Interesting Tartan shawls. Are they traditional or adopted ?
Good write up, just shows the simple burner works best ! The meths never froze ?
I actually had a choice of shell layers, to acommodate different activities, including the 'civvy' gear I used for travel.
During the trip I found that at around -10, and when active, I needed just the baselayer, one midlayer, and shell, to stay comfortable. Below around -20, I needed the extra midlayer (Norwegian sweater) to stay comfortable. Below -30, the supplementary layer was needed as well, except maybe when extremely active, which didn't occur as I wasn't digging any snowholes etc.
I brought both snow overtrousers and gaiters, but in the conditions we encountered, found the gaiters more useful in deep snow.
I notice from your kit list that you did not include any waterproof shell. But I see others dressed in Goretex shells. What did you do on days when you experienced wet snow? Did you canvas gaitors get wet?
How many of you took a waterproof shell, and what was the full temp range you experienced?
How warm did it get?
Oh. And did anyone take a goretex or event bivy bag? If so how did they cope up to -10, and beyond?
Thanks, don't know about the shawls I'm afraid, Wayland is much more clued-up then me on Saami crafts. The meths didn't freeze, though Riam's bottles of rum froze solid !
I was using 'Tenol' purchased from a local garage, which is an ethanol/methanol mix, supposedly better for stoves than meths. It was quite apparent though how the cold affected the flammability. I could just light the tissue wick, which would then burn with a small flame until it heated the surrounding parts of the burner enough to warm up the tenol. It took several minutes for the burner to 'bloom' properly.