Good winter wet suit?
Moderators: kenneth, sbroam, TheKrikkitWars, Mike W., Sir Adam, KNeal, PAC, adamin
Good winter wet suit?
What are some good name brands for a winter wetsuit---not for me but for my wife?
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- C Maven
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2004 2:39 am
- Location: Northern California
theres a place for one....
Take a look at one of the NRS titanium wetsuits, I got a ultra-john last year and am well pleased. You didn't mention where you were from and what you/she paddles (canoe-c1), but there's lots of days around here that a wetsuit works great. For men look for one with a double zip, one that zips from both ends. That way for us guys you don't have to even to unzip you're PFD, to take a whizz.
And before jumping to the keyboard...
I've almost worn out my fifth drysuit, and yes I wouldn't be caught dead without one. Three of them, those breathable cost as much as a boat suits. However a wetsuit certainly works, and also having one will greatly decrease the wear n'tear on a drysuit. For starters there's days where it's just not too cold, and almost anything worn in a drysuit is too much. There's also the matter of briers, thistle, and thorns.... one such trip can practically ruin a drysuit. For that reason on any exploratory-type run, I'll most always go without a drysuit. And on cool-chilly-just-average cold days it's simply more comfortable, not having to put up with a neck gasket. On days when you're mentally debating the drysuit, it's nice to have the wetsuit option. Plus kneeling in an open canoe, a farmer john is all thats needed some days (without a paddling jacket). Yes, I'm from the S.East... but I boat all over and our local paddling season is from November/December to April/May. I find a wetsuit particularly nice, on those western runs where the waters cold and the days warm. ((Of course - swimming all day wouldn't be recommended))
If half the days I'm comfortable in a paddling top and 100 dollar wetsuit, then I've doubled the life of my drysuit.
And before jumping to the keyboard...
I've almost worn out my fifth drysuit, and yes I wouldn't be caught dead without one. Three of them, those breathable cost as much as a boat suits. However a wetsuit certainly works, and also having one will greatly decrease the wear n'tear on a drysuit. For starters there's days where it's just not too cold, and almost anything worn in a drysuit is too much. There's also the matter of briers, thistle, and thorns.... one such trip can practically ruin a drysuit. For that reason on any exploratory-type run, I'll most always go without a drysuit. And on cool-chilly-just-average cold days it's simply more comfortable, not having to put up with a neck gasket. On days when you're mentally debating the drysuit, it's nice to have the wetsuit option. Plus kneeling in an open canoe, a farmer john is all thats needed some days (without a paddling jacket). Yes, I'm from the S.East... but I boat all over and our local paddling season is from November/December to April/May. I find a wetsuit particularly nice, on those western runs where the waters cold and the days warm. ((Of course - swimming all day wouldn't be recommended))
If half the days I'm comfortable in a paddling top and 100 dollar wetsuit, then I've doubled the life of my drysuit.
- sbroam
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I added a pair of neoprene pants to the wardrobe after a cold day on the Tellico a couple of years ago - the dry top + paddling pants just didn't cut it. I like not worrying about gaskets or tearing the fabric. But... I do most of my paddling south of there. I would quickly consider adding a dry suit if I was paddling north of Asheville/Knoxville through the winter.
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- marclamenace
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- ohioboater
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talk to board surfers
For the most part, I really like NRS products, but their wetsuits are rudimentary and not very comfortable. Hard core board surfers wear wetsuits year round, including in 35 to 40 degree winter water, and I never hear of them complaining about their suits being uncomfortable or cold. Of course, they swim even more than Louie does, so evaporative cooling isn't an issue.
Still, the few modern surf suits I've seen are way better made and much more flexible than the neoprene strait jackets that pass for paddling wetsuits...
Still, the few modern surf suits I've seen are way better made and much more flexible than the neoprene strait jackets that pass for paddling wetsuits...