I for sure sweat in rubber no question. One tip I heard from a fisherman is that the reason they wear rubber that is so baggy is so it can circulate air. Rubber rain gear should be a little baggy so you can circulate air.PNW is not all created equally. Here on the Olympic Peninsula we had over 30” of rain in January. For this type of wet there is nothing that will keep you dry but rubber & you will be soaked from the inside from sweat with any activity & it can be cumbersome. So get what your comfortable in & can afford then get out there to see what you can endure.
Roughly how much does it weigh?HAHA! and I paid for mine! The Jacket anyways, rainpants are pointless IMO.
I might argue that with you. But we would be splitting hairs. Sitka being owned by gore has good stuff.Arcteryx rain gear is no better or worse than Sitka's.
Minute 50:15 of this podcast. It never occurred to me before but I think that's what happened to me in my First Lite Seak jacket. I was out all day in a downpour and no leaking. I've only had it "leak" or "fail" once; super high winds. I thought I wet it out but I was soaked and figured there was no way I was sweating that hard. I don't sweat much. . but. . the wind was blowing super hard.This is just my guess after spending lots of time in rain jackets. The heavy fabric gets saturated with water and after a while, it seeps through the breathable membrane. This rarely happens on day one. It's several days without being able to dry the jacket out. The worst jacket was the FL SEAK and its a 3.5 layer jacket. We had a HARD rain on Kodiak. The next day it was a soft steady downpour about halfway through the day the dam broke, I might as well not even had on a rain jacket. But the Thunderhead Jacket did basically the same thing to me here in North Idaho. The first morning it rained all night, so I walk through wet brush most of the day. The next day it rained all day. I could tell the jacket was taking on water it got heavy, then I was wet. I wore it the next day because its really all I had for a shell and it was wet.
Since then I have stayed away from jackets that have thick feeling face fabrics. The Takur is a 3 layer jacket as well but feels really thin. I have been in some real storms with the Takur and it's been impressive I don't know what they use for DWR but it's awesome. But it's a breathable material as well so I am waiting for the other shoe to drop. I don't want to sound like I am bashing companies they make great gear. But this shit does happen.
Here is a good listen on when rain gear goes bad.
Episode 61: Good Rams and Bad Rain Gear
In this episode, I’m going solo, so bear with me. I recap the sheep hunt I just had and how much fun it was chasing rams around with the bow before I got blown off the mountain. I also talk s…tundratalkak.com
Roughly how much does it weigh?
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Cool. Thanks.25oz on my scale.
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rainpants are pointless IMO.
Arcteryx rain gear is no better or worse than Sitka's.
How do you deal with keeping feet reasonably dry in an area you have to do a lot of brush busting? Gaiters on bare skin, pants over that and just let them get wet?
I don't care about wet legs, but I had water running down my pants, behind gaiters into my boots this year to the point I was continuously pouring water out of my boots. My feet FELL APART, Lost pretty much all the skin on both feet from boot top down... Nasty.
I'm only 5' 8" and I ordered the Talus. I figured that the waterproof portion at the the back of my leg (calf muscle) was too low and would barely be above my 8" boots if that. Do find that to be an issue being shorter? Basically it seems like these will be more effective for tall people as built-in gators.I have kind of given up on keeping my feet dry in those situations. The last two years the Talus pants have been awesome at keeping water from wicking into my boots. I hope several other companies come out with a similar type of pants, but with 100% waterproof panels below the leg. I also carry three pairs of socks a lot.
Yeah this is why a lot of us here in SE opt for light weight PVC bibs that can go over our boots. Wet feet is no joke.How do you deal with keeping feet reasonably dry in an area you have to do a lot of brush busting? Gaiters on bare skin, pants over that and just let them get wet?
I don't care about wet legs, but I had water running down my pants, behind gaiters into my boots this year to the point I was continuously pouring water out of my boots. My feet FELL APART, Lost pretty much all the skin on both feet from boot top down... Nasty.