Lum asked a few things.

“What between the fishnet and sweater?”
Any insulative layer. I tested this in the extreme early on, putting on a 
soaking wet heavy cotton flanel (Duluth burly flannel I’d just taken ouf the 
the washer, which doesn’t spin dry welll) and my Ventile jackt and then riding 
for an hour at -10˚F. I stayed “not cold”, so long as I was moving (didn’t test 
stopping). Parts of the sleeves were frozen stiff when I got home, but I was 
fine. My usual:
Standard weight cotton flannel: 50˚F down to about 25˚F when climbing (toasty 
at 50 when climbing, but I just unbutton the shirt a bit and it ventilates well)
Heavy weight cotton flannel: 25˚F to 10˚F when climbing
2 weights of sweater: normal (like Riv’s sweaters), and boiled wool (like 
wearing 4 regular sweaters, but far better. Blocks a lot of wind. I’ve ridden 
down hill into headwinds at 0˚F.). I will add at the top for cofee/pipe/writing 
as needed, starting at 50˚F and cloudy.

“How do you keep wind from penetrating layers?”
Add canvas vest, sweater, or ventile jacket for wind blocking/heat retention as 
needed. Below 20˚F, this wind layer can be a regular canvas, as all “moisture” 
is dry snow. However, Ventile does a great job no matter the temperature, so is 
what I use.

“What about pants layers and sox?”
Tweed breeks from https://www.spencers-trousers.com. So far I’ve not added 
anything under or over and only plan on adding fishnet longjohns if needed, 
below ˚F. I do add single sock as extra warmth and wind block cod piece at 15˚F 
and below.
Socks: Boiled wool extra heavy 3-ply over the knee sock (folded to be under the 
knee), requires sizing shoe up 2 sizes. I add a second pair 4-ply ankle sock at 
15˚F, good down to zero. Below that, I shift to Sorel Caribou boots with 1-2 
pair boiled wool socks.
I add ventile gaters, to just below the knee, for a wind barrier as needed, but 
for warmth due to heat retention starting below 20˚F.

Mittens: 3 ply boiled wool glomitt down to 20˚F. Add a 4-ply boiled wool mitt 
below that, and an Empire Canvas chopper mitt as needed for wind block/heat 
retention.
Wool scarf, blocks wind into shirt and keeps neck warm starting around freezing.
Hat: Walts wool cycling cap to about 25˚F. Add 2-ply down to 10˚F, 4-ply below 
that and/or at stops at the top, for descents. Ventile hood if windblock 
needed, but that doesn’t happen until below zero as the 4-ply blocks wind very 
well and is 2 or three layers thick around the ears/headband area.

The key before fishnet was to wear enough layers to absorb sweat, then change 
to dry base layers if stopped, or just don’t stop. Since fishnet, the key is to 
manage moisture, and when things get wet it’s not a big deal because I’ll stay 
warm even when I stop, and at an extended stop just add more insulative layers 
and wind block as needed. It allows me to do extended stops at all 
temperatures, which has opened up my riding.

Boiled wool: 
https://www.sweaterchalet.com/dachstein-woolwear-boiled-wool-sweaters-mitts-socks-caps-gloves/.
 Rick is great to work with. A note on the boiled wool hats: I’ve added a chin 
tie to keep them on. People with smaller heads may not have this issue. 
Basically a leather shoe lace inside the back headband of the hat, pushed 
through at the front of the ears. When tied, it holds the hat snuggly to the 
back of my neck and below my ears.

Ventile: https://hilltrek.co.uk

You can see a number of these layering combos in my coffeeneuring post: 
https://thegrid.ai/withabandon/coffeeneuring-challenge-2018 and fall color 
post: https://thegrid.ai/withabandon/gold-trail.

(I’ll also post this to it’s own thread to not derail this thread further)

With abandon,
Patrick

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW 
Owners Bunch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to