Sorry for not updating the thread regarding my experiment with Paramo in May. Time gets away, doesn't it?
Seeing as the TGO is held in May, I decided to avoid the 'heavy' Paramo and go for their newer 'Adventure Light' gear. For the Jacket, I chose the
Third Element Jacket and for trousers, the
Velez Adventure trousers The jacket is short in the body, but works well with the trousers as there is sufficient overlap.
I used it every day on the Challenge, and I've been using it just about daily here in our winter, so I think I can give a fair impression of what its like now.
Do I like it? Yes, definitely. I think the trousers are a size too big but that's not a disaster like being too small.
The material is soft. I've been wandering around the bush for years in stiff goretex or Hydronaut jackets. Even the thin versions of these materials have a stiffness to them, but the Paramo is just a soft polyester style fabric. Construction quality seems to be very good, nothing looks like it is coming adrift, and all seams etc look to be well sewn. I really cannot say if the Tassie garment shredding plants will destroy it but I can say that it doesn't seem to have suffered from the heather bashing in Scotland. I guess it might not fare well if it snags, but this hasn't been a problem to date.
Third Element Jacket:I'm told that the cut of Paramo gear is baggy and generally oversized but they seem to have repaired their ways with this jacket. It's quite well fitted, and I can fit a base layer and an extra microfleece under it but anything more would see me heading up to size L. Arm length is fine, I can pull most of my hands up into the sleeves. Wrist cuffs are velcro, and strangely, they seem to run backwards to a normal velcro wrist. Not sure whats going on there.
Walking in cool conditions around here (5-10C) I just use a light poly baselayer underneath and I often end up unzipping the front to let out a bit of excess heat. The jacket has a removable arms section that turns it into a vest, this is quite handy on the few occasions I've used it that way. If you're not wearing a pack, the arms section can be stored in a sleeve across the lower back. It has just two front diagonal pockets and a single interior pocket. None of the pockets are waterproofed. It has a good size hood which is attached to the arms section but is not removable.
Velez Pants.I've already said that I think these are a size too big. The choices were 32 or 34, and I'm generally a 33, so I chose the next size up. Wrong.

Anyway, the trousers have good length, front fly, a zip pocket on each side and no rear pocket. They also sport a knee to hip leg zip for ventilation and they have velcro ankle ties. There is no strengthening inside the ankle area to prevent cuts from skis etc. In the same conditions as above, I have been wearing these with just undies and have been quite comfortable. If the sun comes out, you can get seriously warm in this kit, which is why the leg zips are there. They work ok, but not as good as a pair of shorts ot light trousers. They came with a lightweight belt which I need (probably because of the sizing)
Waterproofness. I've worn these items as a set in some pretty nasty local weather, and as long as the DWR is still working, I have never gotten wet. After Scotland, I continued to wear them for a while and I did get caught in the rain one day when the DWR was obviously not working. The fabric eventually wetted out and I got wet, but by the time I had returned to base (about 4km) it had started to dry out so I guess it would dry out well from wet as long as the rain stops. After giving them the Nikwax treatment, water resistance was restored and I have yet to have water penetrate the system again but I think they must be getting close to re-treat time - I'm going to try just the wash to see if that restores the DWR at all. Paramo recommend retreating before any major outing to guarantee the proofing, and that makes good sense to me.
Windproofness. Absolutely no complaints. Works brilliantly, and is sufficiently adjustable so that you can allow venting or close it up to keep snug.
Comfort. Really good, especially the trousers. The fabric does not catch or drag, so there is no resistance from the clothing. It just feels like very light clothing, probably something like I imagine yoga gear is supposed to be. (I've never tried yoga)

In terms of warmth, it's about lightweight fleece warmth subjectively.
My only real complaint is the colour. The trousers only come in black, and the jacket is either black or two shades of red. There is supposed to be a dirty brown colour, but not available when I tried, so I'm all black...
Hope that helps people get a bit of a handle on this gear. I don't regret getting it at all, and I'm getting quite a lot of use out of it.