Tractor Supply Gloves???

I have a pair of Wells-Lamont insulated work gloves that I have had for at least fifteen years, and they are still in very good condition. Due to Raynauds syndrome warm gloves are very important to me. TSC shows these gloves at $16.99. They could be the most cost effective article of clothing that I have ever owned. I gave up on five day mechanic type gloves last year and went back to leather. the leather ones cost twice as much but last ten times longer.
I have that condition as well, will check out those gloves.
 
I said I wasn’t looking for gloves. If I was I would have at least asked somebody where to find them. I was just sure that the obvious glove display didn’t have all types.
Sorry, I just don't understand the complaint then. They all have seasonal displays and merchandise in different parts of the store. TSC, Farm and Home, you name it. We were at Farm and Home a few weeks ago and the wife picked me up a bundle of the brown ones off a display in the middle of the store. I know a rack in the middle of the store wasn't all they had. I don't know. I just don't know why people complain about things on the internet when, like you, they didn't even look anywhere else for answers. Making conversation I guess.
 
I think of many of these threads like the morning ramblings around the poor tipping predawn coffee shop tables...
Yep. "Things ain't like they used to be and this proves it." You were lucky enough to wake up this morning, but let's start the self loathing.
 
TSC no longer caters to the working man.

They make their money from HOA chicken farmers and uptown horse women.
Well, all due respect. There are 5 TSC stores within 25 miles of my farm. 2 are in small towns and the other 3 in the congested areas. The farm local stores cater to the farmer primarily. Obviously the congested area caters to the customers there which aren't farmers but they do wear western duds and have dogs and cats and batteries and oil.
 
I don't care for insulated gloves, too bulky and my hands will sometimes sweat in them. I buy the plain pigskin gloves from TSC, and if I need some extra warmth I'll put a pair of jersey gloves inside them.

Harbor Freight gloves are a little cheaper, but the TSC gloves last over twice as long for me. The Harbor Freight gloves never last long for me until I blow out the stitching.
 
I was in Tractor Supply yesterday. They had a display of gloves six feet high and maybe eight feet long, not a single pair of insulated, or even lined gloves. I wasn’t specifically looking for gloves, so I didn’t tour the rest of the store to see if winter gloves were somewhere else.
Sometimes I will check a store's website to see what they have in stock before I make a trip to the store. A quick online search for "insulated gloves" at my local TSC brought up 48 choices with descriptions, sizes, pictures, prices, reviews, and pickup/deliver options. Often the delivery cost is less than the cost to drive to the store.
 
Sometimes I will check a store's website to see what they have in stock before I make a trip to the store. A quick online search for "insulated gloves" at my local TSC brought up 48 choices with descriptions, sizes, pictures, prices, reviews, and pickup/deliver options. Often the delivery cost is less than the cost to drive to the store.
Some store will include an aisle and bay location in an item's online description with a link to a store map. I find those very helpful.
 
All my gloves come from Harbor Freight, and have for years.
I like those yellow ones. I get a pack of twelve every year. They keep my hands warm...much better than leather gloves. Even lined leather ones my fingers get cold.
 
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