Recently, I have been testing a Therma Max Waffle Base Layer. I have found it to be warm and comfortable for everyday wear during cold weather. It is one of many excellent modern base layer options.
Rodney Dangerfield, The Great Escape, and The Maquis
For a couple of hundred years or more, base-layer-like garments in cotton or wool were popular among people who actually had to work outside during cold weather. Of course, they weren’t called a “base layer.” They were called “long johns” or “long underwear.”
People wealthy enough to stay inside near the fire were less enthused about the garments, leading to an association of “long johns” with the lower classes. As a result, “long johns” became the Rodney Dangerfield of the garment world. They didn’t get no respect.
The type of garments that could be afforded by the lower classes were not necessarily particularly comfortable, especially when secured for conscripts to the armed forces by bureaucratic bean counters from the lowest bidder. This led to military long johns having a particularly vile reputation for many years.
I remember in middle school reading the book The Great Escape by Paul Brickhill. The book chronicles the mass escape of 76 Allied prisoners from the German POW camp Stalag Luft III during World War II. Brickhill described how the prisoners at Stalag Luft III made devices out of long underwear bottoms to surreptitiously dispose of the dirt they were excavating from the tunnels they were digging. If I remember correctly, Brickhill said that they “gleefully” cut up the “hated garments” in order to make the devices.Continue reading“Therma Max Waffle Base Layer, by Thomas Christianson”
