Ski Goggles
There’s a running joke around ski towns that goes something like this: How do you tell a tourist on the slopes? They’re the ones wearing sunglasses. Locals almost always prefer goggles, except when they are ski touring in the spring when full-coverage sunglasses will work, too. Even when hiking for their turns in the warmer weather, most locals will only wear the sunglasses on the way up and will change to goggles for the trip back down.
Goggle Fog Prevention
Goggles should be on your face or in your pocket, not on your forehead or around your neck - because your head is hot! The heat and moisture get trapped inside the goggle, increasing the temperature inside. When you put the goggle back on your face, there is too much moisture for the goggle foam to wick away, and the cold temperature outside the goggle works against the heat trapped inside your goggle, creating fog. Even worse, on super cold days that fog can freeze between the lenses of double lensed goggles, and then you are stuck not being able to see until you can get to a lodge and warm them up and dry them out.
Goggle Cleaning
It is really not a good idea to wipe the inside of your goggle lens. All goggle lenses are treated with an anti-fog coating. Wiping the coating takes it off. It also increases the chance of scratching your lens. If you must wipe your lens, only use a goggle/eyewear cloth or the goggle bag they came in, and only do so ever so gently.
Goggle Storage
When you are done skiing, snowboarding, snowmobiling or whatever other activity your goggles have helped you enjoy, always put them back into the goggle bag that they come in. This will protect the lens from all your other gear, and from the surface of the table in the lodge.
Goggle Fit
Whenever you are buying a pair of goggles, be sure to bring your helmet or favorite hat into the store with you. As much as goggle manufacturers try to make their goggles nestle comfortably up against lots of helmet styles, they can’t account for every head and face shape.