Light weight rain gear
A rain jacket is for most backcountry travelers an inevitability. There are
certainly areas of the world where precipitation is unlikely enough to render
raingear useless weight, and places either warm or cold enough that
precipitation is not a concern. In very warm climates one can just get wet
without suffering ill effects, and in very cold places the certainty of
precipitation falling in the form of snow combines with the limits of current
WPB (waterproof-breathable) technology to make other shells better choices. Most
backcountry areas don't fit into any of these categories, or only do so in
certain seasons, and thus anyone hoping to experience the backcountry in safety
and comfort ought to bring something to keep liquid precipitation off their
backs and out of their ears. The reasons for this become a lifetime axiom for
anyone caught out in a rainstorm without raingear. Water promotes heat loss with
impressive efficiency, and renders almost all insulations drastically less
effective. The necessity of raingear is a lesson best learned in theory first,
rather than the potentially hazardous school of hard knocks
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