JamesMc wrote:Walking without a sturdy fibreglass framed umbrella in Tasmania's wet weather is madness.
luke_vic wrote:JamesMc wrote:Walking without a sturdy fibreglass framed umbrella in Tasmania's wet weather is madness.
James, are you serious on this??? I don't doubt it just not sure if it's tongue in cheek or not?
Son of a Beach wrote:I'm wondering how people can get so wet in a good raincoat.... When it stopped keeping me dry, I sent it back for a warranty replacement.
JamesMc wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:I'm wondering how people can get so wet in a good raincoat.... When it stopped keeping me dry, I sent it back for a warranty replacement.
I once had an unsatisfactory experience with returning a Goretex raincoat on warranty. It was a few years old, but had absolutely minimal days' use, though quite a bit of that was in scoparia. It went back to Gore, who tested it and said that it was suffering from many pin-holes, consistent with it having been in contact with prickly vegetation, and consequently they would not honour the "guarantee to keep you dry". It was a heavy weight Goretex identified as being for hiking, rather than, say, golfing. Ultimately that's when I decided there had to be a better way...
Scoparia is one reason why we get wet in raincoats, sweat is another.
JamesMc
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Pretty hard to organise that on multiday trips Rachel!!
corvus wrote:Interesting topic regading Scoparia and getting wet in Goretex,my PP Vagabond has kept me dry for many years (washed /reproofed regularly)only get wet from sweat as I don't get Scoparia holes in the important places by avoiding more than waist high stuff.
Am I to believe that some of you have the bottle to walk through head high Scopariathus causing pin hole problems ,I can only ask why
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corvus
melinda wrote:Hi guys,
Maybe you could use your umbrella as a shield out in front of you to stop your Goretex jackets getting holes in them?
Melinda
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