Originally posted by C Elegans
@Chanak: LMAO
One thing I know for sure, and that is that Swedish woodcutters (male or female) don't cut wood in flannel shirt with rolled up sleeves in -20C (-4F)
But what about the "Polar Bear Club?" You know, the people that strip down when it's well below freezing outside, then jump into hot springs?
I remember hearing about them in Europe while I was living in Germany. Also in Iceland. There are also some people in North America who do that.
As a sidenote...I actually was a lumberjack now and then when I lived in Tennessee, hehe. One particularly cold night (it was about -7 F that night, the coldest there in many years) found me splitting seasoned wood for my woodstove (yes, I had a cast iron woodburning stove, no modern central heat...but I had a computer and an internet connection. Go figure

). Initially I started out wearing a thermal undershirt, wool shirt, then my old army field jacket on top of that with the removable liner installed within...and of course a touque on my head.

Halfway into chopping, I shed the field jacket and wool shirt, as I was starting to sweat. For the rest of the time I was chopping wood, I was quite comfortable as the strenuous work kept my body warm. Once I finished, I wisely put my coat back on, gathered up some wood, and went inside before my body heat evaporated and I started to freeze.
EDIT - And oh yes, my sleeves were rolled up.
