If you're drinking boiling water, isn't it hot enough without adding pepper? Maybe I'm just a wuss though.Meadows wrote:I read that adding 1 tsp of cayenne pepper to boiling water and drinking will warm your extremeties. I plan to start taking a thermos along.
Winter climbing
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- Posts: 55
- Joined: Tue Jun 14, 2005 2:46 am
Great weather for climbing today despite the clouds. today I added a really thin wind layer over my heavy fleece and it seemed to keep me much warmer. There wasn't really any wind but I think it trapped more body heat.
My hands warmed up after only one warmup.
So the comment on the keeping the core warms seems good.
I also keep one shoe in my coat as I put on the other, they cool off real fast if you take them out at the same time.
I think Ascentionist is right as well. the more you go out, the less cold you feel.
My hands warmed up after only one warmup.
So the comment on the keeping the core warms seems good.
I also keep one shoe in my coat as I put on the other, they cool off real fast if you take them out at the same time.
I think Ascentionist is right as well. the more you go out, the less cold you feel.
Back from the Dead!
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- Posts: 3393
- Joined: Wed Jun 18, 2003 12:34 am
When it's cold, I usually press my hands against the rock until they're numb, or find snow or ice instead. Then once the agony is over from them warming up, you're good! Of course, if you take too long between routes then you end up having to do it all over again. No pain, no gain.
"Yeah, it sucks. But then, everything does."
The mini hearter is nice mainly because you can get your shoes so warm that it is almost a treat to put them on. I think the whole get your hands numb and then endure the agongy works. I still think that the real enemy is the wind. You can account for it while your not climbing but sport climbing and wind proof layers don't really seem to mix. At least I can't picture it.
"I just want to disappear"