I watched a few videos on youtube on how to find and fix holes in your waders. Well I found only one hole in my waders, I kind of knew the general area of where the water was coming in. Well today I spent some time fixing my waders. I had to flip the waders inside out and put them up hanging from our back stairs railing. I then proceeded to fill the waders with water in order to find the leak. The wader kept filling and filling, no leaks yet. Kept filling them all the way to the waist and finally I spot the leak. It's right under the seat portion of the waders. It's a small tear on the seam tap. It must have been those five tacos and the horchata I had the previous night or it could have been a combination of all the special gaseous moments. Anyhow, after the waders were completely dry, I put a nice coating of UV Repair. I think this was only the third repair I have done on these waders (Simms G3), I've had them for quite a long time. My girlfriend was saying to just buy a new pair hehe... Yeah, I thought about buying a new pair, but I could spend that money elsewhere, and my waders still have a few miles left in them, plus they have some good fish mojo on them.
This is a photo of the infamous soggy bottom culprit. This tiny tear on the seam left me sitting in a puddle of water, wet underwear, and wet fleece pants while on a recent float tubing trip.
Bottom line
Tube of UV Wader repair about $8
New pair of Simms G3 waders about $400+
Stinky old waders with lots of fish mojo... Priceless