A poncho is something so simple and inexpensive, yet it can save your life. I don’t suppose anyone really knows when the poncho was invented, but it has been around for a lot of years. Prior to the poncho, at least here in the USA West, cowboys and ranchers wore a “slicker” when it was raining. It was nothing more than a long coat, usually heavy canvas duck material, that was impregnated with something like beeswax or similar waterproofing material, that repelled the rain. The only thing was, your lower body still got pretty wet when riding a horse.
In the First World War, our troops wore ponchos in the trenches in France, but they didn’t do a lot of good, when our boys were in the trenches, with mud and water up to their knees, and even higher. In Vietnam, the monsoon rains drenched our soldiers, even when they wore a poncho. So, there is no really great solution to staying dry – for the most part.
On Patrol
Allow me to digress a little bit: Back in 1979, I worked as a K-9 handler, and our job was to patrol around a nuke plant – no longer there. We patrolled from sunset, until sunrise – usually a good 12-hour shift, not counting the drive there and back home – which was about an hour each way. And, of course, kenneling our dogs and caring for them at the end of the day. I took this job in early Fall, and that’s about the time the heavy rains would begin. Newly married, we didn’t have a lot of money, however, back then, I was getting paid $10.00 per hour – that was triple the minimum wage. After a few nights of getting drenched and shivering, I bought a rain suit, to go over my insulated coveralls. Thought I had the rains beat. Nope!
The rain suit – pants and hooded jacket – kept me dry – on the outside. However, my body would sweat, causing me to get drenched on the inside – it was a no-win situation – even my feet got wet on the inside of my government issue rubber boots. Plus, to top it off, we had Dobermans as our partners, and they are short-haired dogs, and about halfway through the night’s shift, they would start shivering and there was no way to keep them warm and dry. I felt bad for my dog. They couldn’t wait to get kenneled, so they could eat, drink and crawl into their protected enclosure and get dry.
For some stupid reason, I never thought about buying a US military poncho, even though I used one heavily, when stationed at Ft. Lewis, Washington for my Infantry school in 1969 – and anyone knows it rains a lot in the Pacific Northwest. Yes, your lower legs and feet would get wet – when not wearing overshoes, but the rest of your body mostly stayed dry if you didn’t do a klutzy tumble.Continue reading“Some Poncho Options, by Pat Cascio”