Hello there!
I live in Estonia. What it basically means is that we have summers of 20-30 degrees celcius and winters with -25. Then there's also the middle bits - spring and autumn.
This means that any sensible person needs at least 3 sets of highly specialized clothing:
1. Summer stuff - light, thin and cool
2. Winter stuff - very-very warm
3. Spring/Autumn - waterproof and windproof
Well actually spring and autumn split into two too, because in autumn it rains a lot and in the spring the ground is more wet and there's more wind.
Anyways, that is just all to illustrate the problem - lack of knowledge due to too many seasons and lack of funds.
Now to the issue at hand:
I got into bushcraft about 1.5 years ago and last winter was the breaking point for me. I've tried to manage with spring/autumn clothing in the winter, normally putting an extra layer underneath and just winging it. With -25 to -28C in the colder mornings I can manage about 10-15 minutes of waiting the bus, then I start losing feeling in my toes and fingers. This is just not satisfactory for me, because when I think of a situation where I could be stuck in deep drifts for several hours, then I'd be in trouble. And that happens often here!
This autumn I've decided I have enough of feeling cold and want to get proper winter clothes.
I am a weird person because I run very hot in the summer, but I'm absolutely freezing in the winter, especially in my hands and feet.
I need to get proper winter boots and gloves. Also have problems with trousers. Since a thick winter jacket is easy to get, they're all over the place, I have no problems with that at the moment, but find it difficult to pick trousers. Especially when my commute to work involves 3-4km of walking every day. I have an office job so I need to be able to fit in too.
For footwear I was thinking Keens. Been looking at those: http://www.keenfootwear.com/us/en/p...ilhead/alaska boot/potting soil!coffee liquer
The snow gets quite deep and I wouldn't need gaiters. On the other hand with warmer weather my feet could get very hot?
Any other ideas?
As for gloves - I have yet to find gloves that make my hands remotely warm. So suggestions would be welcome.
Would a nice wool baselayer be enough under jeans for everyday wear and under my Fjällräven G-1000 trousers for outdoor fun? I need as much multitasking ability as I can get due to having enough expenses with the multi-season requirements for clothes.
Sorry for the long description/rant, but winter is coming!
I live in Estonia. What it basically means is that we have summers of 20-30 degrees celcius and winters with -25. Then there's also the middle bits - spring and autumn.
This means that any sensible person needs at least 3 sets of highly specialized clothing:
1. Summer stuff - light, thin and cool
2. Winter stuff - very-very warm
3. Spring/Autumn - waterproof and windproof
Well actually spring and autumn split into two too, because in autumn it rains a lot and in the spring the ground is more wet and there's more wind.
Anyways, that is just all to illustrate the problem - lack of knowledge due to too many seasons and lack of funds.

Now to the issue at hand:
I got into bushcraft about 1.5 years ago and last winter was the breaking point for me. I've tried to manage with spring/autumn clothing in the winter, normally putting an extra layer underneath and just winging it. With -25 to -28C in the colder mornings I can manage about 10-15 minutes of waiting the bus, then I start losing feeling in my toes and fingers. This is just not satisfactory for me, because when I think of a situation where I could be stuck in deep drifts for several hours, then I'd be in trouble. And that happens often here!
This autumn I've decided I have enough of feeling cold and want to get proper winter clothes.
I am a weird person because I run very hot in the summer, but I'm absolutely freezing in the winter, especially in my hands and feet.
I need to get proper winter boots and gloves. Also have problems with trousers. Since a thick winter jacket is easy to get, they're all over the place, I have no problems with that at the moment, but find it difficult to pick trousers. Especially when my commute to work involves 3-4km of walking every day. I have an office job so I need to be able to fit in too.
For footwear I was thinking Keens. Been looking at those: http://www.keenfootwear.com/us/en/p...ilhead/alaska boot/potting soil!coffee liquer
The snow gets quite deep and I wouldn't need gaiters. On the other hand with warmer weather my feet could get very hot?
Any other ideas?
As for gloves - I have yet to find gloves that make my hands remotely warm. So suggestions would be welcome.
Would a nice wool baselayer be enough under jeans for everyday wear and under my Fjällräven G-1000 trousers for outdoor fun? I need as much multitasking ability as I can get due to having enough expenses with the multi-season requirements for clothes.
Sorry for the long description/rant, but winter is coming!

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