There’s nothing quite like walking up on a refreshing gurgling spring on a hot summer’s day, eagerly drinking after sweating through miles of trail. But what about in the dead of winter, when you’re so chilly you’re moving just fast enough to keep warm? When every icy sip slides from your mouth down to your belly, reminding you how cold you already are?
Here’s the dangerous truth: your body’s thirst response is significantly diminished in cold weather. You don’t feel thirsty even as you become progressively dehydrated. Meanwhile, you’re losing substantial water through several mechanisms most people don’t consider:
Respiratory water loss: In cold, dry air, you lose remarkable amounts of water through breathing—exhaling visible vapor with every breath. At high altitude, this loss accelerates dramatically.
Increased urination: Cold temperatures trigger your body to constrict blood vessels in your extremities and redirect blood to your core. Your kidneys respond by producing more urine (called “cold diuresis”), depleting your hydration even as you think you’re drinking enough.
Hidden perspiration: Even when you’re not visibly sweating, your body is working incredibly hard to maintain core temperature, generate heat, and function under the stress of cold conditions. You’re losing water even if you can’t see it.
The result? Many winter backpackers become dangerously dehydrated without realizing it until symptoms appear—fatigue, poor decision-making, increased cold sensitivity (dehydration impairs your body’s ability to stay warm), and increased susceptibility to frostbite and hypothermia.
STAYING HYDRATED IN THE COLD
If you’re struggling to drink enough water due to cold temperatures, try these strategies:
- Heat water on your stove and carry it in an insulated bottle—warm water is far more appealing and helps maintain core temperature
- Add flavor (electrolyte powder, tea, hot cocoa) to make cold water more palatable
- Set hydration goals: drink at every break, whether you feel thirsty or not
- Monitor your urine color—dark yellow means you’re behind on hydration
- Keep your water bottle inside your jacket, bag, or pack to prevent freezing
- Drink before you’re thirsty—by the time you feel thirsty, you’re already dehydrated
Plan ahead: know where your water sources are, carry a reliable purification system that works in cold temperatures (filters are fragile – protect them from freezing), and pace your intake throughout the day. Hydration isn’t just about survival—it’s the key to thriving in the backcountry, regardless of season or temperature.
Drink plenty of water! Water is life.
