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Warm gloves
Here is an answer about warm gloves (without the long thread of chit chat);
1) Mittens or lobster claws definitely help keep the fingers warmer. Some of these are rather porous and let the wind through, so they are to be avoided. 2) Layers are good for the hands also! A very thin silk liner glove inside a mitten will work wonders. Just like the rest of the body , it's all about keeping the skin dry, and the hands can perspire quite a bit. On colder days, thin wool gloves (I use Smartwool) as liners work even better. I sometimes wear all 3 layers. 3) Just a note on feet; a coolmax liner sock, or other wicking sock is essential to warm feet. gr |
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On 2004-12-09, gr penned:
Here is an answer about warm gloves (without the long thread of chit chat); 1) Mittens or lobster claws definitely help keep the fingers warmer. Some of these are rather porous and let the wind through, so they are to be avoided. 2) Layers are good for the hands also! A very thin silk liner glove inside a mitten will work wonders. Just like the rest of the body , it's all about keeping the skin dry, and the hands can perspire quite a bit. On colder days, thin wool gloves (I use Smartwool) as liners work even better. I sometimes wear all 3 layers. 3) Just a note on feet; a coolmax liner sock, or other wicking sock is essential to warm feet. gr Yup. I visited Gart's (not impressed by their selection, but you never know), then dropped by a backcountry store I'd almost forgotten. There, I found GraniteGear mittens, and the store guy recommended Marmot power stretch gloves as the wickingest underglove he'd ever used. I asked him about gloves with heater-thing pockets. He shrugged and said, that's a cop-out for gloves that don't keep you warm enough. I like that answer. http://www.granitegear.com/products/...ts/index.shtml My husband tried them on and promptly announced that "You are gonna be so friggin' warm in these things." Sounds good to me. I get to test these out on Saturday =) yippie! As for point three, I have nice, thin, wicking socks. -- monique Longmont, CO |
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gr wrote:
Here is an answer about warm gloves (without the long thread of chit chat); 1) Mittens or lobster claws definitely help keep the fingers warmer. Some of these are rather porous and let the wind through, so they are to be avoided. 2) Layers are good for the hands also! A very thin silk liner glove inside a mitten will work wonders. Just like the rest of the body , it's all about keeping the skin dry, and the hands can perspire quite a bit. On colder days, thin wool gloves (I use Smartwool) as liners work even better. I sometimes wear all 3 layers. 3) Just a note on feet; a coolmax liner sock, or other wicking sock is essential to warm feet. gr I agree with the mittens with layers. I was at Whistler when it was very cold and my hands were freezing despite having good gloves. I purchased some mittens and they outperformed my gloves noticebly. I then hit another cold period (I think ten below was the warmest it got) in Big Sky and it was mittens all week. Fred |
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On Wed, 08 Dec 2004 21:42:37 -0600, "Monique Y. Mudama"
wrote: On 2004-12-09, gr penned: Here is an answer about warm gloves (without the long thread of chit chat); 1) Mittens or lobster claws definitely help keep the fingers warmer. Some of these are rather porous and let the wind through, so they are to be avoided. 2) Layers are good for the hands also! A very thin silk liner glove inside a mitten will work wonders. Just like the rest of the body , it's all about keeping the skin dry, and the hands can perspire quite a bit. On colder days, thin wool gloves (I use Smartwool) as liners work even better. I sometimes wear all 3 layers. 3) Just a note on feet; a coolmax liner sock, or other wicking sock is essential to warm feet. gr Yup. I visited Gart's (not impressed by their selection, but you never know), then dropped by a backcountry store I'd almost forgotten. There, I found GraniteGear mittens, and the store guy recommended Marmot power stretch gloves as the wickingest underglove he'd ever used. I asked him about gloves with heater-thing pockets. He shrugged and said, that's a cop-out for gloves that don't keep you warm enough. I like that answer. http://www.granitegear.com/products/...ts/index.shtml My husband tried them on and promptly announced that "You are gonna be so friggin' warm in these things." Sounds good to me. I get to test these out on Saturday =) yippie! Sweet! I really hope that they work out for you, and I think they will. If they are like mine, another advantage is that you can easily remove the liner (s) at lunch or brunch so that they can dry out. An interesting sidenote, I bought my GG gloves directly from the factory in Two Harbors, Minnesota. Purchased a stuff sack for my -20 sleeping bag at the same time. An excellent stuff sack that compresses the hell out of my sleeping bag, and it also looks as good as when I bought it (probably 1996-7 or so). I'd stopped for the stuff sack, the gloves were an impulse buy, as me and my friend were in route to do a couple days overnight up by Lutsen in a tent and it was FREEZING cold! Brrr. A midwest Tele yoyo tour. It was all good till my friends Saab refused to start at the remote parking lot the second morning. As a last gasp effort, we put my MSR under his oil pan and cranked it all the way up ... luckily just then one of those much maligned Suburbans pulled in with jumper cables and saved our asses from futher freezation. At the time, they (GG) had 5 or six people on one side of the building sewing all sorts of stuff together, and a tiny little shop on the other side of the building with demo's of all their products. It was all for sale if you were willing to pay retail. Pretty cool to see the company when it was small and just starting up. I'm sure those jobs have all been shipped overseas by now. Anyway, let us know how they work out for you, eh? nate |
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