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Cold weather gloves
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<blockquote data-quote="TheLBLman" data-source="post: 4666230" data-attributes="member: 1409"><p>On stand, very lightweight (thin) merino wool liner gloves.</p><p>As much as possible, I keep my hands in a pocket, and there is a disposable hand-warmer in those pockets.</p><p></p><p>In very cold weather, I may go to a little heavier weight wool glove.</p><p>In rainy weather, may go to a lightweight (non-insulated) Gore-Tex glove,</p><p>but usually just wear wool gloves even in rain.</p><p></p><p>About those hand-warmers, I like the 18-24-hr ones.</p><p>They put out twice the heat as the 6-10-hr ones.</p><p>You can zip them up in a zip-lock sandwich bag around mid-morning (if not needed),</p><p>then reuse them later in the afternoon, and maybe even the next morning.</p><p>Or if opened for an afternoon hunt, zip them up, and still use same ones next morning.</p><p></p><p></p><p> :?: Allergic to wool or silk?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TheLBLman, post: 4666230, member: 1409"] On stand, very lightweight (thin) merino wool liner gloves. As much as possible, I keep my hands in a pocket, and there is a disposable hand-warmer in those pockets. In very cold weather, I may go to a little heavier weight wool glove. In rainy weather, may go to a lightweight (non-insulated) Gore-Tex glove, but usually just wear wool gloves even in rain. About those hand-warmers, I like the 18-24-hr ones. They put out twice the heat as the 6-10-hr ones. You can zip them up in a zip-lock sandwich bag around mid-morning (if not needed), then reuse them later in the afternoon, and maybe even the next morning. Or if opened for an afternoon hunt, zip them up, and still use same ones next morning. :?: Allergic to wool or silk? [/QUOTE]
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Cold weather gloves
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