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Q&A

How can I stay warm in subzero (0°F, -18°C ) weather?

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I'm going on a campout this weekend and the temperature isn't supposed to rise above zero degrees Fahrenheit (0°F) the entire time.

I've been in subzero weather before and I didn't last long, even with plenty of insulation. What can I do differently this time?

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Some of these answers have the basics, and new posts are redundant, others miss things or aren't true. I've been plenty …

10y ago

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Another point which hasn't been brought up yet is shelter. Have a look at these types of shelter which you can sometimes …

13y ago

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As others have said, your clothing, and lots of layers is important. Additionally, the composition of your clothes matt …

13y ago

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Keep active. Bring a good hat. While your body can reduce blood flow to fingers and toes to prevent the core from getti …

13y ago

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I think this could make a good community wiki. A few things not mentioned (unless I missed) more specifically for slee …

8y ago

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Avoid eating sugary foods, the digestion of sugar tends to heat your core quickly, and then just as quickly your core t …

10y ago

+0
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There are two components to staying warm and it's all generally centred around thermodynamics. You want to stay at one t …

11y ago

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Also, I'd like to add stay out of the wind. The wind will suck away any heat you build up, and unless you have a strong …

11y ago

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Put layers on your ground sheet: cardboard (keep it dry), bubble wrap, survival bags, or blankets will do. These will me …

11y ago

+0
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I have slept in freezing temps and sub zero. All I will say is most sleeping bags will not even keep you comfortable to …

12y ago

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If you're staying out overnight, consider digging a snowhole instead of using a tent. A snowhole can be much warmer than …

12y ago

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There are two important keys to keeping warm in sub-zero temperatures, keeping dry and dressing in layers. Getting wet …

13y ago

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More insulation. Stay dry inside. Make sure you wear something that lets sweat escape. Keep your head covered with a ha …

13y ago

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I've not camped in subzero weather before but I have spent several hours working on glaciers. The things I've found rea …

13y ago

This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/56. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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14 answers

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There are two important keys to keeping warm in sub-zero temperatures, keeping dry and dressing in layers.

Getting wet by any means, including sweat will make you miserably uncomfortable. It is also obviously a lot harder to get dry once you are wet in a cold environment.

As most people are aware the extremities are the hardest parts of the body to keep warm. Your feet and hands will almost always get cold especially if you are not moving them. Keep wiggling your toes and fingers in order to keep the blood circulating through your system.

Why fire is bad! .. sorta.. There is one reason why a fire can be harmful for keeping warm. If it goes out it can play a huge shock on the body (more for an emergency), but a person will be more comfortable when gradually heating / cooling. So don't sit 3 inches away from the fire, use it for a gentle warmth, not a burning

Fire Rocks and Water bottles veering away from the intense heat. These two items will slowly (water fairly quickly, but not as quick as fire) release their heat and make a person more constantly comfortable

Staying small will make you a more efficient heater, same with snuggling with another person. Armpits and Crotch (ewwww) are a good place to keep your hands warm. Just make sure they are clean ;) or you will not have many friends.

A lot of other points are already listed

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Some of these answers have the basics, and new posts are redundant, others miss things or aren't true. I've been plenty warm in 0° with a mummy bag from KMart. The trick is knowing how to use what gear you have. Always have a ground layer to prevent conduction. Go to bed warm, hydrated, and fed. Don't bother with a tent, in general. You'll most likely have ice falling on you in the night from the condensation. An emergency blanket works WONDERS. Wrap yourself within the bag. As little exposed skin as possible, and you're good. Clothing has been well covered.

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  1. Keep active.
  2. Bring a good hat. While your body can reduce blood flow to fingers and toes to prevent the core from getting cold, for obvious reasons it doesn't want to reduce blood flow to your head. Thus, it's important to keep your head warm.
  3. Eat sufficiently. Your body needs a lot of energy to stay warm. Don't deny it that energy. Mix food with readily available energy (simple carbohydrates: sugar. Chocolate is GREAT for this purpose) and food with slow-but-long-burning energy (fat. My outdoor club's former president mixes quite a lot of butter into his dinner, which he claims helps him stay warm throughout the night)
  4. Before you go to bed, run a few circles around the campsite to get warm. It is much easier to keep warm inside a sleeping bag than it is to get warm inside a sleeping bag.
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As others have said, your clothing, and lots of layers is important.

Additionally, the composition of your clothes matters.

Do not wear cotton in cold weather. "Cotton kills" is a common phrase amongst cold weather-goers.

Wear exclusively wool or wicking sythetic fabrics like fleece. Cotton's insulating ability goes to nearly zero when it is wet, and it absorbs moisture, so it keeps you wet.

Wool and synthetics retains their insulating ability even when soaking wet, and they also wicks water away, to keep you dry.

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Another point which hasn't been brought up yet is shelter. Have a look at these types of shelter which you can sometimes build:

  • Quinzhee
  • Igloo
  • Trench (Just dig a trench in the snow and cover it with a tarp. Also, dig another trench inside the sleeping trench to let the colder air sink there instead of where you sleep.)

You can also add insulation by planting fir boughs in the ground at an angle. This gives the boughs a little spring and they form a layer of air under you, similar to having another matress.

Oh, also, a candle can help heat your shelter to a certain extent, but it also helps in drying the air, especially in a tent, quinzhee or igloo.

