Gloves or No

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We got the 30, and the wife does most of the fire building,,,,,barehanded. The only time she uses gloves is when I am handing her wood thru the window to restock the wood box , so she doesn't get any splinters.

Well, my mancard just flew out the window. :confused:
 
" Them gloves cost money and your skin will grow back"

They listened to Jack Benny on the radio. He said he carried his shoes to the studio "Because shoes cost money. Skin you can grow.".
 
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I used to never wear gloves, but after getting black on a few otherwise perfectly good dress-work shirts, I started getting in the habit of wearing long welders gloves.

The only time I ever had a problem was one morning when an errant hot coal came bouncing out of the stove and stuck to the top of my foot at the base of my big toe and next one. I shook and that sucker wouldn't come off. Had to pull it off and had one heck of a burn there and took a very long while to heal up.

Lesson learned.

pen



OWW CHIHUAHA.
 
I am sure they did. They had a hard time letting go of the old, spread manure with the horses till the late sixties.

I had to do in the sixties myself. But with a tractor. But I had to scoop it out of the lot into the spreader. <> With gloves!
 
Gloves . . . 95% of the time. The other 5% of the time I'm living dangerously and like to think of myself as being a devil-may-care sort of rogue who throws caution to the wind . . . or realistically it's just loading the stove from a cold start.

Now as for using gloves in the woods . . . rarely.
 
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*cough*

Back on topic *all masculinity stuff aside* :p

Wear my gloves ever time I open the PE.

The 13 is a learning curve, a hard lesson learned. Damned door latch, still have the imprint on my right thumb.
 
The wife insists I wear gloves when handling wood otherwise the hands chaped up and get rough. So that's that.
 
I wear gloves to move burning splits, otherwise I go beerhanded;). Thats why my forearms are bare! My wife doesnt go near the stove without them.
At the risk of being thrown out of the "he-man woman haters club" (since we're mixing a bit of testosterone with the old classics here) I have to say I'm with your wife on that one (figuratively speaking, of course). Those welder's gloves with the beer pockets are a decent compromise though...
 
At the risk of being thrown out of the "he-man woman haters club" (since we're mixing a bit of testosterone with the old classics here) I have to say I'm with your wife on that one (figuratively speaking, of course). Those welder's gloves with the beer pockets are a decent compromise though...

Something to be said for tough hands. I push chalk for a living, but generally work construction in the summer. By the end of August, my "man hands" are back. Come January, after working the chalk for a few months, I go to work on a vehicle, or do other hands-on / construction work and forget to put gloves on and I'm bleeding like a stuck pig and have small scabs from nicks all over my hands for a week and a half that make me look like I should be a suspect in a crime.

My father still likes to point this out to bust my chops, of course with his hands, he has no need for sandpaper unless it's finer than 60 grit.

If I ever bust someone for needing gloves, I'm just doing it for fun. For many people's profession / daily lives, having decent looking hands is important.

Man-card revocation is not necessary

pen
 
Something to be said for tough hands. I push chalk for a living, but generally work construction in the summer. By the end of August, my "man hands" are back. Come January, after working the chalk for a few months, I go to work on a vehicle, or do other hands-on / construction work and forget to put gloves on and I'm bleeding like a stuck pig and have small scabs from nicks all over my hands for a week and a half that make me look like I should be a suspect in a crime.

My father still likes to point this out to bust my chops, of course with his hands, he has no need for sandpaper unless it's finer than 60 grit.

If I ever bust someone for needing gloves, I'm just doing it for fun. For many people's profession / daily lives, having decent looking hands is important.

Man-card revocation is not necessary

pen

LOL.. It's all in good fun. I've done everything from running hydraulic presses to "cinder snapping" ( dancing with molten iron on a bast furnace floor in a steel mill), to cutting bush lines with survey crews, to programming, etc. No shortage of cuts and bruises, but I hate to add " burning my house down" to my list of stupid human tricks (been some doozies). My gloves help me keep the list in check.

Now if you really wanna see some fire, just drop a pair of gloves (or just about anything for that matter) down into a bell car full of liquid iron.
 
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I invite people that don't use gloves to run right out and buy a stove with a twenty inch deep firebox like the 30-NC. ;lol

Or buy a stove that has a 10X10X19 inch firebox (like a Jotul F3CB) and find out that the log you are trying to jam in is 19 1/2 inches. Doh!
 
Or buy a stove that has a 10X10X19 inch firebox (like a Jotul F3CB) and find out that the log you are trying to jam in is 19 1/2 inches. Doh!

I have an F3. And had to go out the basement door with a flaming too long split in my hands one night. The hands with the gloves on them. Trashed the gloves but saved the hands.

Gloves. They Save The Other White Meat.
 
I need to learn to open the door all the way..!!

And the 30-NC does have a Deeeeep box....... I like to be able to grab a split. If the mood strikes me ;)
 
My favorite screw up with the 30 didn't involve gloves. I had them on. I went out and got some splits for the night load wearing my down filled vest. Came in and opened the door straight out and went about loading the N/S load. And then I smelled something and looked down and the door latch hook was buried in the vest and the feathers were burning.

That night the house smelled like somebody had set a duck on fire in the family room. ;em
 
I only use them if I am loading a hot stove, usually before bed. I usually load the stove 6am, 5pm, 9pm, 4 hours isn't enough time for the stove to burn up the coal bed so it tends to get hot. I only burned myself a few times this year, all on the door trying to close it after loading by reaching over the top for the handle. The welding gloves are also good for trying to rearrange the splits to get as many in there as possible, like a puzzle which ones need to pair together in a stack to fit in there tight.
My only problem is the cheap pair of welding gloves I got had a bad seam but I was too lazy to return them and now I have a big hole in the thumb crotch.
 
I always use welding gloves when loading the stove. Doesn't 100% prevent all burns, but pretty near. The Jotul 450 loads E/W. Sometimes splits roll towards the door or I need to rearrange the wood to maximize filling the box. In these circumstances, it's good to have gloves.
 
Honestly I keep em near buy for emergencies. A smoking log that needs to come out or gets lodged in the door. They have come in handy with things like that. As you get used to a stove the forearm burns happen few and far between.
 
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