Poster: A snowHead
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My daughter gets Raynauds Phenomenon, she can without warning suddenly have one or two of her fingers turn completely white as if someone has just turned off the blood supply to them. It seems to be mainly triggered by exercise or cold or both, and it doesn't need to be that cold either. She's been to the doctors and she said to just make sure she had suitable gloves for exercise, even in warmer months. So we've got a selection of gloves for riding, hockey, etc. We need to buy her new gloves for skiing this year. Her hands are nearly the same size as mine now, and last year when she got cold hands she stole my heated gloves. I'm not happy about losing my heated gloves to one of my kids, so figured it would be useful to buy her some of her own. Mine were very expensive, I bought them in a ski resort when the temperature was -26C one day and I decided to treat myself. Knowing my child, if I bought her gloves that pricey she would lose one off a chairlift. There seem to be lots of cheaper heated gloves on Amazon. Has anyone got any good recommendations? Obviously they would need to be waterproof as well as warm even without the heating element on.
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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Aha! They are the same as the ones I have and I agree they are brilliant. I paid the, err, pre-sale price for mine!
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@pandora, most heated glves heat the back of the hand and not the fingers. Mrs U has Raynaud’s and those types don’t work for her.
She has used Blazewear glove lines for maybe 7 years now? We ski around 60 days a year and live in the Alps.
She has 3 battery sets and two chargers to ensure capacity for the coldest <15C days.
Www.blazewear.co.uk.
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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@pandora, did your heated gloves work for your daughter?
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have a look on sportpursuit.com. I bough the OH some heated motorbike gloves on there (37 degrees) and she loves them.
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Treat yourself to a new pair & give her your old ones?
You can always get the wrist leashes for the gloves to aid in her not losing them?
Be interested if you find anything cheap as my partner also suffers from Raynauds but she wont spent money on decent gloves.
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
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Haha, she's not having mine! But she will certainly have wrist leashes on whatever I get her. As has been pointed out, most of these gloves heat the back of the hand, so I'm looking at mittens atm as they are certainly warmer whichever way you look at them. Under a new name, I looked at the liners your wife has, and perhaps I will get her some when she has stopped growing! But they are quite pricey for a pair of liners when I'll have to buy outer gloves too and if she doesn't lose one she'll grow out of them before they've had more than 20 days use! She really only started to suffer last year - her wrists went very red and her middle fingers went completely white from the mid knuckle to the tip. It kept happening during PE at school and that's when I took her to the doctor.
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
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Yet another vote for the Blaze Wear liner gloves. My wife has Raynaulds too and uses the heated liners under all of her gloves including for horse riding if needs be. She does have two pairs though as the ones for riding and using at the stables do tend to pong of horse after a bit! (they doo hand wash well though)
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I've only used them a couple of times so far but I'm happy with the Tugga TG 110 heated gloves (£80 from Sport Pursuit).
If it's any help I have small hands (usually size 7) and the small fit ok. They aren't elegant, being more like a gauntlet, and overlap quite a bit onto/under the sleeve of my ski jacket.
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You know it makes sense.
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@pandora, when we bought them they only came in 2 sizes S-M and L-XL ...
Quite stretchy. I wouldn’t imagine she’d grow out of them ...
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Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
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Another vote for the blazewear liners .
I suffer with very cold fingers (self diagnosed reynaulds - white fingers and extremely painful burning feeling when they thaw out. Figure no point in going to the GP as they can’t do anything?).
The liners heat all the way to the fingertips.
Saved the day in The dolomites at new year.
Very cold on the day we tried to get to Marmolada. Minus 25 windchill.
I carry a spare set of batteries now though as they ran out very quickly the year before in La Rosiere .
I think Li batteries can get killed by the cold..?
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Poster: A snowHead
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Just bought myself some Zanier gloves after looking at the cheaper ones on Amazon. I’m hoping I get what I paid for. Somehow I dont envisage the cheapies doing the business but I may be wrong. My last heated gloves conked out in Ischgl this year and at minus 16-25 it was dreadful - for me. Glove liners and two pairs of gloves and my hands were still upset. Heated gloves therefore seem quite miraculous to me.
I don’t have Raynauds but it must be awful. Your daughter has my sympathy.
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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Ok you are talking me round to the Blazewear ones. Daughter also rides and has had a few short days this winter when we've finished early due to hand problems. We can be in the saddle for up to 5 hours at a time, and once I've got her properly trained up we could be riding for over 6 hrs a day (I do a lot of long distance competitive riding and she wants to tag along.) If the Blazewears can fit under any gloves they could be a winner. She will have to go skiing ponging of horse though. She can have 2 pairs when she earns the money
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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And *Sheffskibod* I did take daughter to the doctors, and you are right, she said they can't do anything, she just recommended good gloves. The trick is to no letting her get cold to start with. Which is rather difficult with a headstrong 11 year old who won't wear certain warm clothing because it's not cool!
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@pandora, My daughter also has Reynauds....and after trying everything, I got her some Blazewear glove liners. She hasn't used them in anger, but am confident they will do the trick.
I have 2 suggestions:
1. Get a second battery (and preferably charger as well, as getting both batteries charged by the morning could be awkward), as you will need at least 2 batteries to see you through the day.
2. Get the Mitts after you get the liners, to make sure there is enough room in them and the cuff is long enough to cover the cuff of the liners.
I recommend Hestra Army Leather Heli.
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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@pandora, If you are looking to be riding (or skiing) for that long then you'll definitely need 2 sets of batteries for the blazewear liner gloves.
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@pandora,
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recommended good gloves
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Is, sadly, in our experience, not adequate advice. Mrs U suffers in the Geneva heat of 35C summer when washing lettuce if the water's too cold She struggled with Hestra Heli Mitts and Silk liners for about a season till we discovered a rather industrial motorbike heated glove system (with adapter cables for BMW electricity).
Blazewear much more elegant. AFAIK, none of the other brands heat around the finger, which is critical. Also, we were chatting to a chap in one of the big shops in Cham and while he didn't name names, they have tried a number of brands and have more or less given up due to failures and returns. I think we are on year 7 with the Blazewear and we ski ~50-60 days a year in a good year.
We did have to replace one liner, which of course was a pair and although out of guarantee, they just sent us new ones. I have a suspicion that there'd been a bad batch.
You need more than one set of batteries for any of these systems, if you are running on full power for more than 2-3 hours. As you can see, it's pretty important to us and we have spent quite a lot of time looking at solutions.
Other top tip, as you will have multiple chargers, often in hotels, apartments or ski rooms with limited sockets, get a multi socket with an illuminated switch (!!) - it 's very vexing to come downstairs and discover that you hadn't actually energised the charging systems... (and the LEDs on many of these will illuminate off residual battery charge without mains being on - which is easier to mistake than you'd think). A nice bright red illuminated switch excludes one source of error, esp. after an apres-ski apero.
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Quote: |
it 's very vexing to come downstairs and discover that you hadn't actually energised the charging systems... (and the LEDs on many of these will illuminate off residual battery charge without mains being on - which is easier to mistake than you'd think).
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been there, done that with Mrs A's pair of Blazewear heated gloves.
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