moisture your greatest enemy…

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Moisture your greatest enemy…

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Moisture your greatest enemy…. Precipitation, Perspiration, Aspiration. How to Stay Warm Stay dry Dress is several light layers Bring raingear on all trips Outerlayer should be a nylon-like material to shed snow Cotton is the worst cold weather clothing. And the Best Way to Stay Warm - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Moisture

your greatest enemy…

Page 2: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Precipitation, Perspiration, Aspiration

Page 3: Moisture your greatest enemy…

How to Stay WarmStay dry

Dress is several light layers

Bring raingear on all tripsOuterlayer should be a nylon-like material to shed snow

Cotton is the worst cold weather clothing

Page 4: Moisture your greatest enemy…

And the Best Way to Stay Warm

…not to get cold!

Page 5: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Insulation…

Clothing doesn’t “heat” you as a furnace does.

It insulates you to hold in the heat your body produces.

Clothing that traps dry air provides the best insulation.

Page 6: Moisture your greatest enemy…

WoolExcellent natural insulator

Warm even when wet

Somewhat expensive

Check grandma’s attic, army-navy stores, thrift shops

Merino wool is very soft

socks, hat, gloves, shirts, sweaters, pants

Page 7: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Polypropylene

Wicks moisture away from the skin

Makes you feel warm and dry

Worth every penny

sock liners, underwear, hats, gloves

Page 8: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Goose Down

Extremely lightweight

Worthless when wet

Very expensive

sleeping bags, vests, jackets, gloves

Page 9: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Thinsulate

Light, thin insulation

Reasonably priced

hats, jackets, gloves

Page 10: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Quallofil, Hollofill, Polyguard, etc.

Man-made imitation of goose down

Good insulation

Pretty good even when wet

hats, gloves, sleeping bags

Page 11: Moisture your greatest enemy…

Head: Up to 65% of heat loss can be from the head. “Put a hat on to keep your feet warm.”

Neck: Wear a scarf or (better) a hood.

Wrist: Extended jacket cuffs, gloves, or wristlets cut from an old pair of socks.

Hands: Gloves or mittens. Mittens are warmer, but offer no dexterity. Best combination - thin gloves inside heavy mittens.

A Typical Layer System

Page 12: Moisture your greatest enemy…

FootwearRubber bottom, leather top boots with wool felt liners.

Nylon snowmobile boots with felt liners.

Rubber boots with built-in foam insulation.

Nylon gaiters

Leather boots should be treated with “snowseal” or similar dressing to keep them water resistant.

Boots must have room for whatever winter socks you plan to wear, plus room to wiggle your toes.

Don’t cut off circulation!

Page 13: Moisture your greatest enemy…

A Typical Layer SystemPolypropylene underwearOne pair polypropylene liner socksOne or two pair wool socksMedium weight wool or fleece shirtWool or fleece pantsWool sweater or fleece jacket, preferably with hoodNylon windbreaker with hoodWool gloves, fleece hat, chapstickBootsGaitors