Stay Warm

Hypothermia kills, and frostbite isn’t much fun either. Learn how to protect your vital organs and keep all your extremities attached.

As odd as it sounds to non-astronomers, it’s possible to become chilled while observing even during high summer. Observing is a sedentary activity, so you generate little excess body heat. The temperature of the night sky is very nearly absolute zero, and it serves as a gigantic heat sink that sucks the warmth out of you. Observing sites are often located at high elevations and unsheltered from the wind, which makes the problem worse.

When our astronomy club holds public observations at a local state park in July and August, it’s easy to tell the experienced astronomers from the public visitors. The visitors are wearing the same t-shirts and shorts they wore during the heat of the day. The astronomers are wearing long-sleeve shirts and jeans, and often don jackets and caps as the night goes on. More than once, we’ve loaned blankets to visitors who were shivering, unable to figure out why they were cold. The night sky gets you every time.

For cold-weather observing sessions, the problem is much worse. The standard advice is to dress for temperatures 20°F to 30°F (11°C to 17°C) colder than the actual temperature, counting wind chill. For example, if the forecast low temperature is 30°F including the effects of wind chill, we dress for 0°F to 10°F, and are often none too warm at that.

Fortunately, there are steps you can take to remain warm even under severely cold conditions.

Avoid Alcohol

Even moderate alcohol consumption increases the risk and severity of hypothermia. Alcohol is dangerous in three ways. First, it increases the likelihood of hypothermia by increasing heat loss from your body. Second, it masks the effects of hypothermia by reducing shivering and other hypothermia symptoms. Third, and most dangerously, it gives you a false sense of feeling warm. Drinking alcohol before or during an observing session is always a bad idea, but it’s a particularly bad idea for cold-weather observing sessions.

Dress in Layers

Two basic principles of keeping warm are that many thin layers of clothing are better than a few thick layers, and that loose layers are better than tight layers. Using several thin, loose layers of clothing traps your body heat most efficiently.

Tip

When you purchase clothing for your observing wardrobe be sure to buy the outer layers such as sweatshirts and sweatpants in a much larger size than you normally wear. This allows for layering without the fit being too snug. Remember, it is more important to be warm than to worry about how you look!

For a routine cold weather observing session, Robert wears underwear, long underwear, and jeans on the bottom, and long underwear, a t-shirt, a thin turtleneck, a sweater or sweatshirt, a flannel shirt, and a parka on top. For colder sessions, he wears underwear, long underwear, flannel-padded jeans, and sweatpants on the bottom, and adds two or three layers on top, including a hooded sweatshirt. Barbara dresses similarly, but dislikes jeans. She prefers to start with a heavy pair of sweatpants, paired if necessary with long underwear for added warmth. If it is very cold or windy, she adds a second pair of of sweatpants.

Tip

Most people don’t realize that long underwear comes in different ratings. Standard long underwear suffices for routine cold weather, but for observing in extreme cold you can get special “arctic” long underwear from outfitters such as Cabela’s (http://www.cabelas.com). Outfitters also carry other specialty gear, such as full-body, zip-up “freezer suits” that are useful for observing in truly cold conditions.

Keep Your Head and Neck Warm

Your head is an amazingly efficient heat radiator, and your neck isn’t far behind. If you dress warmly otherwise but do not protect your head, you will be cold. Even for summer observing sessions, it’s worth wearing a baseball cap or similar light hat. For cool or moderately cold sessions, wear a knitted watch cap. From late fall to early spring, supplement the watch cap with a thin balaclava to cover your face and neck. During very cold weather, wear a fur-lined hat with ear flaps over the balaclava, and use a scarf to keep your neck warm.

Keep Your Feet Warm

It always amazes us to see some astronomers during cold weather observing sessions waddling around like penguins, bundled up in parkas, but wearing tennis shoes. Your feet are second only to your head in heat loss, and it’s impossible to be warm if your feet are cold. To keep your feet warm, start with two layers of socks. Use a thin, cotton or polypropylene inner layer and a thick, woolen outer layer. For extreme cold, consider heated socks, which are powered by a battery pack and available from outfitters and hunting supply stores. Some observers place a scrap of carpet or a foam pad near their telescopes, standing on it to isolate their feet from the cold ground.

Choose your footwear according to the temperature. For cool or normally cold sessions, wear ankle-high hiking or walking boots. For very cold sessions, wear insulated calf-length hunting boots, such as those sold by L.L. Bean (http://www.llbean.com) and other outfitters.

