Seems there's been a shift in the wisdom. Here’s a link to one of a dozen or more articles arguing the old saw that says "If you have cold feet then put on a hat" is nonsense.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2008/dec/17/medicalresearch-humanbehaviour
There is a quote in there: “If as much as 45 percent of body heat were lost through your head, going out without a hat would feel like going out without trousers.”
Last winter I saw a really typical scene for round here. A kid came out of his house, there’s a few inches of snow around and its was about -4C. He’s wearing boots, a jacket, a scarf, a toque, gloves … and basketball shorts
. See it all the time.
Me too! I can, very often do, go out in weather like that, and quite a bit colder, happily wearing shorts – if I have a jacket and a hat on. If I am digging out the drive, then the coat is likely optional ... but not the hat.
I am starting to wonder if I am just deluded and have been conning myself into thinking I am warm, or if the scientists (factually correct, or not) have simply misjudged the experience of being out in the cold.
Might need to find out more about this
I think we need a survey
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2008/dec/17/medicalresearch-humanbehaviour
There is a quote in there: “If as much as 45 percent of body heat were lost through your head, going out without a hat would feel like going out without trousers.”
Last winter I saw a really typical scene for round here. A kid came out of his house, there’s a few inches of snow around and its was about -4C. He’s wearing boots, a jacket, a scarf, a toque, gloves … and basketball shorts

Me too! I can, very often do, go out in weather like that, and quite a bit colder, happily wearing shorts – if I have a jacket and a hat on. If I am digging out the drive, then the coat is likely optional ... but not the hat.

Might need to find out more about this

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