[pct-l] Umbrellas and desert hear
Greg Kesselring
gkesselr at whidbey.com
Tue Jan 22 13:53:39 CST 2008
It's a huge difference. When your hat is exposed to direct sunlight, it
gets HOT. A hat also doesn't allow air circulation around your head.
Your head will feel a lot cooler without at hat if you're standing in
the shade than with a hat standing in direct sunlight. Ditto for any
other part of your body that is in direct sunlight and is covered with
clothing.
Patrick Beggan wrote:
> Right but how is that different from a wide-brimmed hat? As long as
> your skin is covered, there's no major difference.
>
> And trust me, I know all about the desert. :P I'm just wondering why a
> hat is inferior enough to warrant the extra weight of an umbrella to
> people who slice up their maps into funny shapes to save a quarter
> ounce. :P
>
>
> On Jan 22, 2008, at 2:35 PM, Greg Kesselring wrote:
>
>> I'm sure there is a lot of heat given off by the desert ground.
>> However, the radiant heat from direct sunlight adds to that. Having
>> spent lots of time in the open alpine of the North Cascades, my guess is
>> that hiking under direct sunlight adds 20 or 30 degrees to the ambient
>> temp just in terms of how it feels.
>>
>> If you're in the hot desert, try standing out in the sunlight. Then try
>> standing in the shade. Which do you think will feel warmer.
>>
>> The umbrella fellas are just trying to take that shade with them, all
>> day long.
>>
>>
>>
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