I can verify the latex gloves suggestion. You can cast or tie a knot while wearing them. They work down to about 40*.
wolfhnd LIKED above post
Up here in the northeast, you have to be prepared for the cold, unless you only want to fish for 4 or 5 months of the year! So, over many decades, I've come to rely on a pair of rag wool, fingerless gloves. Remember, even wet, wool has insulating properties. Those, along with a hand warmer in each parka pocket and you're good to go. Carhartt bibbs, poly base layer and Sorel wool pack boots top the outfit off. We don't stop fishing here until ice up, or it's so cold that ice forms in your rod guides, preventing you from casting. That's usually sometime in late November, just prior to Thanksgiving.
"A voyage in search of knowledge need never abandon the spirit of adventure."Redge LIKED above post
Purchase the large hand warmers at Wal-Mart, they are 18 hour ones. Dependi g on how cold, I will use one or two in my hoodie pocket. Can't stand wearing gloves, too many years duck and goose hunting.
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Hot hand pouches are the best way for me.
Jerry "Bo" Bryant
"Follow me and I will make you fishers of men" (Matthew 4:19)
Exam gloves under fingerless gloves. Hot hands inside them.
Or brown jersey gloves under over sized exam gloves. Have several pair though, as your hands sweat, this glove system holds in the moisture.
Put the hothands in between a shirt and your kidneys, keep the core warm, the rest usually will also.
Drinkin coffee, missin fish.
You could also have a pinched nerve in your neck and back.
I have OCD "Obsessive Crappie Disorder"Kowtown LIKED above post
I have had deep cuts in my fingers on both hands that took out Nerves and tendons. when those fingers get cold it shuts down circulation that spreads to other fingers .. Numb hurts .. Hot hands helps
Chance LIKED above post