Dress Like An Onion: The Art of Layering

The thing about the cold is that you can never tell how cold it is from looking out a kitchen window. You have to dress up, get out training and when you come back, you then know how cold it is.

– Sean Kelly

Apart from the obvious lesson in Rules #5 and #9, hidden within Sean’s sage advice lies a paradox: if we can never tell how cold it is until we’ve arrived home from our ride, then how are we to determine how much kit to wear?

The Kelly Paradox is the layering equivalent of the Goldilocks Principle, wherein we aim to be neither overdressed, causing us to overheat sweat excessively, nor underdressed, causing us to needlessly lose energy through shivering and to hate life at a conceptual level. By extension, it also implies that whatever choice you make, you will get it wrong.

The answer lies in the art of layering, wherein one deploys several layers of clothing that can be unzipped, shed, and added back as both the temperature and the engine room heat up and cool back down throughout a ride.

The first rule of kitting up is that we should expect to be chilly for the first ten or fifteen minutes, allowing for the body to warm up and start producing its own heat to counter the cool outside temperatures. But this may not account for changing temperatures throughout the ride, and therefor we will need to be prepared to alter the composition of the kit.

The second rule of kitting up is that unless it is mid-summer, you are likely to misjudge the weather, so you should be prepared to make adjustments en route. Please observe the following pointers when kitting up for your ride.

  1. Always wear a base layer, which should be made of wicking material and is designed to keep the skin of your torso dry. In colder weather, heavier wool base layers may be used as an insulation layer against the skin.
  2. Long Sleeve jerseys and full leggings are always encouraged at the café for pre-ride espressi unless it is genuinely warm and sunny, in which case one is encouraged to bask in the sun and admire you own guns, Boonen-style.
  3. Arm warmers are preferable to long sleeve jerseys unless the weather is sufficiently cool or the temp sufficiently moderate to ensure the long sleeve jersey will not be shed throughout the ride. Arm warmers may be slipped down to the wrists for further cooling. Under no circumstances, however, are the sleeves of a long sleeve jersey to be pulled up towards the elbows to regulate temperature.
  4. A gilet should be considered before a long sleeve jersey as it can be easily removed and stowed mid-ride. A gilet should be light and close-fitting like a jersey. When stowing, fold flat in thirds from top to bottom, then in half along the zipper. Slip this between your jersey and bibs rather than into a jersey pocket. This should be done for bonus Casually Deliberate points while riding hands-free.
  5. It is acceptable for any and all layers to be unzipped and allowed to flap in the wind, emphasizing how hard you are crushing it. Additional Casually Deliberate points are also available for zipping back up while riding hands-free, particularly when doing so while cresting a climb with fools suffering on your wheel.
frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • @minion

    I was chatting with an Aussie the other day at the pub about Tazmania. I had no idea Aussies made so much fun of those folks. The scar on the shoulder from where Tazmanian mother’s cut off their children’s second head? Hillarious.

    My wife’s a Tasmanian, so from the three best islands in the southern hemisphere, Fuck you.

    Winky emoticon

    As a Tasmanian I can tell you my favourite Tasmanian joke.

    Dave comes home and excitedly tells Dad and Mom:
    "Dad!, Mum!, I've got some great news. I've met this girl and she's a beauty.
    She can cook, she can chop wood, she can plow, she's got most of her teeth.
    I'm in love and we want to get married."

    Dad and Mum say how wonderful that is.

    "But Dad, Mum, there's one problem. She's a virgin."

    Dad's reply
    "Well if she's not good enough for her own family, she's not good enough for ours."

  • @RobSandy

    @bea

    I’m wondering, how many of you ever took their leg-warmers off during a ride?

    I’ve taken my Kneekers off because they annoy me so much.

    I've never taken leg warmers off, if it's cold enough to need them they stay on, besides I am riding too hard to stop.

  • @Lister

    @RobSandy

    @bea

    I’m wondering, how many of you ever took their leg-warmers off during a ride?

    I’ve taken my Kneekers off because they annoy me so much.

    I’ve never taken leg warmers off, if it’s cold enough to need them they stay on, besides I am riding too hard to stop.

    This. I've never taken leg warmers, knee warmers or a gilet off during a ride. Maybe a cap, but that's it.

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