Just a tip for the gentlemen on the site...if you DO rub fresh chillis on your neck and chin, or handle fresh chillis in any other way, PUT YOUR GLOVES ON BEFORE YOU TAKE A SLASH!!!!. And don't ask how I know this...suffice to say half an hour under a cold shower is the result if you don't...
. “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis
Fear is never a reason to quit. It's only an excuse.
Well, along with pies and chillies, Rev-it does a nice wee neck thingy made of a quasi-neopreme material. The first time I wore it I couldnt believe I'd been riding for 20 years without one (or something like it, Revit wasnt even born!)
Also cuts out heaps of wind noise.
But I have ridden with a guy that was (a farmer) using a rolled up mutton-cloth (cheese-cloth) as a neck warmer. When it got a bit manky he'd just cut another new piece.
A nice Pit
Never to mind ladies and gentlemens, My sister being the nice chick she is, brought me up a thing from the camping/hiking store she works at down in christchurch.
And if its good enough to keep christchurch necks warm, im sure it should be more then up for the task in hamiltons weather.
Fear is never a reason to quit. It's only an excuse.
Yes got one of those too and it works.
However my preference for winter in the south is something wind-proof and am still looking. One of those neoprene masks as mentioned above would be a good option. Used to wear scarves but they'd always find a way of one end cracking in the wind.
I've found that wind-proofing is the most important first step with riding gear. I put one of those strong plastic shopping bags down my chest once just as an experiment and was amazed at the difference. Now got an Oxford wind-proof top now.![]()
I rock a beleclava eh. Cuts down the wind noise on the open road real nice too. It's an oxford one, some synthetic windstopping kinda stuff. I forget how much i paid for it now but its real nice. Anything woolen might get itchy and annoying
And when the men in white coats cart you off to the loony bin you'll already be fitted with your own straight jacket.
Now that must be an embarrassing look on a mans face (unless it's beaver eating time)
Only problem I find with balaclava is my damned glasses have those light weight bendy arms and trying to get them inside my balaclava and helmet together is a pain in the ring. But it certainly is warm once I've done the 10 minute dance to get my head gear on.
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