Bob,

A canvas shell works best at 20˚F or colder, the idea being highly 
breathable to allow vaporization from exertion while being windproof and 
shedding snow easily. If it's wet from the outside, so it the canvas. 
That's why I love Ventile, as it accomplishes both, so temp does not matter.

With abandon,
Patrick

On Sunday, February 2, 2014 11:13:55 AM UTC-7, Bob E wrote:
>
> I don't have any army surplus clothing (I do have a US Army woolen 
> blanket, though), but I am also a recent convert to wool for cycling. After 
> my (supposedly) breathable jacket's zipper broke, I did the same thing: I 
> switched from those same synthetic materials to the layered wool approach. 
> A base layer, a somewhat heavy jersey, and a thin Ibex zippered jacket work 
> very well -- I'm no longer drenched in sweat at the end of my ride. (And I 
> imagine mountain biking would provide an even tougher test of the 
> clothing's performance.)
>
> I'm curious about the cotton snow smock; does it work better than wool as 
> an outer garment? Is it somewhat water/wind resistant?
>
> Bob Ehrenbeck
> Garwood, New Jersey
>
>
>

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