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Poncho v. Rain Suit


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  • #1216311
    Verndal Lee
    Member

    @jagc

    Locale: Pacific NW

    Am considering purchasing a Stphenson poncho. Is there any advantage of a poncho vs. a rain suit (jacket + pants)? I’m in the Northwest – and yes, it does rain a lot here.

    #1338503
    Kim Skaarup
    Member

    @skaarup

    Locale: Cold, wet and windy Scandinavia

    Only the weight is in favour of a poncho.

    You can not go outside your “home” on a rainy day.

    I dont know of a poncho which is actually breathable as goretex/event.?
    Its like wearing a cheap plastic rainsuit.!

    Im turning into
    a tent /tarp suited for the climate your in.
    A goretex paclite/ event jacket less than 10 oz, which also works quite good as a windshirts!
    + trousers if there really is a lot of rain – about 7 oz in GoretexPaclite.

    Some very dry places, a poncho is suitable – elsewhere now I think not.

    BUT -If you are in to the SUL race you need to think poncho to win. :-)

    Btw – Verndal have you seen my post about the espresso.?

    #1338509
    Chad Lorenz
    BPL Member

    @chadl

    Locale: Teton Valley, Wydaho

    Going to have to disagree with Kim. I’ve used my ID Silponcho for over 1000 miles on the fairly wet AT, and it is by a LARGE margin more “breathable” than my gore paclite jacket. The breathability is not from the poncho fabric itself, it is from the way it drapes over the body and allows air to circulate through, especially when used to cover the pack as well as the body. For wet and reasonably warm conditions, down to about 40*F for me, a poncho is very practical and comfortable.

    Chad Lorenz

    #1338510
    paul johnson
    Member

    @pj

    Locale: LazyBoy in my Den - miss the forest

    I have used both poncho & rain suit.

    I agree with Kim on one point (if your poncho doubles as your tarp, then ans. the call of nature in the wee hrs of the morning when it’s raining can get you a bit wet from the rain), but i disagree with her on another point as did the prev. poster who posted as i was composing my full-length Novel reply.

    An eVENT rain jacket is very nice coupled with some WPB pants. Use a large kitchen trash bag or a specially made pack liner bag (sold by GossamerGearPackLiner). You don’t need a pack liner if you are using a poncho.

    Primarily, however, I use a poncho for rain wear. Yes the ‘spinn’ fabric or silNylon (i have both) are not breathable, however, this is not a problem as the poncho does not seal tight and so is ventilated to a degree. The spinnPonchos sold on this website are very nice as are the silNylon ones sold by Integral Designs, Equinox, Campmor, and Dancing Light Gear. The ID & Equinox can be found online at BackCountryGear (if i recall correctly) & Campmor & DLG sell their own, though Campmor sells other brands as well.

    If you’re also going to use your poncho as a shelter, the extended length ponchos (the back snaps up for wear – or unsnaps for wear in a veritable deluge) from Equinox and Campmor are very nice. The DLG poncho-tarp is perhaps the largest extended poncho of them all & so makes for a larger shelter. Keep in mind that the larger extended ponchos in silNylon weigh ~3.0-3.5oz more than the ponchos made from spinnaker fabric sold on this website.

    Just so you can try to cp. to the PacNorthWest. I live in Connecticut. Lots of rain, though almost never as much total annual precip as the wetter parts of the pacNoWest. Our wettest year on recent record (105 precip days that year i believe if i recall correctly; i think ~95 precip days is more typical), a few yrs ago, topped Washington State for precip that year – according the local weathermen (maybe it was a dry year there in the pacNoWest also??? don’t know?). So, we too get our fair share of precip. T-storms with heavy rain in aft, eve, & night during late spring, summer, & early fall – 30min to 2hr duration typical. Varying light to moderate rain for up to five days straight – round the clock with virtually no let up (this actually happened in that wettest year i referred to earlier – great shades of Noah!!). Heavy rain for up to a day. Rain falls up to 4″ per hour when very heavy, though 1″ to 2″ per hour is more common when rain is heavy. Lots of run-off & trail erosion, and low-land flooding as a result. Rain can be very noisy when it falls this fast in such large drops and is landing on your house, yard, driveway, & cars. It sure does make a racket!! A lot of overnight rain in the wee hrs of the morning for a few hrs – usually light to moderate. ‘ok’, i think you get the idea – not the PacNoWest, but not the arid SoWest either. Maybe, i’m a bit strange, but I love to hike in the rain (and after nightfall too).

