I love silk, too. But I've found I sweat way to much for silk to handle it. (when I'm riding or something... I don't sweat like that all the time!)
I like the stuff WinterSilks makes.
I love silk, too. But I've found I sweat way to much for silk to handle it. (when I'm riding or something... I don't sweat like that all the time!)
I like the stuff WinterSilks makes.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Kathi, my husband wears silk under all of his wool stuff.
silk is good, but not near as fun as wool, i guess!
I used to have pure silk base layer tops and long johns. Overall, they felt soft and nice. But the tops used to get smelly under the arms after one wearing, they felt clammy if they got sweaty, and they didn't keep me nearly as warm as merino wool thin base layers.
Wool gives you that lovely layer-of-air insulation that keeps you from feeling damp or sticky, and also wool doesn't get smelly because it does not encourage bacterial growth under your arms (like other fabrics do).
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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1. WHich Cirque jacket do you like/have? There seems to be 2 different ones...I bought the one that appears first...not the "light" looks slimmer.
2. Silk keeps you warm but doesn't "wick". I was just reading about dressing for field trials (yeah, dogs) and the woman who wrote the article owns either backcountry or ST..can't remember...she said to stay away from cotton and silk as they don't dry....wool and synthtics made for cold weather layering work much better.
3. So yeah...what about the next to the skin merino crew I just got from Riv that is a little itchy...will washing help? If not, what do you put under it that doesn't negate it's values?
e
Discipline is remembering what you want.
I guess I haven't experienced the clammy thing (yet) with my silk base layer pieces. But then, I'm not exactly a speed demon biking or hiking, so I'm probably not kicking up enough sweat to test the soak-and-sop limits of silk.![]()
Now that I've heard this group swoon over the virtues (and vices) of wool, I can hardly wait to get the Ibex pieces I snared on STPost today! Of course, temps have to actually DROP to something resembling AUTUMN before I'll get to test the warmth factor.........![]()
"If there are no dogs in heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went." (Will Rogers)
gee, Kathi, don' t you have some killer hills where you live? that's where I get hot and sweaty!
Yes, indeed, LOADS of killer hills 'round here----very much part of the charm that drew me to this part of Virginia. My cycling fiend boyfriend regularly throws himself up and down the mountains in MTB and road century races, and loves every painful minute of it!.......I've never been strong on hill-climbing of any kind, so have learned just to take it slow, at a comfortable pace. Result? I rarely end up being more than damp even in the hottest weather. I suppose I'm more tortoise than hare! I'm just getting back into riding after a decade off, and am happy to be averaging about 12mph for the moment. Today I did my longest ride yet: 16 miles, in 1hr 20 min! At the end, as the sun was dropping, the temps dropped fast and I was glad I'd put on two layers---'though neither one was wool...yet!........I'm looking forward to doing some mileage on the Blue Ridge Parkway when I get a little stronger. Right now I think I'd just get disheartened by the longgggg climbs. I figure in another month or so I'll be ready to give it a whirl. (Plus the bumper-to-bumper leaf-peeping traffic will be gone.....) That's when my new Ibex goodies will come in handy!![]()
Last edited by KathiCville; 10-27-2007 at 03:06 PM.
"If there are no dogs in heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went." (Will Rogers)