I bet I'm not the only one who'd like to see a pic!Amongst other things I have an Inverness Cape. Too expensive to wear for bushcraft but for wearing with the full highland outfit when it is pelting down with rain, it is good to go.
So did I. I'd actually forgotten about it (possibly deliberately) so couldn't describe it except it was quite tailored and it had a hood and, I think, arm holes. Once you got past the "It's the 1980s, I'm a teenager, and I'm wearing a cloak" horror of it, it was actually very welcome in the winter for the walk between dorm house and main school building. With the hood up it became a sort of perambulatory tent, and kept the wind and rain at bay for the ten minutes or so it took. Wouldn't want to spend long in a downpour though, I suspect. But you really couldn't do anything wearing it, because it would just get in the way and/or your arms would get cold/wet. So useful, but only up to a point.My sister had a cloak for school.
I'm afraid I have no idea where it ended up.Page 3 of this thread.
Cloak Wearers - Step Forward
OK, I was rereading this older thread the other day;- http://www.bushcraftuk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=41138&highlight=elves And one of the things that it seemed to underline and speculate upon was that to travel light a cloak or poncho of some fashion would be a step in the right...bushcraftuk.com
I haven't found Wayland's guide to wearing the plain rectangular one though.
Does anyone have any ideas on where it is ?
M
Can't really visualize it. Is the old soviet plash-palatka something alike?Basically I make a triangular fold along the top edge and draw the narrow end of the triangle around my neck and use a broach or pin to fasten that to the rest of the material at my shoulder.
Works just as well with kilt pin, bone pin or a fibula.OK it's nothing like the soviet thingy, which according to people who have tried it is surprisingly usable considering it's origin.
I guess one just can't use that without a proper bronze brooch.
Leather suits was used by fishermen for hundred of years.Exploring the medieval hunt
themedievalhunt.com
There’s a lot of information on here about medieval “bushcraft”. Pretty much they avoided it… I’m joking.
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I’ve never had to rely on wool alone in heavy rain however. Snow fine, wind fine, mist and light showers fine. I’ll have to ask a Viking ship crew. I cannot see how a longship is at all dry!
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