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HHere is a tip a friend gave me. When he handed them to me he said you'll be suprised at how warm they will keep your hands.
Easy to cast a spinning rod and I have been trying Knotts with 15 lb line with them on. When we started casting it was 25 degrees and about 32 when we finished. It was sunny and we were catching fish so that helped keep us warm too.
If you stick your hand too far in the water and get water in them you will have to dry your hands off good and start over with a new pair.
Not sure if the brand or type matters. Photo below
Attachment 9388
they actually made my hands colder. You can wear them under a thin pair of gloves to make any pair waterproof and you can tie knots with em
Pretty sure this is a spammer because they made another post that sounded like spam. At least it's on topic. Maybe the gloves are good?I used the sport lover products gloves: http://www.sport-lover.com/Fishing-Gloves-c16.html
Exactly what I do, except I don't cut any of the fingers off, don't like exposed finger tips. Keep a fresh pair in each pocket, so you always have a warm dry set to put on. Use heavy gloves for running.I just use the brown jerzee gloves. Cut the tip of the index finger out on my left hand so i can feel the line and the tip of the thumb out on my right hand so i can thumb the line on the cast. Keep several pair in the boat so when one gets wet i can just swap em out. I do have a pair of under armour i use when im using a spinning rod and i can put the hot hands inside the glove on top of my hand and still fish comfortably. I always keep hot hands in the pockets of my coat so i can ocassionaly put a hand in there and warm it up a little
I've tried several different types of gloves, and this system works best for me.
I am not much of a glove guy but you might look at some of those riding (motorcycle) gloves. Some of them can be pretty durable yet thin and functional.
look at SIMMS website, they have a variety of good gloves to choose from