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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Long Beards & Spurs
Fogged glasses are a pain
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<blockquote data-quote="fairchaser" data-source="post: 4603321" data-attributes="member: 10373"><p>I've looked at it in a mirror to try to figure out what happens. If you have the mask over your nose, then as you breathe, your exhale hits under the mask but a portion comes up between your nose and the gap just under your inner eye. This instantly fogs your glasses. The soap or cat crap you rub on your glasses helps the fog to disappear more quickly but each breath it returns creating a recurring problem. Even if you pull the mask under your nose, you still get some blow back on your glasses. The only solution is face paint that I can see. It's almost worse than the fog. I usually just fight it constantly rubbing my glasses until I calm down enough that it doesn't fog up. Cutting holes might help but my mask is very light mesh so it might not work but willing to try anything.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fairchaser, post: 4603321, member: 10373"] I’ve looked at it in a mirror to try to figure out what happens. If you have the mask over your nose, then as you breathe, your exhale hits under the mask but a portion comes up between your nose and the gap just under your inner eye. This instantly fogs your glasses. The soap or cat crap you rub on your glasses helps the fog to disappear more quickly but each breath it returns creating a recurring problem. Even if you pull the mask under your nose, you still get some blow back on your glasses. The only solution is face paint that I can see. It’s almost worse than the fog. I usually just fight it constantly rubbing my glasses until I calm down enough that it doesn’t fog up. Cutting holes might help but my mask is very light mesh so it might not work but willing to try anything. [/QUOTE]
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Long Beards & Spurs
Fogged glasses are a pain
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