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Best thing about winter? You can always add heat. (Photo: Inga Hendrickson)
This gear will help you survive a night (or two or three) in the snow.
Built for Arctic conditions by a company with a long heritage in polar exploration, this is one of Fjällräven’s warmest, most rugged jackets. A full 23 ounces of 800-fill down are sandwiched between a waxed, recycled poly-cotton blend that’s wind and water resistant.
This space heater is the most innovative we’ve seen. Based on a traditional Korean furnace, the propane-fueled Giga Sun pumps out 23,000 BTUs in a 360-degree radius.
Canada Goose made this posh lid warm enough to be worn at either of the poles. It’s lined with sheep shearling, and the DWR-coated poly-cotton exterior sheds falling sleet and snow.
The heart of Baffin’s iconic extreme-weather boot is the company’s signature eight-layer removable lining, inspired by Inuit sealskin footwear. Its insulating layers wick moisture, while a double-layer aluminum membrane traps heat.
This expedition-grade bag was designed to be the warmest on the planet. And with 52.9 ounces of responsibly sourced 900-fill goose down, a contoured hood, and a comfort rating of minus 60 degrees, it probably is.
A super-insulating bison undercoat makes these eminently winter-ready.
These fully seam-sealed resort pants are the last word in warmth. Synthetic insulation and interior metallic dots reflect body heat, so your seat stays warm on ass-numbingly slow lift rides.
This thermos’s copper coating and foil liner keep your coffee piping hot.
These weren’t made for shoveling the driveway. Stuffed with 540 grams of PrimaLoft Kodenshi, the Absolute and its comfort zone of minus 40 degrees will fend off frostbite high in the mountains.