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Reddit mentions of Sea to Summit Mosquito Head Net, Mosquito Head Net with Insect Shield

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 6

We found 6 Reddit mentions of Sea to Summit Mosquito Head Net, Mosquito Head Net with Insect Shield. Here are the top ones.

Sea to Summit Mosquito Head Net, Mosquito Head Net with Insect Shield
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    Features:
  • Mosquito head net treated with Insect Shield permethrin repellant, proven effective at repelling ticks, fleas, flies and mosquitoes
  • Multi-filament polyester mesh is soft, comfortable and affords high visibility
  • Very fine hexagonal mesh with 500 holes per square inch provides maximum airflow but keeps bugs out
  • Elasticized draw cord closure ensures optimum fit
  • Wide enough to accommodate a hat (not included), stores compactly in included stuff sack
Specs:
ColorInsect Shield
Height13.78 Inches
Length19.69 Inches
SizeWith Insect Shield
Weight0.06 Pounds
Width13.78 Inches

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Found 6 comments on Sea to Summit Mosquito Head Net, Mosquito Head Net with Insect Shield:

u/JMJACO · 2 pointsr/Ultralight

Hey no problem! Patagonia makes a bunch of different weights of baselayers (https://www.patagonia.com/shop/mens-baselayers), and other gear that can serve as day shirts or baselayers (such as the Tropic Comfort Hoody https://www.patagonia.com/product/mens-tropic-comfort-hoody-ii/52123.html, or the Sunshade Technical Hoody https://www.patagonia.com/product/mens-sunshade-technical-hoody/52657.html), but all of the ones that are not labeled lightweight baselayer are marginally heavier, for different tradeoffs and features. Definitely an interesting and very well thought out product line in their totality, and always includes the killer Patagonia warranty (which is part of the reason their stuff is so expensive, aside from the fact they try to source and produce stuff ethically, which naturally costs more).

The S2S bug net was the lightest weight robust thing I could find to pair with a tarp that would keep out bugs and nightly scavengers (which seems necessary for the AT, but not the PCT per se).

Speaking of bugs, one thing that I think might be worth investing in for the AT as well is the S2S Mosquito Headnet with Insect Shield (https://www.amazon.com/Sea-Summit-Mosquito-Insect-Shield/dp/B003F5WGNG/), which is about .8oz. Would provide nice help combating all of the bugs on AT while you're walking during the day in the parts where it might otherwise be really annoying.

u/cwcoleman · 2 pointsr/CampingandHiking

The Olympics definitely have a mosquito / fly season. It can get nasty out there. July 4th is about right, maybe a few weeks later, after the snow has melted but before things dry out too thoroughly.

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I would recommend a head net. They are the only thing that keeps me sane when the bugs are bad.

u/ETeeski · 1 pointr/Ultralight

Basically anything except cotton. I have a pair of pants that say "100% nylon with teflon coating" that are great. Polyester would probably also be good. Basically, you'll have to go by "feel". Find something that isn't cotton, then ask "is this tough/thick enough that most bugs won't bite me through this?" and "is this light enough that I won't get overly hot in it?". And get yourself a bug head net, in black. they usually come in green, but black is easier to see through. here's an example amazon link

u/PerennialPangolin · 1 pointr/gardening

Do your best to eliminate standing water in your yard, as this is where mosquitoes breed. Even things like saucers from potted plants can be mosquito breeding grounds if water is left standing in them for long enough (about a week, from what I understand).

After a particularly bad mosquito year, I bought a head net (similar to this one), which helps in particularly buggy situations. Other than that I mostly use DEET-containing big sprays, although I’ve found some of the more natural repellants (the ones with essential oils) seem to work well enough if the mosquitoes aren’t too bad to begin with.