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  • Avoid eating sugary foods, the digestion of sugar tends to heat your core quickly, and then just as quickly your core temp goes back down.
  • Eat some cheese right before going to sleep. This does not have the problem that sugary foods do.
  • Drink warm liquids periodically during the day.
  • Keep a small stove going at night and occasionally wake up, heat some water, put the hot water in a canteen/thermos, drink a little and then sleep with it in your sleeping bag.
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Put layers on your ground sheet: cardboard (keep it dry), bubble wrap, survival bags, or blankets will do. These will mean the tent does not lose heat to the ground.

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I think this could make a good community wiki.

A few things not mentioned (unless I missed) more specifically for sleeping:

  • Make sure you're hydrated. Sounds dumb because it's cold and you don't feel like dehydration is an issue, but it really is (cold air sucks moisture out of you while breathing, it's cold so you don't feel like drinking potentially cold water, etc). So drink all day, regualarly. When you get in camp, make a point of keeping on drinking. You don't want to gulp 2 litres of water before going to bed (because you'll have to get up to pee soon enough), but you must be hydrated before you go to sleep otherwise you'll have a hard time keeping warm.
  • Shelter - if you're tent camping, pack snow under your site before you set it up. PIck a less windy spot and/or make small snow walls around to minimize wind gusts. You can also (if it's not a super traveled/protected forest) put spruce/fir branches under you tent. Pruning lower branches of a tree isn't actually that bad for the tree if you don't over-do it on any single tree (in fact, the lower branches of taller trees are the next one to die naturally). That'll give you an addtional layer of insulation, plus will prevent melting snow from seeping moisture thrue the bottom of your tent (in case you're like me and use 3-seasons tents in winter).
  • Eat - as mentionned eat well, but also make sure to have fat/meats (takes longer to digest).
  • Boil water just before going to bed. Wrap it in clothes, make sure it's well closed (and not a cheap PET bottle, use a good nalgene-style) and put it in your sleeping bag. You don't want it to feel TOO hot (you'll sweat), but it'll give you a boost thrue the night.
  • Sleep with your head cover on. It really chances everything.
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If you're staying out overnight, consider digging a snowhole instead of using a tent. A snowhole can be much warmer than a tent and give significantly better protection. And, as Andy Kirkpatrick writes, they can't blow away.

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Also, I'd like to add stay out of the wind. The wind will suck away any heat you build up, and unless you have a strong tent, cold air will pour in through the seams. One time we were dumb enough to camp on a mountain bald with no trees to protect us in a steady 40 mph wind and a member of our group was in early stages of hypothermia before we were able to get off the mountain top.

Another tip, you're only as warm as your coldest group member so if there's someone who is freezing, focus on heating them up and make sure they're giving you accurate responses to their condition. People experiencing hypothermia usually first start acting irrationally.

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There are two components to staying warm and it's all generally centred around thermodynamics. You want to stay at one temperature and physics wants you to become the temperature of the your environment.

You body, if 100% efficiently insulated, would get hotter and hotter because it's generating heat from all the bodily processes and chemical reactions going on, especailly movement. The source of this heat energy is food which is processed and/or stored in your body and if no fuel is going in, then your body itself.

Equally, if you were 0% insulated, you would cool down at a rate proportionate to the difference in temperature between you and the outside world. To this, you add the heat energy you're generating and ultimately you get a rate of decrease in temperature.

Somewhere between the two is a level of insulation which essentially allows you to create an equilibrium between the rate of generation of heat and the rate of loss. This is how you stay the right temperature.

So some tips are:

  • Wrap up warmer as soon as activity stops. You're about to generate less heat, so balance.
  • Keep out of the wind: wind increases heat loss.
  • Keep dry: water is a good conductor of heat, away from you.
  • Don't sweat. If you are getting hot, ventilate your clothes to increase your heat loss so you don't sweat and get wet (see above)
  • Keep well fed, you need fuel to keep generating that heat internally.
  • Eat before bed. Digestion creates heat, and you'll want that heat in the middle of the night.
  • Don't get your sleeping bag dirty. The dirt will fill in the lovely air gaps which are the best insulators. And don't sweat in it (see above)
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  1. More insulation.
  2. Stay dry inside. Make sure you wear something that lets sweat escape.
  3. Keep your head covered with a hat and, if possible, a mask or balaclava.
  4. Eat plenty of food.
  5. When you stop, you will probably want to be doing something, stand at a fire, or get in your sleeping bag. It's hard to just stand around in sub-zero weather without getting cold.
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I have slept in freezing temps and sub zero. All I will say is most sleeping bags will not even keep you comfortable to half their rating. Get a good bag, add a thick blanket or two, and wear plenty of layers.

Do not forget a head and face covering. A few days ago I slept outdoors in -12F and I used a triple layer extreme cold military bag inside a commercial bag rated to -25F and I was mostly comfortable.

Anything extra you can do is recommended. Like building a debris shelter, digging a trench to block wind etc.

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I've not camped in subzero weather before but I have spent several hours working on glaciers. The things I've found really helpful have been lots of layers. Typically I would wear the following. Thermal underwear, tshirt, jumper, fleece, ski-jacket, rain-coat & trousers, sallopettes and waterproof trousers. Along with thick socks and decent boots, hat, neck warmer and gloves. I found having several pairs of gloves handy as when wet they lose their warmth.

As for sleeping I've probably camped out in sub zero - I've just never had a thermometer with me to check. I've found a good mummy bag (wrapped in a blanket if it's really cold) on an airbed enough.

Other tips to bear in mind are the ground is cold is insulate underneath yourself as well as on top. One trick is to use an airbed on top of a roll matt. The smaller the tent the better as it will trap some warmth in, an obviously a smaller tent will warm up from your breath quicker than a big tent. Lagerbaer also makes very good points which I was beaten to making. :) Also things like cup-a-soups are good for warming you up.

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