When you sense something is wrong, stop and check it out!

819s

Wannabie Member
I went for a decently long ride the other day. I checked the weather and it was supposed to rain in the evening and I knew wI would be back home well before that. I sometimes bring my winter gloves on rainy days because they are waterproof. I left them home this time since the weather is warm.

Halfway into the trip, it started raining. I checked the forecast and it still said that it will not keep raining so I kept pushing forward.
Around the furthest point I was planning to go, it started raining and the forecast was updated to reflect that it was raining and it would keep raining. It was between 8 and 13 Celsius where I was riding. (It gets colder in the mountains.)
My gear was soaking up the water. I was drenched all the way through all my gear. The wind was making me cold. My fingers felt really cold but honestly, not out of the ordinary for a ride on a cold day.

In hindsight, the first sign that there was a problem was using my controls. When I went to turn off my turn signals, I honked the horn. I thought nothing of it. Then it happened again around 5 minutes later. Still, no big deal. I thought I was off my game because I was disappointed about the change in weather.

I stopped at a convenience store to get a hot coffee and use the restroom. When I took off my gloves, my fingertips were purple! I was getting frostbite. It never crossed my mind that I could get frostbite from wet gloves and wind chill. WIth the temperature above freezing, I never expected it.

At the store, they sell hot steel cans of coffee. The first can I bought seemed to hot to hold and I didn't want to risk burning my fingers or something so I held the can with the gloves on. My fingers were still cold so I bought a second one when the first one cooled down. My fingers went back to a seemingly normal color and it took 3x as long as normal to get home because I stopped every time my fingers felt too cold.

The moral of the story for me was to pay attention when something is out of the ordinary. Stop and take a minute to find out what is going on. Also, make sure you have the right gear. Prepare for what may happen. I knew it would rain later so I should have brought some gear that could handle the rain better.

Stay safe out there!
 
Wind chill is not fun, especially when wet. Am glad you managed to warm up a bit and get home safely.
The right kit is really important, we are lucky to have so much choice of decent kit available and mostly affordable.
 
I have been riding long enough to know better. It was a wake up call and since I am safe, I am glad that I learned the lesson without any serious consequence.
 
Yeah. Being cold can be super dangerous. Wet gloves will get super cold really fast. I,be been caught out like that before and it sucks. I was so cold one I couldn't pull my clutch in because my hand lost all it's dexterity.
 
Yeah. Being cold can be super dangerous. Wet gloves will get super cold really fast. I,be been caught out like that before and it sucks. I was so cold one I couldn't pull my clutch in because my hand lost all it's dexterity.

I kept williging my fingers individually and checking that there was smooth movement. It became how clear the problem was when I tried taking out coins to pay for the hot coffee. I was really struggling. I am not sure if the clerk realized what was wrong or not. He made some strange faces.
 
I went for a decently long ride the other day. I checked the weather and it was supposed to rain in the evening and I knew wI would be back home well before that. I sometimes bring my winter gloves on rainy days because they are waterproof. I left them home this time since the weather is warm.

Halfway into the trip, it started raining. I checked the forecast and it still said that it will not keep raining so I kept pushing forward.
Around the furthest point I was planning to go, it started raining and the forecast was updated to reflect that it was raining and it would keep raining. It was between 8 and 13 Celsius where I was riding. (It gets colder in the mountains.)
My gear was soaking up the water. I was drenched all the way through all my gear. The wind was making me cold. My fingers felt really cold but honestly, not out of the ordinary for a ride on a cold day.

In hindsight, the first sign that there was a problem was using my controls. When I went to turn off my turn signals, I honked the horn. I thought nothing of it. Then it happened again around 5 minutes later. Still, no big deal. I thought I was off my game because I was disappointed about the change in weather.

I stopped at a convenience store to get a hot coffee and use the restroom. When I took off my gloves, my fingertips were purple! I was getting frostbite. It never crossed my mind that I could get frostbite from wet gloves and wind chill. WIth the temperature above freezing, I never expected it.

At the store, they sell hot steel cans of coffee. The first can I bought seemed to hot to hold and I didn't want to risk burning my fingers or something so I held the can with the gloves on. My fingers were still cold so I bought a second one when the first one cooled down. My fingers went back to a seemingly normal color and it took 3x as long as normal to get home because I stopped every time my fingers felt too cold.

The moral of the story for me was to pay attention when something is out of the ordinary. Stop and take a minute to find out what is going on. Also, make sure you have the right gear. Prepare for what may happen. I knew it would rain later so I should have brought some gear that could handle the rain better.

Stay safe out there!

I experienced a similar problem with cold and adverse health affects in the American Southwest desert. It was dry and cold. So cold the border patrol guards on I-10 would not come out of their checkpoint.

When I felt nauseated, I stopped and found I was suffering from hypothermia and a bit of frostbite. I was lucky the store clerk where I stopped saw the skin on my face and told me to go in the bathroom and lock the door. I saw my face was pale blue in the mirror and immediately took off my snowmobile suit I had for cold weather riding.
 
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