Caol Ila
Well-Known Member
I just got myself a huge, warm belay jacket for mountaineering purposes. Basically something to throw over whatever layers I have on when stopped on a mountain for any length of time. It has 200g of synthetic insulation and a weather resistant lining to keep the snow and wind out. It's one of the warmest (and heaviest) synthetic belay jackets you can get. You would get a warmer, down one for something like the Himalaya, but it should be more than cozy enough for Scottish winter.
I'm thinking about getting a new turnout rug for my horse because I have Derby House ones and I think they suck. The YO thinks I need a heaver one than the 100g one she's using at the moment. I'm looking at the Premier Equine medium and heavy ones and all I can think is, what on earth does my horse need 200g or even 350g of insulation for?
The horse is big and pretty well designed by mama nature to stay warm.
The horse is unclipped. She doesn't get a huge winter coat -- it's very fine, and silky, but it still means she has a built-in base layer and a mid layer.
The horse will not be spending hours not moving, tied firmly onto a rock on a very small belay ledge or the top of a mountain at 3000ft, getting blasted by wind, snow, and pummeled by spindrift. At least I hope not.
The horse will definitely not end up benighted in the above conditions.
The horse's turnout field is not at 3000ft and she spends about seven hours per day in it. That would be a short winter day out in the Scottish mountains.
So.... given that my horse is not very likely to take up winter mountaineering and even if she did, she'd stay warmer than me because she's a horse, isn't a 200+g turnout rug a bit over the top?
I'm thinking about getting a new turnout rug for my horse because I have Derby House ones and I think they suck. The YO thinks I need a heaver one than the 100g one she's using at the moment. I'm looking at the Premier Equine medium and heavy ones and all I can think is, what on earth does my horse need 200g or even 350g of insulation for?
The horse is big and pretty well designed by mama nature to stay warm.
The horse is unclipped. She doesn't get a huge winter coat -- it's very fine, and silky, but it still means she has a built-in base layer and a mid layer.
The horse will not be spending hours not moving, tied firmly onto a rock on a very small belay ledge or the top of a mountain at 3000ft, getting blasted by wind, snow, and pummeled by spindrift. At least I hope not.
The horse will definitely not end up benighted in the above conditions.
The horse's turnout field is not at 3000ft and she spends about seven hours per day in it. That would be a short winter day out in the Scottish mountains.
So.... given that my horse is not very likely to take up winter mountaineering and even if she did, she'd stay warmer than me because she's a horse, isn't a 200+g turnout rug a bit over the top?