Spring has always been my favorite time of year. As the days get longer, adventures get more ambitious. It鈥檚 also the time of year known for sketchy weather, leaving you prone to getting wet in the proverbial April showers. Avoid sogginess with these tips.
Use That Body Heat
When you鈥檙e in extreme cold or wet, sometimes the only source of radiant heat comes from your body. If something like a pair of gloves gets damp, pro skier Caroline Gleich shoves them between her jacket and base layer and lets her body heat dry them. 鈥淚t works really well as a first line of defense,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been getting into skimo racing, and skins get destroyed during fast transitions, so I bring two pairs of skins, and one is always living in my shirt.鈥 This works best, of course, if you have a breathable shell that will expel the moisture once your body has heated up. I鈥檝e found that any jacket with Polartec NeoShell or Gore-Tex Pro鈥攍ike the ($486)鈥攚ill do the trick.
Play (Safely) with Fire
鈥淭he campfire option is always effective, but sometimes too effective,鈥 says professional kayaker Ben Stookesbury. 鈥淵ou often go from having dry gear to having melted or burned gear.鈥 To hedge your bets against sizzling massive holes in your socks, Stookesbury suggests keeping your gear upwind of the flames. 鈥淒ownwind will give you the most heat but will also put the most embers in your gear,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he wind direction side is more important than proximity.鈥 And take particular care when drying synthetic fabrics鈥攖hey are much more flammable than wool or cotton. The Sparkr plasma lighter ($50) is an incredible little gadget for getting a flame going, even if you鈥檙e getting hammered by wind or a torrential downpour.
Stuff Your Shoes with Newspaper

Appalachian Trail record holder Jennifer Pharr Davis lives in the Southeast, where it rains buckets. One of her hacks involves newspaper. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going into town and have an hour or two to take your shoes off, balling up newspaper and sticking it in your shoes will dry them out a lot faster,鈥 she says.
Wear Thin Layers Close to Your Skin
You don鈥檛 have to worry about drying your gear if it never gets wet in the first place. 鈥淪weat is my nemesis,鈥 says professional skier Brody Leven. His main weapon in the battle: an extremely thin merino base layer top. 鈥淎 thin base layer means less insulation, but it鈥檚 also less likely to get sweaty, plus it鈥檚 easier to dry out if it does,鈥 he says. Even if the day is really cold (like minus 10), Leven will wear a thin merino T-shirt, like the ($56), against his skin.
Get a Bigass Tarp
Professional alpinist Graham Zimmerman brings a huge inexpensive tarp to base camp. 鈥淚f I hang stuff up to dry and it starts to rain or snow, I just throw a tarp over it,鈥 he says. Then just pull it off if the sun pokes out again. And almost any tarp will do. 鈥淚 tend to just use a cheap blue tarp,鈥 Zimmerman says. ($7) haven鈥檛 let me down yet.
Turn Your Tent into a Clothesline
Polar explorer Eric Larsen goes so far as to rig a clothesline in his tent. He uses lightweight guyline鈥攑aracord works, if you aren鈥檛 worried about weight. 鈥淎ny good tent is going to have points where we can set up a series of clotheslines,鈥 Larsen says. To add to the laundry-day vibe, he fastens everything with safety pins to make sure gloves and socks don鈥檛 come raining down during gusty winds. Larsen works with MSR and always advocates that they make tents with gear loops on the ceiling鈥攍ike the 国产吃瓜黑料 Gear of the Year鈥搘inning ($400).