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Stephen Henning 05-06-2005 05:08 PM

Pond Gloves
 
While in the UK and visiting the Chelsea Flower Show, I discovered
something that I have been looking for unsuccessfully for a while. Long
gloves to use in the spring when bringing up the plants I sent on the
bottom of the pond the previous fall. I have been using a set of
industrial gloves that are fairly long but wanted a longer pair.

At the Chelsea flower show they had lots of "pond gloves" which sold for
from $5 to $20. I normally wear a 32" shirt sleeve and these gloves
cover my entire arm.

A google search for "pond gloves" turned up a number of sources.

The ones I got a

http://www.worldofwater.com/gloves.htm

and

http://www.gardening-emporium.co.uk/...products_id=47

and

http://www.bradshawsdirect.co.uk/Bra...t/product.asp?
prod=CSGL&cookie%5Ftest=1

I haven't used any of them yet.
--
Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to
18,000 gallon (17'x 47'x 2-4') lily pond garden in Zone 6
Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA

kathy 05-06-2005 05:16 PM


Oh, wow!
You were at the Chelsea Flower Show.
:::moment of extreme envy::: ;-)

Gloves sound neat!

kathy :-)www.blogfromthebog.com
this week ~ the damselfly

Pond 101 page for new pond keepers ~
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html


~ janj JJsPond.us 05-06-2005 07:14 PM

On Sun, 05 Jun 2005 12:08:23 -0400, Stephen Henning wrote:

While in the UK and visiting the Chelsea Flower Show, I discovered
something that I have been looking for unsuccessfully for a while. Long
gloves to use in the spring when bringing up the plants I sent on the
bottom of the pond the previous fall. I have been using a set of
industrial gloves that are fairly long but wanted a longer pair.

At the Chelsea flower show they had lots of "pond gloves" which sold for
from $5 to $20. I normally wear a 32" shirt sleeve and these gloves
cover my entire arm.

A google search for "pond gloves" turned up a number of sources.

The ones I got a

http://www.worldofwater.com/gloves.htm


I have these, work great! Definitely a solution in cold water. Prior to
them though I found the way to beat cold water was to have a bucket of warm
water next to the pond. Do some work, soak in the warm bucket for a bit,
and do some more work. ~ jan

~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~

WillMore 06-06-2005 03:17 AM

I saw them being sold in a fisherman supply stores. They also sell neat
things like rubber aprons, those hardy latex and mesh gloves and other
sorts of neat water proof wear.



In article , Stephen
Henning wrote:

While in the UK and visiting the Chelsea Flower Show, I discovered
something that I have been looking for unsuccessfully for a while. Long
gloves to use in the spring when bringing up the plants I sent on the
bottom of the pond the previous fall. I have been using a set of
industrial gloves that are fairly long but wanted a longer pair.

At the Chelsea flower show they had lots of "pond gloves" which sold for
from $5 to $20. I normally wear a 32" shirt sleeve and these gloves
cover my entire arm.

A google search for "pond gloves" turned up a number of sources.

The ones I got a

http://www.worldofwater.com/gloves.htm

and

http://www.gardening-emporium.co.uk/...products_id=47

and

http://www.bradshawsdirect.co.uk/Bra...t/product.asp?
prod=CSGL&cookie%5Ftest=1

I haven't used any of them yet.


Heather 06-06-2005 08:57 PM

Got mine at Home Depot in Ontario.

Heather

"WillMore" wrote in message
...
I saw them being sold in a fisherman supply stores. They also sell neat
things like rubber aprons, those hardy latex and mesh gloves and other
sorts of neat water proof wear.



In article , Stephen
Henning wrote:

While in the UK and visiting the Chelsea Flower Show, I discovered
something that I have been looking for unsuccessfully for a while. Long
gloves to use in the spring when bringing up the plants I sent on the
bottom of the pond the previous fall. I have been using a set of
industrial gloves that are fairly long but wanted a longer pair.

At the Chelsea flower show they had lots of "pond gloves" which sold for
from $5 to $20. I normally wear a 32" shirt sleeve and these gloves
cover my entire arm.

A google search for "pond gloves" turned up a number of sources.

The ones I got a

http://www.worldofwater.com/gloves.htm

and

http://www.gardening-emporium.co.uk/...products_id=47

and


http://www.bradshawsdirect.co.uk/Bra...t/product.asp?
prod=CSGL&cookie%5Ftest=1

I haven't used any of them yet.




Lt. Kizhe Catson 06-06-2005 10:30 PM

Stephen Henning wrote:
While in the UK and visiting the Chelsea Flower Show, I discovered
something that I have been looking for unsuccessfully for a while. Long
gloves to use in the spring when bringing up the plants I sent on the
bottom of the pond the previous fall. I have been using a set of
industrial gloves that are fairly long but wanted a longer pair.

At the Chelsea flower show they had lots of "pond gloves" which sold for
from $5 to $20. I normally wear a 32" shirt sleeve and these gloves
cover my entire arm.

A google search for "pond gloves" turned up a number of sources.

The ones I got a

http://www.worldofwater.com/gloves.htm

and

http://www.gardening-emporium.co.uk/...products_id=47

and

http://www.bradshawsdirect.co.uk/Bra...t/product.asp?
prod=CSGL&cookie%5Ftest=1

I haven't used any of them yet.


After trying long plastic disposable gloves, I decided to give up on
staying dry. My DW found me a pair that look like wet-suit gloves --
you go ahead and get wet, but the water in them quickly warms to body
temp and keeps your fingers from freezing. I also wear my ancient
"grubby" winter jacket, and hip waders. That generally keeps me
adequately warm, even in ice water.

Of course, at the moment that's not even remotely a concern ;-).

-- Kizhe



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