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Survival straw or two and a light metal cup for melting snow/drinking water? I didn’t see that anywhere…sorry if I missed it.
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Wow...great info on this thread, things/items I never considered or thought about for the past 20 years or so. Will take all this advice in the event I travel north at some point. In my locale, cold weather gear is a long sleeve t-shirt.
I've recently discovered biolite products. The company offers off-grid personal-scale energy products for cooking, charging, and lighting. I'm thinking about addressing the biolite customer support by link and finding out more about their products. Did anyone try them?
Last edited by Gregory234; 09-20-23 at 09:54.
This is an informative article by Bill Rapier former SEAL Team 6 operator. https://www.amtacshooting.com/backpa...ong-days-hike/
How does the mil surplus silk weight undergarments perform as compared to capilene?
I was/am in the market for some additional capilene pieces but now a single pair of midweight bottoms is $80+
A compete new set of the gen III ECWCS silk weight was $30
Haven't tried out milspec stuff yet and hope they do well.
Another vote her for ArcTeryx Goretex hardshell outer layer. I have nothing but good things to say about mine. In fact all of my ArcTeryx gear is now my go to outdoor stuff. I ended up donating most all of my other stuff and am pretty much only ArcTeryx with the exception of a Carhartt work coat and a 'casual' Mountain Hardware hardshell and MH spare outdoor hardshell.
ETC (SW/AW), USN (1998-2008)
CVN-65, USS Enterprise
Worth a watch for light/midweight layer opinions.
Haven't tried any fishnet stuff yet.
I tend to agree with him on the level 2/waffle/grid fleece being more versatile on temperature range than level 1.
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