    Poncho keeps me dry even when trail leads out of the forest to a rocky hilltop. Yes, some wind driven rain may enter the poncho.

    Under the poncho, I often wear a Wild Things hoodless windshirt made of Epic fabric. This windshirt coupled with either Epic trail cargo zip-off pants and various gaiters, keeps me dry in light-moderate rain for a couple of hours even without the poncho. When worn with the poncho, i haven’t gotten wet yet.

    If it’s real hot, like during the day in the summer, I don’t wear the Epic windshirt under the poncho. I just push up my base layer long sleeves, and let my forearms get wet, if I’m wearing long sleeves that day/trek – sometimes still do for some sun protection even when very hot.

    My ponchos are long enough (or is it that i’m short enough?) to come just below my knees. During very hot summer days, if I’m wearing more breatheable lighter weight (not made of Epic fabric) nylon cargo pants, i’m still basically covered on the legs. The poncho extends far enough down that my knee length tall gaiters cover the rest of my legs. If i’m weaing Epic pants, i typically only wear some Montbell shortie gaiters made of Schoeller Dryskin as they only weigh 1.5oz. This combo keeps my legs dry.

    I stick mainly to trails with some off-trail excursions. Getting ripped to shreds by brambles/briar patches, both clothes/gear & skin, is not my idea of a good time (unless i’m “hunting” wild raspberries & blackberries). If you’re going to be bushwacking in the rain, then maybe a poncho isn’t a good choice for rain gear.

    GossamerGear also sells some inexpensive Tyvek-like mat’l (maybe it is Tyvek???) rain gear similar to DryDucks i believe. I’ve purchased it, but haven’t used it yet. Seems decent enough if one is careful. Nicely made. Here’s a link to it. It won’t last as long as a more expensive rainsuit, but is very inexpensive so you can try out a rain suit or use it under conditions when ANY rain gear, not made from plate mail/armor might get torn.

    hope this info helps.

    #1338555
    Verndal Lee
    Member

    @jagc

    Locale: Pacific NW

    Did more research and discovered The Packa. This is a backpack cover first, then it expands into a poncho to cover the body.

    Has anyone here tried one?

    #1338783
    John Davis
    Member

    @jndavis

    Locale: Isle of Man

    I’ve not sensibly tested ponchos – just an awful cycle cape and a WW2 ground sheet – so can’t comment on them. However, note that waterproofs are multipurpose. They serve as windproofs, a warm layer and as pyjamas when I’ve taken the wrong sleeping bag with me for a January outing. They are very good, if dry and clean, in this last role. The shivering stopped and sleeping started.

    Never ever get a cycling cape! Even now, 25 years on, the memory makes me shudder.

    #1338785
    Mike Storesund
    Member

    @mikes-1

    I can see it now (25 years ago), kid on a bike with a cape saying…
    “DaDaDaDaDaDaDa – BATMAN”
    and cape goes into spokes… next thing you see is ear playing motercycle noises (like a baseball card) on the spokes… ouch

    #1338789
    D G
    Spectator

    @dang

    Locale: Pacific Northwet

    Cycling capes are really fun when you get hit by a strong gust of wind from the side, especially when you are riding in traffic.

    #1338809
    John Carter
    Member

    @jcarter1

    Locale: Pacific Northwest

    If you will not be using a poncho-shelter combo, and stick to main trails, I would reccomend DriDucks; my entire XL suit weighs 10.4oz and cost $25.

    If this uses a comparable tecnology to Rainshield suits (propore vs. provent), then BPL rates this garment as nearly as breathable as eVent.

    I bought a DriDucks suit a few weeks ago and am very pleased so far. I’m spending the summer in Portland, OR and have had a chance to test them in 2 rainstorms so far, both in mid-60 deg. weather. My body never felt clammy while my hands and feet, covered in goretex shells, felt hot and clammy.

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