No w this is what I call a good post and thread!
Wish we still had the "Like Button". Great post and very informative.
I'm looking for something to wear as a Mid Layer to stay warm and dry under my Field and Stream Camo Hunting Parka/bibs. I don't need more insulation as the Parka and Bibs have plenty of Insulate Insulation built into them.
But I want something that will wick water to the outside and though the Field & Stream Parka. The F&S parka has what the field and stream Marketing guys call Hydro-proof and I don't think it breaths like it should. The F&S Parka has a zipped in liner/jacket that can be taken out and worn as a reversible light weight Thinsulate insulated jacket itself. The Parka is ok when I take the liner out but then I don't stay as warm as I like. With the liner zipped into the Parka it's very heavy and does not let the sweat evaporate out though the Parka. The liner gets wet and the inside of the sleeves get wet as well. Not good IMHO. So maybe another layer under the Parka alone would work better for hunting in the cold weather. Fleece or Wool is my opinion would work better. Wool stays warm even if its' wet. Not sure what Fleece is made from. Hopefully it's not cotton fibers. I'm trying to stay away from cotton fibers material.
I bought the Field and Steam Parka/liner/Bib setup at ****'s Sporting Goods store about 6 years ago.
I think that the main problem with this system Is the Thinsulate inner jacket which is reversible. Camo on one side and brown on the other. I wear it with out the parka over it and it's OK for cool weather but not warm enough when it's really cold outside. But it still retains water (sweat) even without the parka over it. So that tells me that the inner Thinsulate liner is the problem. It not breathing the water though it to the parka. Wearing both the liner jacket and the parka is like wearing a 15 lb. rubber sweat suit.
Hydro-proof is suppose to mimic or be like Gortex I suspect but I'm not so sure that it's breathable or water proof either. That's what the marketing types tell us but I trust them about as far as I can throw them.
Now I wear the polypropylene type long johns that don't hold moisture ( Plastic polypropylene is hydrophobic and won't absorb water like cotton fibers. So it's not going to get soaking wet like cotton fibers from sweat.
[QUOTE=psprowler;526751]Get breathable waders. I've had cheap and I've had expensive, both have one thing in common - they will leak at some point. The seams wear out usually along the inside legs but it's nothing aquaseal won't fix. I've currently got low level Simms and they are sufficient. BPS branded breathables are hit and miss, Hodgman's I've had no luck with, and the best pair I've ever owned were Reddington's. Get them a size bigger and layer up underneath.
On bottom:
Under armour base layer 3.0
fleece pants from Cabela's
Flannel lined khaki type pants over that (only when it's really cold)
On top:
Under armour base layer 3.0
fleece pullover
Coat (heavyness dependent on air temp)
Two pairs of thick socks, with disposable hand-warmers applied directly the top of each foot
Gloves with disposable hand-warmers applied directly to top of each hand
Ski-mask, balaclava, or tobaggan depending on air temp and wind.
I'm never cold when wading and can stand in one spot up to an hour if necessary. It was 20 degrees Wednesday when I started and I was sweating by the end of the day.[/QUOTE]