ABD (always be drying) is one of my cardinal rules for maintaining winter gear. Dozens of friends, colleagues, and pro athletes I鈥檝e spoken with over the years agree. Whether it comes to boot liners, jackets, goggles, or climbing skins, moisture is the enemy, causing mold, odor, and deterioration if your equipment stays damp for too long. My most important weapon in the fight against it: a $23 retractable clothesline.
If you鈥檙e like me and don鈥檛 want to clutter up your bathroom all winter with drying musky Gore-Tex, set up the in your garage. I got mine at a local hardware store. At 40 feet it鈥檚 long enough to span the entire back of my garage but retracts into an unassuming case in the corner when I don鈥檛 need it. The heavy-duty line is sturdy enough that my wife and I don鈥檛 have to take turns hanging our wet ski kits at the end of a backcountry tour. After skiing, my gear doesn鈥檛 even have to enter the house. When I get home, I head straight into the garage, hang up my boot liners, skins, base layers, and all and cruise straight into the shower. If something needs to warm up (like the boot liners) or get washed (like sweaty base layers), I鈥檒l retrieve them from the line once they鈥檙e dry.
If you don鈥檛 have access to a garage鈥擨鈥檓 well aware that mine is a true luxury鈥攜ou鈥檒l need to find another indoor drying location. You just can鈥檛 adequately dry anything outside in winter. But I promise you that an inexpensive, low-profile, retractable clothesline is a good investment for anyone, even if it鈥檚 a short line above the bathtub. ABD, people, ABD.