tents. It is kit that has clearly been designed by a gang of folks who love sleeping in the dirt just as much as we do here at WildBounds.
Oh, and if you’re still wondering where the heck that name Big Agnes comes from, we did try to find out. Depending on who you talk to, it’s either an affectionate tribute to a legendary truck drivin’ mountain mama, or a 12,000 foot peak in the Mount Zirkel Wilderness. We kinda like the first one better.