What about FORLOH allclima pants. Waterproof knee pads, hip zip vents wirh mesh lining. Great stretch and seem very well built
I was checking this pant out at the forloh booth at TAC this past weekend. I wouldn’t have thought they were insulated. I didn’t spend too much time with them or try them on but they Seemed like a cross between my Sitka ascents and my kuiu attacks.FORLOH says those are “mid-weight” and “insulated” pants. If they’d make them in a super lightweight hot weather version they’d be killer. As is though they don’t fit the same role as Kutanas/De Havilland Lites etc.
I was checking this pant out at the forloh booth at TAC this past weekend. I wouldn’t have thought they were insulated. I didn’t spend too much time with them or try them on but they Seemed like a cross between my Sitka ascents and my kuiu attacks.
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Maybe this will give you the general idea in th corrugate foundry.
I have attacks, tiburons and foundry's.
For those conditions I'll take the Foundry's. The KUIU pants all suffer from a lack of breathability. Even with the vents fully open the cell phone I keep in the cargo pocket is wet when I take it out. This doesn't just happen when I'm hiking the attacks and tiburons are my daily drivers.
I can get the foundry's heated up too, but not anywhere near the attacks. The tiburons are nice for hot days, but I still notice a lack in breathability unless there's a breeze.
At 80 degrees you'll be hot in the foundry's and maybe wish you had the tiburons, but from teens (with a base layer) up to 70 the foundry's are great.
The knee pads are super comfortable, but they are hot. So I only run them when I think they'll be useful.Do you run them with the knee pads all the time or just "as needed"? Do you find the extra bulk in the knees hot/restrictive?
I don’t run the knee pads at all. I keep them just in case but haven’t needed them yet. I have considered sliding them in for saddle hunting but haven’t yet.The knee pads are super comfortable, but they are hot. So I only run them when I think they'll be useful.
I found them particularly useful when there’s snow on the ground. And the obvious rocky and cactus ridden areas.I don’t run the knee pads at all. I keep them just in case but haven’t needed them yet. I have considered sliding them in for saddle hunting but haven’t yet.
I had a pair of the older Sitka knee pads wear a blister on my shin one time and I’ve been gun shy. I may give them a chanceI found them particularly useful when there’s snow on the ground. And the obvious rocky and cactus ridden areas.