jansman wrote: ↑Sun Mar 19, 2023 5:51 am
Frnc wrote: ↑Sat Mar 18, 2023 7:04 pm
jansman wrote: ↑Sat Mar 18, 2023 6:25 pm
Some years ago I fished on a very warm day in July. The bank gave way and I went in!I thought that wearing clothes would dry them in the sun. Inside 45 minutes I started shaking and teeth chattered. Literally. I was so cold I abandoned my kit and got home fast. As I stripped in the yard,my wife ran a hot bath. Got hot drinks inside me and it still took an hour to warm up. That was reality.
And nobody nicked my kit!
Bit of an extreme case. It does depend on what you are wearing and how active you were. I'm talking about light rain on synthetic material, but I maybe forgot to mention, you'd need to keep walking briskly until they were dry, and you'd probably need a thin, light, synthetic, highly breathable windproof outer layer. I always used to carry/wear a pertex windproof. I still have one on my bug out clothes rail. I have a similar but cheapo orange one for cycling.
Buffalo built a whole brand based on this: pertex outer, pile inner, worn even in the rain. Don't try this at home:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLtklD4LSX0
Also I was taught it as a kid, along with avoiding cotton and "keep cool to keep warm" ie avoiding getting sweaty.
Those thru hikers will be walking non-stop at a fair pace for a good hour or two after walking through a cold river. Wouldn't fancy it personally. They even wear mesh trailrunners in snow, but only to cross short sections. These are American who walk thousands of miles.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TyRdhlEOfI&t=0s
What happened to me was not EXTREME.It was Summer! Surely ,planning for “light rain on synthetic material “ should really be for EXTREME? My situation was for real,not an internet hypothesis.
My bugout gear includes waterproofs - jacket and/or poncho, overtrousers, mitts, gaiters and leather boots. In the summer, I might not bother with some of that, and wear fabric boots. Obviously in winter I would be wearing/carrying similar to what I would for winter hillwalking, plus spares/extra.
I was just trying to explain how fast you can dry different clothes at different levels of wetness by wearing them. If you watched the video you know the Buffalo setup (Pertex/pile) dries in 15 minutes of brisk walking after full immersion in winter. I don't wear Buffalo and I'd almost certainly change if I got soaked.
NB. The whole point of Buffalo is not to bother with waterproofs at all. A bit extreme for me. But in drizzle I wear something very similar. I prefer the versatility of a separate Pertex wind jacket plus synthetic layer(s) underneath. I've worn this on hundreds of days in the hills and I think I may have got the idea from Buffalo in the 1980s. I always had a Pertex wind jacket from the mid 80s if I remember correctly.
I would wear waterproofs if it was raining. However in drizzle, I would be wearing a combo simlar to Buffalo: Pertex wind jacket (same as Buffalo), but something thinner than pile underneath, unless it's winter. But never cotton! In a light shower in summer I would either stick to Pertex outer or throw on the waterproof jacket or poncho.
If I did fall in a river when bugging out I would almost certainly change. The only thing I probably wouldn't have spare of is trousers. Nylon walking trousers don't hold much water and dry quick. My bugout bag always has lightweight merino mix longjohns in the summer, and thicker Rab longjohns as well in winter. Of course it contains a spare upper body base layer and hiking socks. It always has a spare upper body midlayer/outer. Usualy it is an insulated jacket (Mountain Equipment Rampart, which is 80g/m2 Polarloft). I only plan on wearing this if walking in freezing temperatures. Otherwise, it is in my rucksack. If it was cold and I wasn't wearing it, I'd be wearing a Mountain Warehouse Talus base/fleece mid/Pertex outer, (again, similar to a Buffalo combo). So, my point is, wearing that, I don't
need a waterproof on. However, personally I would wear a waterproof if it was properly raining.
The great thing about Pertex is its versatility. It is windproof, but very breathable though. If it's hot you could wear it to keep the sun off. Actually nowadays there are different types of Pertex, and other makes. Plus it's a bit hard to get hold of. For cycling I have a cheap orange windproof by some unknown company, but it is very similar to Pertex, very tight weave.