-
8th March 20, 09:51 AM
#1
Sport Kilt and USA Kilts hose
I have those Sport Kilt hoes and they are nice. If you can take a percentage of wool, USA Kilts has your color in a few different styles. I love my bottle green Colored Kilt Hoes. The color is awesome.
Dave
-
-
8th March 20, 03:15 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Crazy Dave
If you can take a percentage of wool, USA Kilts has your color in a few different styles.
I'd love to, but I've got enough weird allergies already (goofball ones like carrots and parsley), that as soon as I started developing a mild wool sensitivity, I figured I'd better ditch it ASAP before it became something much worse. I get sensitized to things way too easily.
I do have a few pairs of USA Kilts's cotton hose, though:
https://www.usakilts.com/cotton-kilt-hose.html
I like them, but they are a little tight. Green color's quite nice.
Last edited by MichiganKyle; 8th March 20 at 03:16 PM.
Reason: Grammar - missing a word
-
-
8th March 20, 05:24 PM
#3
I have gluten sensitivity, so I get what you are saying. Good to know about the cotton socks. I was thinking of giving them a try. I have been very happy with everything that I have ordered through USA Kilts. I an wearing an Ireland's National Casual Kilt as I write this (and drinking a double dram of Bushmills 10 year old single malt). Looks great on me! I like the economy flashes too.
Dave
-
-
9th March 20, 07:53 AM
#4
Mine are mostly long-term full-blown allergies (anaphylactic reactions, in some cases, like with cumin) where my throat swells shut and my face gets red and puffy. IgE antibodies to all kinds of stuff - blood testing has actually been a pretty accurate match for exclusion testing. I have to switch up my diet quite frequently to keep from building up allergies to more foods. So I may be a little paranoid about wool, but I really really don't want to develop any more true allergies than I already have - my immune system's clearly quite good at coming up with fun new things to try to attack.
-
-
11th March 20, 03:55 PM
#5
Amune system
Sounds like you immune system is on hyper drive. Actually, going gluten free tamed down some of my allergies, like my allergy to cats. It might have something to do with all the Roundup that is in most wheat products. It might be worth a try opstaining from gluten and seeing what happens.
Best wishes,
Dave
-
-
11th March 20, 05:18 PM
#6
Yep, I've had to cut out gluten. Also have a separate allergy to wheat, most of the nuts (cashews and pecans are fine, just about everything else is bad), the entire legume family (including peas, beans, peanuts, chickpeas, etc.), the carrot/parsley/cilantro/celery/cumin family, the peppers family (green, yellow, red, jalapeņo, chilli peppers, etc.), soy, eggs, sesame, dairy from any animal (with the exception of some cheeses thanks to the allergy meds I'm on - couldn't do that before without swelling up), brussels sprouts, sunflowers, and a bunch of other oddball grains and veggies. No issues with fruits, though, which is nice. Except if they've been treated with something - I've had that happen before with berries. Also, been vegetarian for years for health reasons. All of that together severely limits my diet. I go off of it sometimes, but then I have to take different allergy meds that put me to sleep shortly afterwards, and even with that I'm usually swollen for about 3 days. None of it's life-threatening, I just turn red, my face and neck puff up, I can't swallow, breathing gets difficult, and it hurts really bad. And for some of it (like cumin), my lips and tongue swell up. But not life-threatening.
I've got some environmental allergies as well, but most of them are not nearly as bad.
With all that, I'm a huge advocate for people getting tested for food allergies. I've had them my whole life, and when you've never known anything different, you don't really realize that eating doesn't always have to hurt. It's nothing abnormal for you - you have no baseline for comparison. And now that I know how big of a difference it makes, it makes it so you can really see how many people suffer from the same symptoms but have absolutely no idea. The blood test, for me, was mostly pretty accurate and is a quick and easy way to get you 90% of the way there. I'm no doctor and this is not medical advice, but if you have any question, I'd highly recommend looking into it.
And, yeah, I've thought the same thing for a long time - that I find it pretty hard to believe that glyphosate plays no part in the amount of allergies we're seeing nowadays. It's one of the big reasons why I think GMOs are things to avoid. The organism itself may be harmless, but it enables the use of other stuff like glyphosate. Not to mention the stupid intellectual property laws we have in the USA where you can patent self-replicating (and, indeed, cross-contaminating) organisms.
But, I digress.
Needless to say, wearing a super awesome amazing-looking wool kilt or the wool kilt hose I'd like to is not worth the risk of developing a new allergy. I've got enough of them already, and my body's quite good at making up new ones. Once I started developing a wool sensitivity, I ditched wool about as fast as I could. Which leads to this project.
-
-
11th March 20, 08:44 PM
#7
That is some list of allergies! You make me feel lucky that I only have a gluten sensitivity. The only reason I know it that I went off of gluten to lose a few pounds. Then I watched a laundry list of heath problems disappear, the I thought were old age. Even my memory got better.
Dave
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks