Update on Geier 448s. Both my spouse and I have a pair. At the outset I'll say these are the most comfortable gloves I've tried and the stitching is rock solid. We had high hopes for these gloves for all around farm work including stringing high tensile wire on a vineyard trellis. My spouse got her pair first and we were stringing wire at the time. Stringing wire is with one of us driving the tractor with a spinning jenny in a dump trailer that is spooling out wire and the other following behind and keeping the wire tight and snapping it into trellis posts. After 2 days of this my spouse's right hand Geier glove burned a line hole from the wire abrasion.....very disappointed. After that I decided not to use mine for stringing line. When mine arrived I used it for all around use which is grabbing briars, wood logs, and stones. I found the stones wore a hole into my right hand thumb relatively quickly. Overall the gloves are comfortable and work well with plant material(briars, wood) but do not last with pulling metal wire and moving rocks. That being said Geiers do last longer than the cheapies but at their price buying multiple cheapie gloves is better for some jobs. So at this point I'm going to see about repairing the Geiers and possibly a modification of the palm with another abrasion resistant material. Cost of repair will determine if I go through with it.
So at this point my gloves are many depending on the job and time of year. For warm weather and working in the soil with plants my breathable Mudd gloves are perfect. They also act as a liner for other gloves if so needed. For pounding in metal posts the latex dipped Kevlar gloves work best and last through about 300-400 posts. For general chores I'm leaning towards a disposable leather glove and wrap duct tape in some areas(palm & couple of fingers) when stringing wire....yes I still have some more to do. For winter I have a thermal liner(Outdoor Research) and a leather kevlar outer glove(Cabelas) that works well.
So at this point my gloves are many depending on the job and time of year. For warm weather and working in the soil with plants my breathable Mudd gloves are perfect. They also act as a liner for other gloves if so needed. For pounding in metal posts the latex dipped Kevlar gloves work best and last through about 300-400 posts. For general chores I'm leaning towards a disposable leather glove and wrap duct tape in some areas(palm & couple of fingers) when stringing wire....yes I still have some more to do. For winter I have a thermal liner(Outdoor Research) and a leather kevlar outer glove(Cabelas) that works well.