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| Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 1 [30 messages per page] Muskie Fishing -> General Discussion -> What kind of gloves does every use when it gets cold out? |
| Message Subject: What kind of gloves does every use when it gets cold out? | |||
| Maverick |
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Posts: 49 Location: Waconia, MN | Just curious as to what people use while casting to keep there hands warm | ||
| ToddM |
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Posts: 20278 Location: oswego, il | I use the ice armor gloves. They are bulky but they do work, I just get used to them. | ||
| welldriller |
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Posts: 402 Location: Eagle River, WI | I use sheer will power to keep my hands warm. I just can't get comfortable fishing with gloves, so I fish until I can't take it anymore and then I take a break for a minute or two and then continue fishing. | ||
| esoxfly |
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Posts: 1663 Location: Kodiak, AK | I like neoprene to keep the hands warm while wet. Wool works awesome as well, and is what I wear when steelhead or salmon fishing. | ||
| dtaijo174 |
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Posts: 1169 Location: New Hope MN | NO COTTON | ||
| sorenson |
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Posts: 1764 Location: Ogden, Ut | Fingerless ragg wool | ||
| bridgeman |
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Posts: 529 Location: Not Where I Want To Be | Cabelas Camoskinz | ||
| tmusky |
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Posts: 55 | fleece fingerless gloves from orvis. less bulky than ragg wool. made for flyfisherman but work great. other companies probably make them as well. | ||
| Chasin50 |
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Posts: 378 Location: Michigan | Seal Skinz | ||
| JRedig |
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Location: Twin Cities | Glacier glove fleece lined neoprene. | ||
| h20wolf |
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Posts: 126 | The seal skins are good to a certain temp but if it's too cold the outside of the glove holds water and feels cold on your hands. I have used 2 pair of seal skins... a larger pair over top of the first pair. Glacier glove is better when it's too cold though. | ||
| W8N4SNO |
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Posts: 118 Location: Minnesota | Blue Latex surgical gloves inside of a pair of ice armor gloves. | ||
| Lee Tauchen |
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| Cabelas Camoskinz without a doubt. 80 gram Thinsulate and Goretex. They eventually get wet halfway through the day, so have a second pair ready to switch out. This has worked the best for me after trying everything. Hope this helps. Lee Tauchen http://leetauchen.com | |||
| wisriverrat |
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Posts: 378 Location: On the River | Ice Armour I keep 3 or 4 pairs in the boat Seal skin gloves don't work very well. | ||
| WI Skis |
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Posts: 547 Location: Oshkosh | Im with Sorno, fingerless ragg wool. Peter | ||
| Jomusky |
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Posts: 1185 Location: Wishin I Was Fishin' | fingerless wool and a pair of deer hide choppers to go over the top when it gets real cold...I will look for the Cabelas Camoskins though. | ||
| Lakeshore Lure Co. |
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Location: Chicago, IL | ditto on the Seal Skinz | ||
| esox23 |
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Posts: 267 Location: Right behind you (tap, tap) BOOO | Fingerless Ragwool here too, keep multiple pairs in the boat. Esox23 | ||
| marine_1 |
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Posts: 699 Location: Hugo, MN | ICE ARMOUR! | ||
| BNelson |
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Location: Contrarian Island | I have the camoskinz Lee mentions above..they do eventually soak thru but are thin and don't get in the way....my glove arsenal might be a bit overkill...I usually have 5 pairs of assorted varieties on my boat bag, and another 5 -10 pairs in a ziploc for the tough guys like Sled who jump in w/ no gloves ; ) ....for milder days, fingerless wool ones, colder days I have the camo skinz, and Ice Armor gloves, I wore those last weekend casting when it was 32 and they weren't that bulky...can never have too many dry gloves along in the fall...... | ||
| Reef Hawg |
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Posts: 3518 Location: north central wisconsin | Once air hits 38 been running a pair of North Face titanium Goretex/thins. and they have been great, if a tad bulky. I troll with the Ice Armor mits or fleet farm deer hide choppers with wool/thins liners. | ||
| muskie24/7 |
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Posts: 909 | sorenson - 10/13/2009 9:02 AM Fingerless ragg wool I've been wearing these for 30 years during cold months! When they get wet you just ring them out and your warm again! Brian | ||
| rockpt |
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Posts: 20 | Used latex surgical gloves last week at LOTW while jigging eyes and I was surprised how well they worked. Hands stayed dry and kept the cold air from direct contact with skin. And they're hookless and waterproof. $3.99 for a box of 50. Muskie trolling I like Under Armor liners (great wicking) under a pair of polypro. Seal Skinz and Glacier Gloves are good, too. | ||
| Murph |
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| What ever type of gloves you choose, the key is to have several pairs to change when they get too wet. I also like the fingerless gloves, I have a pair sold at REI that are made for mountain climbing, which seems to be applicable when chasing muskies. | |||
| Windburn |
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Posts: 115 Location: Birch Run | I wear frosty grip work gloves, rubber coated grips (waterproof), cheap are can handle fish with them and change lures without taking them off. | ||
| Guest |
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| fingerless wool gloves from the army surplus store they also have ultra thin wool gloves that fit under the wool gloves. They are like $5 a pair and are warm even when wet. s | |||
| esoxaddict |
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Posts: 8863 | I've been using the Glacier Gloves, with limited success. They last a couple hours in the rain before water gets in there, and another few hours before you can actually dump the water out of the glove. I use the polypro liners under the glacier gloves when it's really cold, and keep a spare pair of each in a ziplock bag for when the first pair gets soaked. That will get me though the day. When you get off the water though, you have to turn them inside out and squeeze the water out, soaking it up with a towel or something. If you don't, they start out wet the next day, and that's no fun. By the third or fourth day fishing in the rain? You don't want to put your hands in there! I've tried the fingerless wool gloves, but they don't really seem to do anythhing except soak up water. For trolling? Nothing beats the millitary issue leather gloves with the wool liners. The ones they used to sell at the Army Surplus stores were great. Now the leather outers they sell are kind of cheap, so I've resorted to using the wool liner with a pair of insulated leather gloves I bought at Kohl's over top. I think Brad has it nailed. Keep a bunch of different gloves, because they're all going to get wet eventually. The thing I hate about all of them is they are bulky -- casting all day makes for some cramped up hands because you're fighting with the gloves. Edited by esoxaddict 10/16/2009 2:00 PM | ||
| RiverMan |
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Posts: 1504 Location: Oregon | I like wool gloves because I can still maintain all my dexterity needed to feel what is going on with the rod, work the reel, etc. Wool is surprisingly warm and if they get wet you can slap them against something and nearly all the water will come out. Keep a propane heater close by to take the edge off as needed. There are much warmer gloves out there but you lose alot of control. Jed | ||
| nwick |
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Posts: 59 Location: WI | I like mechanic's gloves with fingers. Good for handling fish as well. | ||
| gus_webb |
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Posts: 225 Location: Nordeast Minneapolis | I picked up a pair of neoprene fishing gloves from sierra trading post (pretty easy to find). They were about $10 a pair, and you can fold the fingertips back, if needed... Couldn't be happier, really. For casting, folding one thumb back means the rest of my hand stays warm, and remarkably warm at that. | ||
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