I think I know its name: Mountain Hardwear’s Monkey Woman Jacket ($115; www.mountainhardwear.com), a piece made with an extremely lofty, warm fleece material called Polartec Thermal Pro. It’s a little bulky, but is near perfect either on its own or under a shell—especially under a shell, as it’s not windproof. Another good choice would be L.L. Bean’s Mountain Guide Fleece Jacket ($99; www.llbean.com), made with another excellent Polartec fabric: Wind Pro 300. That’s about the heaviest fleece made, one that’s woven very tightly to keep out all but the stiffest breezes.
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If you’re looking for something warm for those slower moments, though, you might think a little outside the box. It’s very hard to beat a light down sweater for its weight/warmth ratio—sweater in this case really meaning jacket, though not essentially weighty enough to be a tried-and-true jacket. Get it? Gear-marketing semantics aside, Patagonia’s Down Jacket weighs a mere one pound, stuffs down to the size of a grapefruit, and is far warmer than any fleece jacket out there ($199; www.patagonia.com). Probably too warm to hike in, and not a good rain piece, but if you can bear lugging a little extra gear it would prove to be an extremely useful piece. Heck, you could make up the weight by packing a lighter sleeping bag and using the down jacket as a nighttime warming piece. Marmot’s Women’s Down Sweater is a tad heavier (one pound two ounces) than the Patagonia piece and about the same insulation rating, and sells for $160 (www.marmot.com). Either would keep you extremely toasty.
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