krash
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-10C doesn't cut it? Average high temp in Gilgit in January is 9C and low is -2.7C. You've probably never experienced -10C. All I'm saying is many of the northeners should dress properly, I don't get how long they have been living there. Look at people in Canada, Scandinavia, Iceland they are also use to extreme cold but they still dress in proper winter cloths Pathan or Kashmiri or not.
I have two Chitrali topis what's your point? They are made of sheep wool yes they are very warm but they don't protect your ears from the cold which can be the first to go in subfreezing temperatures.
Point is if many of them owned proper winter clothing they could have better kept warm outside there were many young children sitting out for days with no gloves and their fingers got gangrene in days. As for me I would start a fire with my flint, and my clothes would prevent me getting in that bad shape; that's the point.
Dude, you just had to poke me, didn't you.....very well,
I kinda have a house up an old "hill" on the outskirts of the Skardu valley near the bridge connecting the Ghanche and Skardu valleys. I was first taken there when I was 2 in late Jan. That was a particularly cold winter and I fell ill due to the -20C below temps. Currently I live in the Ontario snow belt, have been for more than a year now. Apparently the previous winter was the coldest in many decades but the temp only fell till -22C or maybe -20 for two nights (can't remember exactly). The lowest I've experienced is a -36C. We got stuck on Saling in a snow storm during the winters at 5300 meters. Had to dig a snow cave to stay alive. On Hombroq it was -38 to -40C but I couldn't verify that through any credible means. In Rattu we call a day with -12 to -15C a good day for skiing. I've been sleeping on rocks, with a sleeping bag of course, in temps below -10C since I was 15. Interesting story: I once peed all over the officer's lounge's bathroom bowl in Rattu because I didn't realize that the water in the bowl was frozen solid.
Now, ever wondered what the folds on that topi are for? Also, mufflers and scarves are used there to shield the ears along with the face and the neck from the cold. Next, they did own proper winter clothing (as much as they needed). But see the strange thing about earthquake disasters is that when they turn your house into a pile of rubble you can't really go fishing for your gloves in it. And so despite owning proper clothing, you're left without them. The temps that those kids were dealing with could not have been dented much with a fire, which I'm sure they had enough sense to build. If they didn't have enough clothing to survive their winter then I'm pretty sure they would've gone extinct by now. These people do own goose down jackets, they're pretty cheap up there, but they only wear them when they feel the need.
ps: Firstly Gilgit is the warmest darn place in all of Gilgit Baltistan. Next, an average low of -2.7C in Gilgit is absolute rubbish. Interestingly, google also says that Rattu has an average low of -1C, lol. About Canada; through out the winters I saw women in skirts, everywhere, but even still they aren't as immune to the cold as the people back home. Btw one thing I forgot to mention is that if you over clothe yourself, then go out and work yourself into a sweat then its about 100.34 times worse than being cold. And unlike the Icelandic and the Canadians these guys have to go out and do hard manual labor everyday. I'm still pretty sure you have no idea of the kind of traditional clothing these guys have for winters, which they rarely wear anymore and instead wear those winter jackets you like, but only when they feel the need.