| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
|
|
#1
posted to rec.boats.paddle
|
|||
|
|||
|
Al Deveron wrote:
70% cotton 30% nylon (fairly thin). Is this a good fabric for canoeing/camping pants (aka trousers!)? If it's warm enough and you're just out for a two hour excursion, sure they'll work fine. But if there's a chance you might encounter temps below about 25 Celsius (75 F) and there's any chance of getting wet, don't wear cotton anything. IOW, keep looking. Nylon, polyester, polypro, even wool are all a better choice than cotton. //Walt |
|
#2
posted to rec.boats.paddle
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Tue, 18 Jul 2006 09:40:01 -0400, Walt
wrote: IOW, keep looking. Nylon, polyester, polypro, even wool are all a better choice than cotton. OK - I will try a few different fabrics such as the above three. I've always been a staunch cotton man in the past, since cotton seems to reduce perspiration - or allow it to evaporate. It seems to keep one fairly cool in hot weather, yet warm in cold weather. I can't remember having been soaked to the bone in cold weather while wearing cotton though... I have always avoided polyester like the plague because I was under the impression that it inhibits the proper evaporation of perspiration, thereby making one sticky and smelly. Al D |
|
#3
posted to rec.boats.paddle
|
|||
|
|||
|
Al Deveron wrote:
Walt wrote: IOW, keep looking. Nylon, polyester, polypro, even wool are all a better choice than cotton. OK - I will try a few different fabrics such as the above three. I've always been a staunch cotton man in the past, since cotton seems to reduce perspiration - or allow it to evaporate. It seems to keep one fairly cool in hot weather, yet warm in cold weather. I can't remember having been soaked to the bone in cold weather while wearing cotton though... I have always avoided polyester like the plague because I was under the impression that it inhibits the proper evaporation of perspiration, thereby making one sticky and smelly. I understand where you are coming from. Ten years ago, before I started skiing, sailing, and paddling my wardrobe was entirely cotton. Cotton is fine until it gets wet, at which point it stays wet and doesn't insulate at all. Ok for warm weather, but uncomfortable and potentially life threatening in the cold. There are many different grades of polyester - some feel like wearing a plastic bag and others are almost indistinguishable from cotton. Some will make you smelly, others have some treatments to inhibit bacterial growth. Shop around. And keep in mind that you don't necessarily want *one* pair of pants for all conditions. A good wardrobe of pants would be something like: neoprene wetsuit - for cold weather paddling polyester fleece - for moderate weather nylon with zip-off legs - for hot weather //Walt |
|
#4
posted to rec.boats.paddle
|
|||
|
|||
|
id say best thing would be supplex pants with zip off
legs that make them into shorts yes? |
| Reply |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|