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Thread: "Crazy" Things

  1. #11
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    The trampoline in the back garden is always a no go area for me while kilted :rolleyes:
    All the Best.....David.
    Why be part of the crowd Choose a Freelander Sporran
    A Member of the Caledonian Society of Norway
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  2. #12
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    I was a bar that had two stories a couple of weeks ago for my rugby team's monthly bar night. The event organizer called me over and we started talking for a while until we coudl hear the buzz from below starting to build and that's when we realized that everyone had gathered at the foot of the balcony trying to figure out what I really had going on underneath the kilt....

    ....and it was 18 degrees outside

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Breecher
    Otherwise, I've been swimming, snowshoeing, cliff diving, and of course long-distance hiking in a kilt.
    Man, you’re rough on your kilts.

  4. #14
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    Kold and Kilts

    As I walked across the university campus to work, with the temps this past week almost down to 0 degrees F (-18 or degrees C), I did get a few strange looks, but it seemed only from women. Maybe they knew how it would have felt, had they been wearing a skirt. Regardless, it didn't feel uncomfortable to me, since I had on long wool socks.

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Breecher
    ...Otherwise, I've been swimming, snowshoeing, cliff diving, and of course long-distance hiking in a kilt.

    Andrew.
    Wouldnt your kilt get rather heavy while swimming??? to have all that fabric swirling around your legs, soaking wet, it would weigh a ton & drag you down a bit, i would think....
    ITS A KILT, G** D*** IT!
    WARNING: I RUN WITH SCISSORS
    “I asked Mom if I was a gifted child… she said they certainly wouldn’t have paid for me."

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by UmAnOnion
    Wouldnt your kilt get rather heavy while swimming??? to have all that fabric swirling around your legs, soaking wet, it would weigh a ton & drag you down a bit, i would think....
    True, but it was either that or skinny-dip at a public beach with lots of kids around. It was hot, and I wanted to swim!

    Andrew.

  7. #17
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    Geez.....these are kilts! Not disposal KLeenex Andrew! How did the water affect the kilt after swimming?

  8. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by 646guy
    Geez.....these are kilts! Not disposal KLeenex Andrew! How did the water affect the kilt after swimming?
    It was a poly-viscose Bear kilt. It dried within two hours of me wearing it after getting out of the water, pleats intact. Same as after I jumped off the rope swing. Same as when I wore it backpacking over thirty miles through a snowstorm. Same as when I wore it backpacking through seven straight days of torrential rain. Same as when I forded three waist-deep rivers a day for a week in it.

    I treat my kilts like clothes. They're tough garments, and I'm tough on them. They keep coming back for more. I was always inspired by Bear's slogan: "Kilts are clothing, not costumes!" Why should I treat them like porcelain kittens? They were designed to be worn in the rough Highlands: slept in, rained on, building houses in, tending farms in.... My goal is to put 8,000 backpacking miles on one of my Bear kilts, and I have no doubt it will pull through - I can't think of many other articles of clothing that would take such abuse!

    Andrew.

  9. #19
    NewKilt's Avatar
    NewKilt is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    The only comment I got was from a women who told me I was going to freeze my legs. It was about 8 F outside, and I was wearing my Stillwater black heavyweight. I told her that my legs were warmer than if I were wearing pants. I don't think she believed me. She was probably thinking how she would feel if she were wearing a skirt.

    Darrell

  10. #20
    Southern Breeze's Avatar
    Southern Breeze is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    As I've alread said, climbing ladders is possibly the "craziest" thing I've done. I've noticed that most people think that simply wearing a kilt in cold or bad weather is crazy.
    I agree with Andrew- treat your kilts like clothes.

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