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Backpacking Backpackers hike into the backcountry to spend one or more nights there, and carries supplies and equipment to satisfy sleeping and eating needs.

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Old 01-02-2012, 05:17 PM   #21
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I agree ppine, I would think that any exposed area will help heat escape. Why wouldn't an uncovered head keep you cold. When it's smoking hot out and you're on the verge of passing out due to heat, you pour water over your head to help cool down. The thin area of skin allow the water to help cool the capillaries in your head, cool this down and it's conducted to the rest of you body. Nowhere as efficient and a radiator but works on the same principle. If you are pumping warm blood into a cold noggin, it's just going to recirculate this cooler than when it came in. Your body is already working to save heat and is trying to keep the primary organs warm. Hands and feet are going to feel this first. I say cover the head and keep as much as the heat in as possible.


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Old 01-02-2012, 05:36 PM   #22
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Dress appropriately for conditions so you are neither too hot or too cold. We all have different tolerances for extremes in weather and age can factor into this as well. I wasn't going to mention hair, but...


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Old 01-02-2012, 05:48 PM   #23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ppine View Post
If you think those sources are credible, more power to you. The internet has information to support almost any point of view.

The next time you go camping and it is below freezing, or better yet below 10 degrees, try this experiment. Sleep for a night without a hat, then wear a really warm hat, like a rabbit fur lined mad bomber the next night. Tell me what you find out.
I tried wearing a hat when camping in temperatures below freezing, however I was more comfortable with my down bag used as it was intended pulled over the top of my head and small pillow and the collar pulled in. Those bomber hats remind me too much of The Confederancy of Dunces to ever wear one. That being said, I'm intelligent enough to bring whatever everyone else is bringing to keep comfortable just in case. Southerners are not fond of being cold!


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Old 01-02-2012, 06:23 PM   #24
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I agree with ppine, from experience. In fact, I carry an extra wool hat and when I find a hypothermic patient, the first thing I do is slap it on their head. JudyAnn can help us with her vascular knowledge, but it's my understanding that the blood vessels in your scalp are much closer to the surface than elsewhere, and your involuntary nervous system doesn't restrict them to conserve heat like the circulation in your fingers and toes.

Anyway, I don't know exactly why, but it works.

Here's another little tip, from Iditarod mushers: Just before you turn in at night, eat a little snack of cheese, preferably cheddar or another orange variety. There's something in it that stimulates your metabolism to produce more heat while you sleep.

I don't mind if you don't believe it, but try it out and see if it works for you first.

Parker


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Old 01-03-2012, 12:52 PM   #25
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http://jap.physiology.org/content/10...esid=101/2/669

Festive medical myths | BMJ

More credible for you? Just because you choose to ignore the science doesn't make it false. It is basic physics. Heat loss is proportional to surface area. There is nothing magical about your head. You will lose no more heat through your head than through any other body part (given the same surface area).

If you sleep in 10 degrees with a hat on your head and your feet naked/uncovered you are still going to get cold. The hat will keep your head warm but not your feet. Socks will also not keep your head warm. If you want a body part to be warm, insulate it to prevent heat loss. If you head is cold wear a hat, if you hands are cold wear gloves.


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Old 01-07-2012, 02:54 PM   #26
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I still believe in the "myth" Yeah surface area and all. That's why eskimos are short and round. But I think the head theory has something to do with all the blood in your head. Well at least that's what I assume because in the movies, when someone gets their head blown up blood goes everywhere. Plus, the only way to kill a zombie is by chopping their head off.


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Old 01-07-2012, 06:00 PM   #27
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[QUOTE=MountainMan22;52548]I don't know guys this sounds like a battle that should be fought on the Myth Busters show.





Good thinking, MM22.

Actually, covering any exposed skin surfaces will help to keep you a bit warmer...unless you're Conan...!!


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Old 01-07-2012, 06:10 PM   #28
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P.S.


Hi...


For car campers...have you seen the new cot tent/bivy from Cabela's? Kind of neat. It is a small tent that attaches to your pad on your sleeping cot. I don't remember if it was previously mentioned on OBC before or not.


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Old 01-07-2012, 11:35 PM   #29
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I'm staying out of this one except to say;
I wear my pink pajamas in the summer when it's hot
I wear my pink pajamas in the winter when it's not
And sometime in the spring and sometimes in the fall
I jump between the sheets with nothing on at all


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Old 01-09-2012, 12:16 PM   #30
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Thanks for not posting picture Grandpa!


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