peregrinator wrote: I just need to remember to lift the net when having a drink!
Lamont wrote:"OFF" ...I bought the spray pack and put 60 mls in a little bottle and used about 5-8mls over a 24 hour period...
dashandsaph wrote:One trick I found worked for an afternoon snooze when the shade for the tent wasn't that good, was to drape the sleeping bag over the tent. It aired the bag and created a lovely insulated dark shade underneath.
Moondog55 wrote:dashandsaph wrote:One trick I found worked for an afternoon snooze when the shade for the tent wasn't that good, was to drape the sleeping bag over the tent. It aired the bag and created a lovely insulated dark shade underneath.
This
quill wrote:I was left in a hot car as a kid and although I can't prove it, the fact is even today at age 38 I sweat rivers at the slightest hint of heat...
madpom wrote:Altitude! Surely you aussies have mountains. In the east at least. Great Dividing range & all that ... -3 degrees per 1000ft dry air, -5 degrees per 1000ft wet air. Its 39 degrees right now here in Alexandra, Otago (400m amsl) and unbearable, but I've just spent a lovely, comfortable 4 days between 1000m & 1800m tramping & working.
Moondog55 wrote:Wimps All of you
It's about technique and tempo and acclimatisation
madpom wrote:Altitude! Surely you aussies have mountains. In the east at least. Great Dividing range & all that ... -3 degrees per 1000ft dry air, -5 degrees per 1000ft wet air. Its 39 degrees right now here in Alexandra, Otago (400m amsl) and unbearable, but I've just spent a lovely, comfortable 4 days between 1000m & 1800m tramping & working.
was at 1800m asl 2 weekends ago and the road was melting. It’s the sun, it’s brutal.
rcaffin wrote:was at 1800m asl 2 weekends ago and the road was melting. It’s the sun, it’s brutal.
We were XC skiing around Perisher one time and sun problems. This was of course in mid-winter. The sun was so fierce that we had to wear silk face masks all the time. I got sun-burnt gums at the start! (Panting going up hill with moth open.)
north-north-west wrote:Fact: If you feed them lots of March flies, the ants don't touch you.
madpom wrote:Altitude! Surely you aussies have mountains. In the east at least. Great Dividing range & all that ... -3 degrees per 1000ft dry air, -5 degrees per 1000ft wet air. Its 39 degrees right now here in Alexandra, Otago (400m amsl) and unbearable, but I've just spent a lovely, comfortable 4 days between 1000m & 1800m tramping & working.
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