I find that when riding I get away with wearing much less even at 30 below than I do when sitting at even -10 on a tree stand. When I am trapping I am either riding, which can develop a sweat i you are not careful, chopping ice, or walking in snow which is the same general exertion.
I wear much less on a sled to be able to dump the heat out. Even trail riding at 60mph doesn't chill me much since riding faster takes body english.
Doing 50 mph into a headwind on the open bay is a bit chilling, but my normal trapping gear is a pair of tough duck waterproof overalls 200 weight long johns on my lowers, a fleece sweater or two and my outer layer coat. Mitts with bar warmers always on high, and a pair of Kamik insulated rubbers with heavy wool socks. With the bar warmers, I often jsut wear work gloves to keep from wearing out good ones. Even if they get wet, my bar warmers often dry out my palms on the ride home. I bring two pairs, and sometimes switch them out.
If I know I will be lake running and not sweating I might add a second layer of fleece pants. As soon as the sled stops (unless its really windy) the outer parka comes off so I don't get too hot because then the work starts. Chopping out beaver traps generally.
If I am inactive on a tree stand at anywhere near those temps I wear Sorel boots, a second layer of fleece pants, and add a puffy down jacket between the fleece and the outer layer. The key for me is movement. Blessing and a curse since I struggle to stay cool most of the time.
Last edited by Hutchy; 05/24/19 09:18 AM.