It was crazy cold today riding into Wellington so here are some comments on staying warm.
Things I found work well that are not typical:
-I've stuffed a woolen beanie in the lower part of my helmet a few times in bitter weather to stop the wind coming up to my face. Sure I have face masks and neck socks but a well placed item in front of the mouth doesn't hurt my. In keeping the cold wind out is has been great. Probably die of carbon poisoning so something like an old lady beanie you can breath through that still blocks the wind.
-Plastics, once all the thermal layers are on (tee shirt, tight thermal * 2, thin ice breaker hoodie * 2, full neck sock) the plastics keep the wind out and make a huge difference (forget just using them for rain the wind is also a big part of the charm).
-Men in tights - thermal tights * 2. Today I doubled the order of thermal tights that I've been wearing all winter and it was toasty where it counts (you know where) more than I would have thought. I've some new ones that are full tights down to the toes and ones I've had for ages that are just legging. Besides the kids love them "do the men in tights dance again!" and it gives the wife a good laugh. 2 for $30 from Max for the wife's fleecy lined tights (which I stole). They are great under the work cloths through the day on days like today also.
The basics
-It is a play off between restriction and warmth (ok and fashion but they are under cloths mostly and my bike is Japanese). Yes it can be restrictive but in the cold you tend to hold muscles tight and try and avoid moving which is more restrictive and mentally draining (I'd just sooner be warm, awake and somewhat restricted).
-Neck Pain is not uncommon on my long commute in winder due to neck socks restricting my motion, over time this can be quite noticeable so welcome ideas here but again I live with it really for the safety of being warm and it goes away in summer.
-The full kit for someone doing around 70 minutes in real cold with likely rain to stay warm for me (not much natural padding) is
One decent tee-shirt preferably a little tight. Two tight thermal long armed thermal skivvies. Two ice breaker hoodies (I wear the hood up on one of them and my thumbs through the finger wholes on one under my gloves). Decent jacket with thermal and waterproof layers in. Two sets of tights. One pair of jeans. Good pants with thermal layer in. Decent arctic gloves. Decent boots with normal socks. Full one piece plastics. Neck sock (the kind that also goes down the front and back and up under the helmet. Decent helmet. Heated grips (first time on 75% for a while this morning).
Last layers need to be put on outside (to stop overheating) so have everything ready as finding the keys in that setup is not good at all and sweat on the face turns cold fast once you start moving. With all this I can move well enough and do 70 minutes warm and dry. On the way home I left out one hoodie and one thermal top and I was getting cold for the last 15 minutes (not bad but certainly would have put them on again if I could do over).
If you have some natural padding I am sure this is not all needed and perhaps I just get cold easy however I FAR prefer warm marshmallow man over cold style is everything boy.
I heard about a chap near Wellington this morning on a GN250 in the rain in light gear legs exposed. That is madness as it was the coldest day of the year to date leaving home this morning (warmer and wetter in Wellington but still cold).
I am sure the beanie in the helmet idea could be a bad one for some and hopefully others have better ideas but I once forgot my neck sock and pulled into a garage for a $20 old lady hat that made a HUGE difference to the rest of the trip and was I think far safer than being sincerely cold around the neck as I was to spend that on such a fashion statement (it was white with a pompom and worth every $).
For years I rode very cold in winter. Whatever part of you gets really cold effects the brain badly and it is miserable riding so keep it all warm.
Oh and yes I can still walk fine in all that. Last note pull everything up well as you go and stretch the legs once moving on the bike (tights can have other unpleasant side effects if to tight). I may look like an inflated turd but I am a warm inflated turd!
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