![]() ![]() Speaking July 18 at a House subcommittee hearing on religious freedom, he pointed to the country’s “blasphemy laws and armed attacks on believers that have continued to worsen,” and noted that Africa’s most populous nation is like “a slow-motion genocide.” Commission on International Religious Freedom, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, has described religious freedom conditions in Nigeria as “abysmal.” It’s clear that the people who made this coat actually spend time in the Pacific Northwest.(OSV News) - The chairman of U.S. The back is split in a fish tail design to added mobility, and the hood visor is laminated to keep it stiff while you’re being pelted with PNW sheet rain. It’s breathable - way more breathable than most rain jackets - so overheating is a thing of the past. A three-layer shell and full seals on the seams paired with four-way stretch materials makes a shell that’s both waterproof and incredibly flexible. The Avalon Rain Jacket, though? It just keeps you dry without that feeling. I’m no scientist, but it’s probably something to do with the colder temperature on the jacket’s outside versus the warmer temperature on the inside. All too often, however, a rain jacket shell develops an odd tendency to stick to your skin once the outside is wet. It’s also not incredibly cold, so a coat that repels rain but isn’t too thick is important. Southern Vancouver Island in particular often requires a decent hike through a very soggy rainforest, squelching through mud that is at least a quarter bear shit. The uniform of a Vancouver Islander in the winter consists of gumboots/Blundstones, Stanfields, and a rain coat. And in the Pacific Northwest, that means rain. Photo: Imperial MotionĪlthough I do spend time in the mountains, the majority of my time is spent down closer to sea level. It is, in short, the best coat I’ve ever owned for riding snow. And best of all, I think, it’s long enough to cover your butt, but not so long it feels as though you’re wearing a trench coat. Pit zip ventilation, just in case you’re really working hard, an adjustable hood that includes a wrap-around neck piece that zips up to your chin, lycra gaiters on the sleeves with holes for your thumbs so they’re not sliding up your arms all the time, a snap back powder skirt so you don’t fill your back with snow when you’re sliding down the mountain on your ass, pockets for days (including a handy one for a phone with a cord exit), and a million other little things. It’s not so thick as to restrict movement - an 80 g insulation and a 60 g shell - and it’s both waterproof enough to stand up to the PNW deluge and that wet snow, yet breathable enough to stave off the dreaded clammy sweats. The Watson Shell (not to be confused with the Watson Insulated Jacket) in particular is so loaded with features that I’m not entirely sure how the designers managed to fit them all in. But the jackets IM sent? Practically perfect in every way. If you want to go hiking in the rain, as my dog often does (he too has a jacket), you must commit yourself to being uncomfortably hot, cold, damp, or sweaty. They’re too breathable so you’re cold, or even worse, not breathable enough, which leads to feeling as though you’re locked in a clammy, luke-warm room full of evaporated sweat. They’re made from a material that repels water for a while, then just turns into a sodden piece of cold, clammy, rubber that clings to your skin like a wet plastic bag. The hoods are generally too large, so the wind grabs them like a sail around your head. The folks over at Imperial Motion sent me a few - one from their Rain Collection and another from their new Snow Collection - to test out, and as a shitty weather connoisseur, I have to say they’re doing jackets how jackets should be done. For the most part, however, most of the coats I cover myself in are lacking something. ![]() Since I don’t like spending the darker months inside and I hate the rain and cold more than just about anything, I require a good jacket. If you’re not dressed for the weather, you’re facing months on end of sitting inside, which can get boring, to say the least, especially when the waves are cranking or the snow is falling. But winters in the Pacific Northwest? Oh man, they are LONG. Get out of town, and there is something new around every corner. The waves are incredible, as are the mountains. ![]() Vancouver Island, where I live, is ripe for exploration. It’s a blessing and a curse - all that rain makes for some of the most beautiful forests in the world. I grew up in a place that sometimes feels as though it might be the rainiest place on Earth. ![]()
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