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Hunting jacket liner
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<blockquote data-quote="112Savage" data-source="post: 2543675" data-attributes="member: 38801"><p>I get cold very easily. I hunt primarily in the mountains of western Virginia usually at altitudes between 2400 and 4000 ft asl. If I'm walking a long way in, I will just wear a base layer of thin wool. I pack a good wind stopping outter jacket and a liner of either fleece, primaloft, or down. This fits in with what everyone else has said, but I will add one thing to think about. The most important part of my kit for cold weather is a warm fleece neck gaiter. You have temperature sensory organs in your carotid arteries that send information to the brain about temperature differentials. If you keep your neck warm you won't shiver as much. </p><p></p><p>I proved this point this fall while hunting. I was wearing a battery heated synthetic puffy vest under all my normal hunting clothes but was absent my neck gaiter. despite the battery heating, I froze my buns off.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="112Savage, post: 2543675, member: 38801"] I get cold very easily. I hunt primarily in the mountains of western Virginia usually at altitudes between 2400 and 4000 ft asl. If I'm walking a long way in, I will just wear a base layer of thin wool. I pack a good wind stopping outter jacket and a liner of either fleece, primaloft, or down. This fits in with what everyone else has said, but I will add one thing to think about. The most important part of my kit for cold weather is a warm fleece neck gaiter. You have temperature sensory organs in your carotid arteries that send information to the brain about temperature differentials. If you keep your neck warm you won't shiver as much. I proved this point this fall while hunting. I was wearing a battery heated synthetic puffy vest under all my normal hunting clothes but was absent my neck gaiter. despite the battery heating, I froze my buns off. [/QUOTE]
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