I'm trying to dial in my exposure protection for winter Lake Tahoe diving. It gets down to (and is currently) 39F, pretty much from the surface on down. I've taken a number of steps to boost my thermal protection and have successfully done 90 minute dives at this temp without getting too chilly. BUT the bottoms of feet get cold right where my insulation compresses when I'm frog kicking. I'm experimenting with some cheap insoles stuffed into my socks, but I'm curious if anyone has advice in this area.
My setup:
TL;DR. I'm diving in cold water and frog kicking while doing so, which makes the bottom of my feet get cold. Any tips?
My setup:
- Trilam drysuit
- Expedition weight baselayer top and bottom
- Santi BZ400x undergarment
- Smartwool expedition weight socks
- Fourth Element Arctic socks
- Drysuit has 3mm compressed neoprene socks
- Size 13 NRS paddle boots (up two sizes from my normal boots to accommodate the extra insulation)
- KUBI dry gloves
- Wool + 40g Thinsulate gloves I found on Amazon (these work really well)
- Waterproof 10mm hood (the sweet orange one)
TL;DR. I'm diving in cold water and frog kicking while doing so, which makes the bottom of my feet get cold. Any tips?