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Couloir 9/06 DriClime Windshirt

Travel Extras
If you’re one of the few people who hasn’t tried Marmot’s DriClime Windshirt, get yourself one before your next trip. The ultimate double-duty layer, the Windshirt’s soft lining adds warmth, comfort and excellent wicking as a mid or outer layer for touring and skiing, while its DWR coating shields from wind and rain while traveling. While I wish it had looser wrists instead of tight elastic, the packability and versatility of Marmot’s Windshirt makes it an excellent travel companion. By Graham Gephart
Skiing December 2007 DriClime Windshirt

It’s Like a Shirt That Blocks the Wind
My dad skied in a windshirt in the ‘70s. It was midnight blue with Western snaps and a fat collar. He tucked it in beneath an insulated parka on cold days, and wore it as an untucked shell in the spring or when driving his ’76 Dodge Dart Sport. It went well with his red, white, and blue I-Ski sunglasses, making it the perfect piece of ski clothing – except it didn’t breathe or wick moisture, and if he fell, he’d accelerate at a sickening rate, frightening his offspring. The nylon was faster than the P-tex on his Hexcel Honeycombs. Great idea, bad execution.
Marmot saved the windproof midlayer when it introduced the original DriClime windshirt in 1991. It wasn’t that complicated: polyester long-underwear material (the DriClime) served as a liner inside a lightweight nylon shell. Armpit vents, a zipper, and a dress-shirt-style hem round it out. Like Dad, I wear it under my puffy on those witch’s-tit days, or as a shell when I’m hiking. I also wear it Nordic skiing and raking leaves and when I’m riding my bike to the packy for a six of Belgian wheat. Which is to say, I wear it all the time. - by M.P.

