Yes, with its open structure, it should be easy to clean. Nothing as nice as the feel and look of polished wood. And, it won't freeze your hands in winter!
Never had freezing hands being in the desert. I'm at the opposite end of the scale where I get skin burns from hot objects.
I normally carry a microfiber towel in my hip pocket to grab the black CF tripod leg as it gets too uncomfortable for me to carry when hot out, and to wipe off any sweat or dust. Desert heat and dust from the blowing afternoon winds is a mess. RRS should have included a foam wrap on one leg that some others do, but given they started out in a cool coastal town of San Luis Obispo, CA they probably never considered that - and still don't (ahem!). Maybe their move to Utah will make them reconsider adding one or even an optional addition.. ProMediaGear offers optional leg wraps for three legs for about $40.
Aside, the ASTM C1055 (Standard Guide for Heated System Surface Conditions that Produce Contact Burn Injuries) recommends that a pipe surface temperature remain at or below 140°F. The reasoning is that the average person can touch a 140°F surface for up to five seconds without sustaining irreversible burn damage. Of course, some calloused oil field worker may tolerate it more.
Curiosity got me to pull out the IR heat gun and take the temp off the wooden and CF tripod legs as both were sitting outside in 100°F degree heat. Also checked it later at 105°F degrees.
100°F degree ambient in sunlight:
Wooden leg reads 109°F
Carbon fiber leg reads 129°F
105°F degree ambient in sunlight:
Wooden leg reads 119°F
Carbon fiber leg reads
143°F <-- OUCH!
I sort of expected the 105°F would be my top end limit to handle the CF tripod. I couldn't grab that leg for more than a couple of seconds. I've encountered that issue on some shoot with bikini models in the desert when it was 110°F. That was miserable and my Nikon D800E LCD went to an inky black from the heat, but luckily it cleared up once it cooled down. I called it off early at 1PM as the makeup woman brought bologna sandwiches and pop in a large ice chest and we got lazy and sat around on bags of ice to cool off.
It's expected to maybe hit 110°F later today or this week so I may read it there too. I expect 'burn city' on CF by then and towel time to grab it but might be interesting to see where the wood tripod gets up too. Sort of glad now I didn't go for a darker, and more expensive, Rosewood model that the darker wood might get a bit hotter than the lighter maple.
I could drive to Death Valley N.P. as it may hit 125°F out there to test it - but maybe not. They can keep it.
Later the next day...
Next day it hit 115°F and wood tripod got up to 126°F, and CF tripod was at 149°F and too hot to touch for very long (Got out kitchen hot pad to move it indoors.).
Still waiting on FedEx to deliver my LegWraps for the CF tripod. Seems it was too hot for FedEx and they delayed routing for a day which was a new one.
One thing I noted on the CF tripod was when fully extended, I can thump a leg in the middle and feel the low-frequency vibrations off it if I barely leave my fingers on the leg while thumping it. If I wrap the leg with a wrist-weight it is less. The LegWrap guys should make a wrap with maybe some lead shot in it to dampen the vibes a bit, but how much and it could be different for different legs and models - and we're back to adding mass being the savior for vibes. The center hook weight does little to help with the CF leg vibes compared to weighting down each leg, imho.