White Ox Gloves?

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Billy_Bob

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Oct 9, 2005
Messages
898
Reaction score
98
Location
Oregon
Why do many of the loggers in the Pacific Northwest wear White Ox gloves (so I have been told)?

These are cloth gloves and don't seem to be waterproof. And it rains, rains, rains here???
 
Billy Bob, White Ox gloves are the standard for a rigging man. When you are handling wire rope all of the time , heavy cotton gloves are the only way to go. If you are pulling on a choker or the haywire and grab ahold of a jagger [wire splinter] you will know it right away. Once you learn how to pull line, you wont get impaled very often.
It probably would not matter what kind of expensive waterproof gloves you tried, your hands would still get wet.
Heavy cotton gloves are also cheap. Working in the rigging a pair would usually last me a week. Moving the yarder[ especially on a sled yarder] and a pair might be holey at the end of the day.
Fallers, on the other hand will usually wear thinner and more tight fitting gloves. A big reason is that you need the dexterity to grab your tape nail and be able to write and keep your scale quickly.

John
 

Latest posts

Back
Top