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"Dan O'Connell" wrote in message
nk.net... This may be off topic (LOL) but does anyone have a favorite brand of very cold water/airtemp paddling gloves. I bought a pair of Marmot windproof/water resistant gloves this week..and froze the instant they got wet. Is neoprene the best...etc? I also have super lightweight pogies/mambas...so coupled with something else thinner and with tacky grip may be my goal? Thanks in advance...this group always has the best advice as usual....Dan O NRS Toaster Mitts. 'Nuff Said. -Paul |
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"Paul Skoczylas" wrote in message news:gssod.176803$df2.33143@edtnps89...
"Dan O'Connell" wrote in message nk.net... This may be off topic (LOL) but does anyone have a favorite brand of very cold water/airtemp paddling gloves. I bought a pair of Marmot windproof/water resistant gloves this week..and froze the instant they got wet. Is neoprene the best...etc? I also have super lightweight pogies/mambas...so coupled with something else thinner and with tacky grip may be my goal? Thanks in advance...this group always has the best advice as usual....Dan O NRS Toaster Mitts. Yep, I second the paddling mittens! From my site: The problem with pogies is that they usually either require teeth or the help of someone else to get your hands in them. If you do get your hands in them easily, so will the water... Pogies are of no use when you need to scout a rapid, as they stay attached to a paddle. I also find that when I need to get my hands out to grab someone or something, they get so cold so quickly that I lose some of the control in that hand. It's also not easy to get your hand back into them if you need to get your hand back in in the middle of a rapid. I have a pair of Walmart neoprene hunting gloves, but they are only used for when I handpaddle in the winter. The fingers are encased seperately, keeping them less warm. The fingers cannot touch the paddle, making you involuntarily grip your paddle harder, tiring your fingers. If you use gloves that don't have pre-bent fingers, you're also forcing your fingers to push against the neoprene even more, trying to keep them around the paddle shaft. I also find that with gloves I can't feel the buttons on my waterproof camera, which results in pictures not being taken. Plenty of reason for me not to use gloves when paddling with a normal paddle. Pre bent open palm mittens circumvent the problems of both gloves as well as pogies: You keep all your fingers together, keeping them warmer. You keep in direct touch with your paddle, keeping better control, and not having to squeeze extra hard to keep a hold of your paddle. You get to keep your hands warm, even if you go for a swim, lose your paddle or when you're scouting a rapid. You don't have to fight against the straight glove fingers keeping your fingers around the paddle shaft. It's also easy to pull one or more of your fingers free of the end of the mittens, so that taking pictures is rather easy. Whatever you chose to go paddling with, make sure that you can still find and use the panic loop of your spraydeck with them! BT Regular David Mackintosh got very close to dying in the spring of 2002 when he got stuck upside down in a nasty hole and he couldn't pull his spraydeck with his surfer's mittens. -- Wilko van den Bergh wilko(a t)dse(d o t)nl Eindhoven The Netherlands Europe ---Look at the possibilities, don't worry about the limitations.--- http://wilko.webzone.ru/ |
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