I like my swany mitts. They are super durable and super warm on really cols days. I also have a pair of regular swany spring gloves that are good for the warmer days. The mitts have an all leather palm which is nice...
I like my swany mitts. They are super durable and super warm on really cols days. I also have a pair of regular swany spring gloves that are good for the warmer days. The mitts have an all leather palm which is nice...
"Hear and you forget; see and you remember; do and you understand."
Like Zappa I have a pair of Lowe Strangegloves (mine are even some samples) that while they didn't last as long as his saw me through ~5 seasons of hard use, including ice climbing a bit. They're highly patched/seamgripped but remain my backup pair. [xover]Best. Gloves. Ever[/xover] I would spend 200 on a new pair in a heartbeat. Right now I have BD's and they're fine, probably 2.5 seasons old. They just pale in comparison to the strangegloves.
"It is not the result that counts! It is not the result but the spirit! Not what - but how. Not what has been attained - but at what price.
- A. Solzhenitsyn
or
bitches.
work great here in the dry CO climate. Something else is that my gloves may look wet, but are totally dry/warm inside. More expensive "waterproof" gloves are the exact opposite.
These are what I just replaced - they split on the seam by the thumb. And the wrists are too short. Though I probably got 120 days or so out of them, so I guess that's reasonable. I also thought the heater pockets weren't that useful - too far away from your actual fingers - it worked better to just put the heater packs on the backs of my hands or something.
I ended up getting Mountain Hardwear Absolute Zero mitts, but with all of one day's use so far, durability remains to be seen.
And Mr.AG has gone through a lot of Dakine gloves. They seem to tear at the palm pretty easily, but they're cheap and he doesn't like anything too thick or warm, so he likes them.
"Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming, "Wow, what a Ride!"
the snoseal seems to wear off, but even without being snosealed they do pretty well (here in CO...)
fully agree with this. I had more than a few days where the kincos looked totally soaked, and I kept expecting my hands to get wet/cold, but they never did.
they're as warm as the marmot ultimate gloves, and for $10, if you loose em, no biggie
i warrantied my last Burton leather gloves after the stitching blew out in a finger after probably 60 days or so.....and they replaced them with these
So far so good, not a ton of loft but they keep me warm once the blood starts flowing. I sealed them with Hestra snow-seal.
Gloves just won't last forever, but if they last a shorter time then I would expect, I send them in with a nice note.
Let me lock in the system at Warp 2
Push it on into systematic overdrive
You know what to do
I second the Dakine gloves. You have to search for the best they make but since they are geared more towards snowboarding they hold up great. I have a pair I have had for 8 years and their still my favorite gloves -- plus another new pair waiting until needed. Some are Gore-tex and the price is about $80 so its a pretty good deal.
Nice features like the removable liners and goggle wipes are nice too. They have a roomy fit so they give your hands a little wiggle room so that they keep your hands warmer than most gloves I've found by Marmot, Mountain Hardware, etc since they tend to have a tighter fit.
Long ago I saw a really burly pair of Burton gloves but they were roughly $120 so I passed. To this day I wish I bought them cause I have never found such a well-made glove. I'm not sure what their top ot the line gloves are like today -- most I have found weren't anywhere near as good.
Just in general look for the higher end snowboarding gloves. They tend to be made to take more abuse.
Cheap, pure, bees-wax BTW:
Use it before you put them in a toilet...
The best gloves I ever owned were the Mont-Bell Storm gloves. They don't make them anymore, but they lasted for 7 seasons. I loved the Cloudveil Troller glove, but after one season they started wetting out big time and now they're starting to pack out. I have 1.5 seasons on the Cloudveil RPK glove now and they seem to be holding out better than anything else I've tried so far.
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