• Drusas
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    15 hours ago

    Things get pretty uncomfortable when you get below -20.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 hours ago

      In my experience I can’t really feel any difference below zero, whether it’s -5 -20 or -40, I just can tell that I have less time outside before it’s too cold to stay out

    • FuglyDuck
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      5 hours ago

      You can dress appropriately for -40-50 and still be reasonably commfie for extended periods.

      Particularly if you stay dry.

      But it’s impossible to stay dry in persistent drizzle or heavy rain. At best you’re wearing several layers of wool and you’re warm but damp and miserable.

      Impermeable shells require venting opening you to the cold wet seepage, and permeable shells will eventually fail if you stay out long enough.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 hours ago

        Oh ffs, this entire thread is a pissing match between people dispersed in multiple climates.

        I’ve lived in -40°F winters but I’m sat here in SoCal tonight with 50°F nighttime lows freezing my ass off.

        How is that possible? It’s called acclimation. Go to a climate opposite of yours sometime for at least two weeks then come back. You’ll probably notice real quick that your home climate is the one that feels weird because you’ve acclimated to your new climate.

        • FuglyDuck
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          13 hours ago

          I’m well aware of that. I’ve spent time in tropical area as, was born in Oceanside and now live in MN.

          That mid-50’s are time for winter jackets in SoCal doesn’t change the fact that people can dress for -40’s and be reasonably comfortable.

          30’s and wet is an entirely different matter. As I said. That shit seeps. (It’d also some of the most dangerous. More people die of hypothermia in 40-50’s than they do the very cold. Probably because they don’t respect it as much.)