Substantial Gardening Gloves Recommendation Please!

Started by Emagggie, January 22, 2008, 11:12:34

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Emagggie

I had an expensive leather pair from Town & Country which were a good fit but less than a year and I've gone through the finger ends. Can anyone recommend a make which lasts?
Smile, it confuses people.

Emagggie

Smile, it confuses people.

manicscousers

we get gloves from pound shops, maggie..rubber front, smell like fish but do the job..ours last, maybe 2 years but if you paint them with fence paint, it wears off and goes sticky..but, at 1.00 per pair, we can afford to replace them  ;D
even better, we can pluck nettles and nasties like that  :)

dtw

I use the cheap ones meant for building work, with suede hands and cloth backs.
Great for removing brambles.
Avoid washing them, as they will harden.

bupster

I got all-suede things in the sale from Homebase for about four quid; at that price I don't mind them falling apart eventually. My last cheap pair gave out after a year and a half. I'm not sure there are gloves tough enough to last much longer than that given the beating they take?
For myself I am an optimist - it does not seem to be much use being anything else.

http://www.plotholes.blogspot.com

Emagggie

I have concluded that I'm probably asking far too much of a simple gardening glove and I shall buy a batch of cheap and cheerfuls.
Thanks all.
Smile, it confuses people.

Lady of the Land

In the winter I use cheap woollen ones or such like from our market. They keep my hands warm and at £1.99 a pair I feel able to use them for anything muddy etc. I take them home and wash them when needed - Have pair sitting on radiator in hall at moment ready to go down to allotment tomorrow.

Robert_Brenchley

I use the thick rubber things; they last me for ages.

caroline7758

I treated myself to a pair of Goldleaf gloves on a visit to Alnwick gardens and I have to say they are good- comfortableand durable. I've got lots of cheap pairs,too- they seem to be a favourite christmas present!

http://www.goldleaf-gloves.com/

redimp

Very little, even if it is expensive, copes with the corrosive abilities of winter mud so you are probably better off with cheaper ones which are replaceable - better still if they are made of materials that can be recycled - then the guilt of having to chuck them is reduced.
Lotty @ Lincoln (Lat:53.24, Long:-0.52, HASL:30m)

http://www.abicabeauty

Thegoodlife

today i will be growin veg!!

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