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How To Avoid Wet Gloves Snowboarding

Nothing is worse then getting wet while snowboarding. Melted snow turns into water and can get your gear wet and leave you feeling soaked. Add cold temperatures to the mix and its imperative you stay dry while riding. Here’s how to stay dry while snowboarding.

1. Get a waterproof jacket and snow pants. Jeans and hoodies don’t cut it when riding all day. You’ll need to get gear that is waterproof and built to ride in. Make sure your snowboarding gear is quality, and has taped seams, waterproof breathable fabric, and elastic cuffs. There are several ways your jacket and snow pants can leave you soaked, but the worst is when they soak through. Prevent soak through by starting out the day with quality gear.

2. Get gloves or mittens with a decent cuff length and closures as well as waterproof fabric. Gloves that aren’t snowboarding specific soak through quick. Make sure your gloves or mittens are waterproof. Also, check the cuff on your gloves. The cuffs should have elastic bands with drawstring enclosures. If you go riding with gloves with no cuffs or short cuffs, you will have snow enter your gloves and your jacket sleeves.

3. Make sure your regular pants and snow pants are both properly placed on your snowboard boots. The bottom of your regular pant legs should tuck down into your boot cuff. Then, your snow pants should go down over the entire boot. That’s how most pros ride. By having your snow pants down over the boot, you provide protection and prevent snow and water from entering your pant cuffs. You tuck your street pants into your boot to prevent your legs from getting cold or chaffed by snow.

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4. Get a jacket with a hood on it. If you ride a lot in really wet and snowy conditions, wear a jacket with a nylon or waterproof hood. Nothing beats a hood when it comes to stopping the downpour.

5. Wear wool socks. Avoid cotton socks at all costs. Cotton socks wick moisture and make you feel wet and soaked. Get a pair of wool socks and feel dry all day.

6. Avoid cotton altogether when you ride. Hoodies made of cotton, jeans made of cotton, t-shirts made of cotton will all get wet and absorb water. Wear as little cotton as possible when you go out riding. Instead, wear smart materials like wool and polypropelene.

7. Don’t spend a lot of time kneeling or sitting in the snow. If you can, strap in while sitting on a bench. Minimize the amount of time you spend in direct contact with the snow, and you’ll be much drier by the end of the day.

8. Start out the day with dry gear. Dry all your gear out the night before you ride. Wet gear will never dry out during the course of a riding day.

If you use common sense, and use gear made for riding, you’ll be able to stay relatively dry even in snowy or fairly wet conditions. If you have a piece of gear that seems to always get wet or leave you soaked, it should be first on your list of things to replace.

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