FionaShedden wrote:Mismatched is a fashion statement right
Ms_Mudd wrote:Definitely not camo here either, my son would not be impressed with me. He also gets paid to wear camo.
I realised my lack of cheery colour choice extends further than bushwalking when a colleague last night stated she knows I don't wear a certain scrub top she gifted me as I always wear plain colours. Ooops. I need to lighten up
slparker wrote:Similarly, was paid to wear splodgy green and brown clothes for some time but refused to use any army equipment for bushwalking.
north-north-west wrote:One of the weirdest sights one experiences in the Victorian bush is a deer hunter out in full camo, including balaclava, beanie and gloves ... topped with a hi-vis vest.![]()
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stry wrote:north-north-west wrote:One of the weirdest sights one experiences in the Victorian bush is a deer hunter out in full camo, including balaclava, beanie and gloves ... topped with a hi-vis vest.![]()
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The answer to the apparent contradiction is simple. Deer don't see blaze orange as we see it, and consequently, the colour does not alarm them. The pale colour of human faces and hands, does however contrast sharply with the surrounds.
ribuck wrote:What surprises me is the number of people who wear black while walking under the hot sun. Wearing black in the sunshine is the most reliable way to become uncomfortably hot.
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