Safety & Security

Skeleton Work Gloves

Skeleton Work Gloves with Rubber Grippers on Palm X-ray Gothic Goth Punk Emo Rockabilly by HM

Security


Skeleton Work Gloves with Rubber Grippers on Palm X-ray Gothic Goth Punk Emo Rockabilly
HM

Made of 40% Acrylic, 60% Cotton
They measure 9 inches long by 5 inches wide.
There is no size written on these.Please use the measurements to decide if they will fit you.They are actually called one size fits most adults.

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Windsor dairy cows and devoted farmer inspire Belfast artist

Farmer Dan Tibbetts tends to 125 dairy cows on Reed Farm in Windsor, and the herd continues to grow. Years ago, a calf was born with a mark shaped like the number seven on her forehead. Naturally, Tibbitts’ children named her “Seven.” Seven’s daughter became “Eight,” but those are the only Reed Farm cows that are identified by number.

“For some people, the cows are a means of getting what they want in life. You know what I mean? You milk your cows and make your money,” said Tibbetts, 64. “But I enjoy it. … I don’t look at it as work. And the cows, I’ve always given my cows names. It’s just my way of making it personal.”

“His girls” go by Sally, Cool, Triscuit, Fruit, Texas, Mabel, Ford, Book, Gum, Boo, AWOL and Jackie. The baseball cow family is Safe, Out, Bag, Plate, Fair, Dive, RBI and Bench. Iraq, Al and Quaida are kin, as are Taxes, Mortgage and Lien. Dish is the mother of Spoon. Lemon and Lime are twins.

Tibbetts is a busy man, tending his cows and working the land; that’s why artist Beth Henderson timed her phone call so she might catch him during his lunch break. She was looking for names to christen the nearly life-sized stucco cow she sculpted this spring for the exhibit “Hooves, Fur and Feathers,” which opened Friday, June 3, at the Maine Farmland Trust Gallery at 97 Main St. in Belfast.