Re: Those suffering hypothermia
I agree that I don't think cotton vs. wool is that major of a factor, or at least it can be compensated for. I was wearing a cotton shirt, cotton drawers, and cotton trousers. I did have wool socks, a wool shirt over the cotton one, a wool-front/cotton-back vest, and a wool frock coat. No head covering but a slouch hat and a cotton rag I tied over my head for a nightcap. The choice of that much cotton was my attempt to prepare for the difference between two hot days and two cold days.
Staying as dry as possible--meaning damp from head to toe but not dripping in more than a few places--and spooning kept me tolerably warm enough overnight, and getting moving immediately upon getting up, made the cold not really an issue for me.
One mistake the linen fellow and I made the previous dry windy night was each wrapping up in our own blankets, then trying to spoon as the night got colder. I think the blankets between us prevented us from warming each other. The last night, we laid the blankets overtop both of us and spooned from the start, and that seemed to do much more good, despite being damper and actually having one less layer over us.
I think people adapt differently to cold though. I'm generally colder than most people when not moving, but warm up quickly if I can keep moving even a little. My hands and feet are the last thing to get cold, but I shiver easily. Somebody else might be entirely different, though, and would need to prepare and plan differently, and worry about their own individual warning signs. For example, Piney Woods, where I could stay active, seemed a "warmer" event for me than Winter 64 when I was supposed to portray a less active sick man, despite the fact I had way more wool on at Winter 64 and was dry.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
Originally posted by Spinster
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Staying as dry as possible--meaning damp from head to toe but not dripping in more than a few places--and spooning kept me tolerably warm enough overnight, and getting moving immediately upon getting up, made the cold not really an issue for me.
One mistake the linen fellow and I made the previous dry windy night was each wrapping up in our own blankets, then trying to spoon as the night got colder. I think the blankets between us prevented us from warming each other. The last night, we laid the blankets overtop both of us and spooned from the start, and that seemed to do much more good, despite being damper and actually having one less layer over us.
I think people adapt differently to cold though. I'm generally colder than most people when not moving, but warm up quickly if I can keep moving even a little. My hands and feet are the last thing to get cold, but I shiver easily. Somebody else might be entirely different, though, and would need to prepare and plan differently, and worry about their own individual warning signs. For example, Piney Woods, where I could stay active, seemed a "warmer" event for me than Winter 64 when I was supposed to portray a less active sick man, despite the fact I had way more wool on at Winter 64 and was dry.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
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