Warning

Never tease someone about being cold, any more than you would tease someone who was having chest pains. There is a certain macho outlook among some amateur astronomers, who would have you believe that Real Men don’t feel the cold. That’s a dangerous attitude. People vary in how they are affected by cold. One person may be in shirtsleeves while another has already donned jacket and earmuffs. One person may already be in the early stages of hypothermia while everyone else is quite comfortable.

If you feel cold, do something to get yourself warm. Don’t worry about what your observing buddies may think. Conversely, if you suspect one of your observing buddies is cold, don’t tease him. Help him. Give him some of your hot coffee, break out one of your chemical heat packs for him, or fire up your propane heater. Hypothermia affects not only body temperature, but judgment. Don’t take chances with it.

Keep Your Hands Warm

Although you lose less heat through your hands than through your head or feet, it’s still important to keep your hands warm, not least to avoid dropping eyepieces and other equipment. A thin pair of cotton gloves or polypropylene glove liners may be all you need for moderately cold temperatures. In freezing temperatures, thin gloves keep your skin from freezing to eyepieces and other metal objects. For cold weather observing, supplement or replace the thin gloves or glove liners with heavy gloves or mittens.

Mittens are warmer than gloves but are cumbersome when you are handling equipment or jotting down something in your observing log. We found the best of both worlds in the hybrid fingerless glove/mittens shown in Figure 1-1. When you’re writing in your observing log or otherwise need your fingers unencumbered, you simply flip up the mitten pouch portion to expose your fingers. When you’re finished, flip down the mitten pouch to cover your fingers. You can even put a small chemical heating pack in the pouch to keep your fingers toasty warm.

Open-finger glove/mittens keep your hands warm while allowing full dexterity

Figure 1-1. Open-finger glove/mittens keep your hands warm while allowing full dexterity

Drink Plenty of Warm Fluids

For cool or cold weather observing sessions, always bring along a large Thermos of hot cider, coffee, tea, or cocoa. (Go light on the caffeine, which may exacerbate hypothermia.) Not only does drinking warm liquids help keep you warm, it helps prevent dehydration. Cold air, even if the relative humidity is high, contains very little moisture. Every time you inhale, your lungs warm and hydrate the cold, dry air. Every time you exhale, you lose that moisture to the outside air, where it is visible as it condenses as fog. Dehydration exacerbates the effects of hypothermia, and should be avoided at all costs. For very cold weather observing sessions, it’s a good idea to take along a propane camp stove and use it to make hot drinks at least every couple of hours.

Screen Yourself from the Wind

Even a slight breeze can make cold air feel frigid and frigid air positively Antarctic. Screening yourself from wind makes a major difference in observing comfort. The most important step is to wear wind-resistant nylon outer clothing. All parkas have a nylon outer shell, of course, but don’t overlook wind-resistant outer pants, hats, and glove shells.

If there is a breeze, choose where to set up your scope with that in mind. Moving just a few feet may allow you to screen your equipment and yourself with trees, outbuildings, or other objects. For cold-weather sessions, our club members sometimes park their vehicles in a laager to provide a central screened observing area. Even if you are alone, you can park your vehicle upwind of your equipment and observe in its lee.

If your vehicle is dark adapted [Hack #45], keep your charts, logs, and other working material inside the vehicle. You can study charts, record observations, and so on from the shelter of your vehicle, exposing yourself to wind only while you are actually locating and observing objects.

Use Supplemental Heat Sources

Regardless of how warmly you dress, you may need supplemental heat to stay warm. Many experienced cold-weather observers use one or more of the following solutions:

Chemical heat packs

Outfitters and sporting-goods stores sell disposable heat packs in various sizes. These small, flat packs produce heat by a chemical reaction that does not consume oxygen, and so can be used anywhere. They are wrapped in cellophane. To activate them, you simply remove the cellophane and shake them.

The smallest pack, about 2” x 3.5”, is the right size for gloves, boots, and pockets, and sells for about $0.50 each. Once unsealed, it quickly warms to the 130°F to 150°F range, which is to say hot. It produces considerable heat for two or three hours, and continues to produce some warmth for several hours more. Larger packs, about 4” x 5”, sell for $1 or so each, produce about the same temperatures but for longer periods, and are suitable to use inside your coat.

