Author Topic: New net  (Read 689 times)

jaybirdsen

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 75
    • View Profile
New net
« on: March 25, 2022, 08:07:33 PM »
This idea may have already been discussed here and I missed it so apologies if that is the case. I've tried a variety of quick cover ups over the years. I find sarongs or kilts can work yet I also find them somewhat restrictive when wearing around the waist. I hate pants basically and any thing else anchored to my waist to stay up.  Also as I get older my shoulders and back seem to burn easier so I was looking for something to cover a bit when the sunlight is strong.

I recently discovered a couple ponchos that work out really well.  They are both 60" by 80" with a hole for the head in the middle and when worn cover to just above the knee. One is alpaca and it is of lighter weave than most heavier ones and shorter. It is called a home office poncho.  It lays very well and I feel pretty free and nude when gardening or even sitting drinking coffee in the morning. It covers sufficiently front and back. They are sleeveless and the sides are open  yet only expose a couple inches of torso, hips and legs. The way it lays covers any questionable areas. The other is a cotton serape poncho that is the same size yet exposes more. I think it is because it is new and after a few washes it will be fine. Of course when the wind blows it flies open yet that is part of the nude felling. You still feel the breeze.  There is some blm wilderness land a little over an hour away.  There is a hiking trail a little ways from the parking lot. You can hike nude on the trail yet not the parking area. I'm going to try the alpaca poncho from the parking area to the trail and also for walking down the cliff to Black's Beach.

jbeegoode

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5353
    • View Profile
Re: New net
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2022, 04:16:12 AM »
I seem to burn easier than in the past and wonder why.

The desert is certainly an easier burn the beach and high elevations, too. I take my sarong, which is wrapped around the waist, like a kilt at the trailhead. Then it is into the back pack, but more often folded and placed over my shoulder, or shoulders. It cushions the water bottle and camera strap and the backpack straps. It keeps the direct sun off of my shoulders. The rest is generally okay nude. It can be whetted to cool off. It can be sat upon for comfort, when squatting gets old, or I want to meditate.

A pancho of any kind has always gotten grabbed by branches and prickers, like regular clothing and worse. I have a wonderful alpaca pancho from Columbia. It weighs a lot. I have worn it at night when it gets cold, even freezing, in the snow and chilly days with wind. I like to just sit in it. I use it for a bed blanket mostly in the winter. Panchos, ruanas, tend to fly out when the wind catches them and they are sometimes difficult to grab. The "Fist Full of Dollars" look does have a fun-ness to it. Perhaps a long tunic, ala a Greek model. Open on the sides, but tied together on the sides. Tunics can be as light weight and breathable as the material that they are made from.

Both DF and I like our medieval wool cloaks, with hoods. We take them to the hot springs regularly. They supplement the sleeping quilt when we sleep. If we open them facing a fire, like a flasher, the heat gets trapped as it rises and wraps around our nudeness. They are nearly calf length, so they are like a warm blanket to tuck in while sitting, a mini tent, or teepee. The clasp at the neck makes an easy on and off adjustment. The hood is added, It works in the rain. It is ghoulish and fun at gatherings. It can be worn as open as we feel. It does get caught in brambles, bushes, etc. It can fly aloft a bit in a wind, if you don't pull it tight. That mini tent thing travels with us as we walk. We can wrap each other up in them, a private little nudist shelter, in a moment, our arms around each other. They can be tossed open, secured over the shoulders, revealing the body to the elements.

The sarong can be laid on the shoulders so that it projects out shading the arm from the sun, but not covering the arms from the breeze.

Desiring a more nude experience, a hiking umbrella can save from sunburn and the heat. It can be placed in front of the body as a shield, in an instant. It can be a pokey weapon. One may work out better than many broad brim hats, or a sombrero to go with your pancho.
Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

jbeegoode

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 5353
    • View Profile
Re: New net
« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2022, 07:15:13 PM »
There are a couple of cloak pics here with the bats:

https://thefreerangenaturist.org/2016/07/17/orient-land-trust-part-2-a-trip-report/

Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

Greenbare Woods

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1952
  • Human bodies are natural, comfortable, and green.
    • View Profile
    • Greenbare Photos
Re: New net
« Reply #3 on: March 29, 2022, 08:04:21 PM »
Cloaks are great.  I have several.   
OLT is great too. 

I seem to burn easier than in the past and wonder why.
Jbee

May be diet related.  There are a lot of anecdotal reports that people who eat only meat don't get sunburn.  Nobody knows why it works that way.   Works for me. 
« Last Edit: March 29, 2022, 08:06:41 PM by Greenbare Woods »
Human bodies are natural, comfortable, and green.
To see more of Bob you can view his personal photo page
http://www.photos.bradkemp.com/greenbare.html