|
I'm curious... why do so few people make rain hats out of eVent? I think it would be the perfect fabric for that. The only ones I've found over the last few years are the never to be realized Bushman Hat from hats from Watership hats. There are gaitors and gloves and jackets and pants and bivies made from eVent, so why not rain hats???
As for windbreakers, I own a Montane Lite-Speed, and unlike my other collection of millions of items of redundant gear (^J^)/" , it is the only windshirt I have and the only one I need. I figure windshirts are there to act as a first layer of defense against wind, only secondly to repel water. The Lite-Speed does a great job even with the latter, so I wear it more than any other outer piece of gear, right down to drizzles. The heat from my body dries out most of the moisture on the surface of the fabric; I only break out my Montane Superfly when the rain really comes down.
I also use, instead of the Superfly/ Lite-Speed combo, the Paramo system (I have a Cascada jacket) for both wind and rain, throughout the year. I have found there is nothing more breathable and waterproof at the same time. Others complain about how warm the Paramo system is, but I actually find it quite cold on the high ridges and always need a warm insulation layer to keep the wind from chilling me. I wear the Paramo system most of the time like a waterproof shirt, with just a thin wool base layer underneath. If it gets so warm that the Paramo system is too hot, then for me it's warm enough to hike without any rain gear at all, just letting myself get wet. Once I slow down I don the Paramo jacket and within a few minutes its superb wicking abilities have me all dried out. The Paramo system has a lot of controversy and there are those who hate it and love it, but personally there is nothing out there that works as well in terms of breathability. The system isn't intuitive until you've tried it.
Edited by butuki on 03/17/2007 08:00:42 MDT.
|