Drugstores sell reusable chemical heat packs that are larger and more expensive than disposable heat packs. These packs contain a solution of dissolved salts inside a heavy plastic pouch. You charge the pack by heating it for a few minutes in boiling water or a microwave oven. When charged, the solution is a clear liquid. When you activate the pack, the salts begin crystallizing out of solution, producing heat as they do so. When the pack is exhausted, the solution has completely solidified, and you can recharge the pack by heating it again. These reusable heat packs typically provide more heat but for a shorter time than disposable chemical heat packs.

Tip

Chemical heat packs are also useful for warming inanimate objects. For example, once a heat pack has started to run down, don’t discard it when you fire up a new one. Instead, put the partially depleted heat pack in your eyepiece case. It will provide just enough heat to keep your eyepieces warm enough that they won’t dew up (or frost up) while you are using them.

Similarly, cold weather is hard on laptop batteries. At very cold temperatures, a fully charged laptop battery that would provide several hours of use at normal temperatures may stop working in half an hour or less. Putting a partially used heat pack between the bottom of the laptop and the chart table keeps the battery warm and allows it to deliver its rated life. (We suggest wrapping the heat pack in a towel, both to isolate it from the cold chart table and to prevent the laptop from getting too warm.) Using a cardboard box to cover the laptop when it is not being used also extends battery life.

jon-e Handwarmers

Hunters have used jon-e Handwarmers for decades, and they’re a good solution for astronomers as well. These devices look like an oversized cigarette lighter, and use a catalyst to burn liquid fuel without a flame. The Standard unit provides 8 to 12 hours of continuous heat on one filling, and the Giant unit runs for up to 36 hours per filling. You can simply keep a jon-e Handwarmer in your pocket to warm your hands occasionally, or you can buy a belt that holds two Standard jon-e Handwarmers over your kidneys to provide overall warming.

Propane heaters

Personal heaters are nice, but sometimes what you really want is to sit in front of a fireplace. Sadly, fireplaces are rare at observing sites, but there is a next-best solution. Portable catalytic propane heaters put out enough heat to make heat packs and other personal warmers seem tame by comparison. Catalytic heaters burn fuel without an open flame, and are safe to use inside a tent, vehicle, or other closed location as long as you provide some ventilation.

Warning

Don’t buy a kerosene heater or a non-catalytic propane heater. These units put out a lot of heat, as much as 25,000 BTU/hour or more, but they produce much too much light to be usable at a dark observing site. They also cannot be used in a closed location because they produce deadly car-bon monoxide gas.

Coleman (http://www.coleman.com) offers several models of catalytic propane heater that produce from 1,100 to 3,000 BTU/hour. (We recommend the 3,000 BTU/hour units for astronomy.) These heaters use disposable 16.4 ounce propane cylinders, which sell for a couple bucks at any hardware store and last from 8 to 18 hours, depending on the output of the unit. Catalytic propane heaters burn with a soft orange glow that is barely visible, even when you are fully dark adapted.

We don’t want to overstate the amount of heat these units put out. You won’t even notice the heat as you move around your observing site. In fact, the first time we fired ours up, we thought it hadn’t started. It takes several minutes for the unit to start completely, and even once it’s started, the heat is not obvious in the open air unless you are quite close to the unit. But 3,000 BTU/hour is a significant amount of heat if you concentrate and contain it. Figure 1-2 shows Robert warming himself with our catalytic propane heater. The blanket acts to trap the heat, and after a couple of minutes it becomes comfortably warm inside the impromptu tent.

If you or one of your observing buddies has a van, that provides the ideal solution. Simply place your catalytic heater in the van at the beginning of your observing session and start it running, leaving a window cracked a few inches for ventilation. Depending on how well the van is insulated, a 3,000 BTU/hour catalytic heater can raise the interior temperature by 20°F or more, providing a warm refuge for your observing group.

Don’t forget that your coat and other cold-weather clothing are as good at keeping heat out as they are at keeping it in. When you’re in the refuge, open or remove your coat to allow the heat to warm you.

Tip

If you use a propane or other heater at an observing site, remember that it produces a heat plume that roils the air over it and interferes with observing. Before you set up your heater, talk to other observers present and verify that where you plan to put the heater won’t interfere with someone else’s observing.

Robert warming himself with our catalytic propane heater

Figure 1-2. Robert warming himself with our catalytic propane heater

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