Rethinking layers...

Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
849
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
So, y'all kind of rocked me with the CLO factor of various pieces of gear and now I'm kind of reevaluating everything I 'knew' including how I use my layers.

Super basic question.

Moderate hike in on a cold day.

Yeah, start cold and all, I get that. I do that.

At your stand/glassing point do you:

A. Layer up immediately to trap and preserve the heat you've built up?

B. Allow yourself to cool, layering up as you shed heat?

I've been letting myself cool and kind of layering up slowly over 15-30 minutes but now I'm wondering if I'm not better off layering up immediately.
 
I don’t know about you all, but I need to be conscience of not getting into a like a moderate exertion level or I’ll sweat like a son of a gun. For me it’s more about letting myself dry off vs cool down. If I’m not sweating though, I layer up right away.
 
I don’t layer up immediately. If I do then I’ll be dripping in sweat.
So, I work in steps, depending on how cold it is.
When I get to my stand, I will put on my bibs if I’m wearing them, and leave the front unzipped.
I will wait until I’m past the sweating stage, then I will zip them up.
If I’m still very warm, I’ll wait a little longer to put on my parka.
I don’t wait until I start to get cold, I wait until I’m not sweating, if that makes sense.
If I get all dressed, and I’m still sweating, I’ll be pretty damp, and then, that’s when I get really cold.
If I take my time I don’t get very sweaty, and if I dress before I get cold, then I’ll be warm through out the sit.
 
To echo what others have said, as soon as I sit down and get set, on go the heavies. A few reasons you'll want to do this:
  1. Why would you wait until you start to get cool/cold to put on warm clothes? You're giving the cold a head start that way.
  2. If you're wearing the correct stuff (i.e. base layers) any sweat on your body will be pulled away and into the other layers as you sit. It might be a bit gooey for a few minutes, but that's the penalty for getting sweaty in the first place. 😎
  3. It's much easier to cool down to a comfortable body temperature than it is to warm up when it's cold outside.
Unless you're wearing some mega heat suit, you'll probably get cold eventually anyway, so why not delay it as long as possible?
 
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