1 / 8Pre-order · Ships September 2026
The Hestra Patrol Jr Mitt is a junior ski mitten with an impregnated goat leather palm, a three-layer HESTRA Ventus backhand and G-Loft insulation in a removable liner. It has no waterproof membrane. The trade-off: it buys warmth, grip and durability, not protection from sustained wet snow.
The palm is impregnated goat leather — it gives a child grip on a pole or lift bar, and it takes the abrasion. The backhand is HESTRA Ventus, a three-layer polyester blend: windproof and breathable. The G-Loft insulation sits in a removable liner, so the mitt comes apart and dries overnight. A Velcro cuff closure and puller let a child pull it on and cinch it unaided. Handcuffs — an elastic wrist band that straps to the cuff — are on the spec.
This mitt is windproof and water-resistant. It is not waterproof. There is no membrane in the build — no CZone insert, no GORE-TEX — so water resistance comes from the shell alone. In cold, dry, packed snow, that is enough. In sustained wet snow — spring slush, a rain-line storm, a beginner who sits down a lot — it will eventually soak through. Hestra grades warmth on an eight-point scale, 1 (Light) to 8 (Expedition), but has published no rating for this style, so none is quoted here.
Hestra's junior scale runs 3 to 7. PTO stocks 5, 6 and 7 — the same three sizes in both colourways, Navy and Fuchsia, so colour does not narrow the choice. Two points from Hestra's official size guide. Junior gloves are sized by age, not hand circumference: you "usually do not need to measure the hand when selecting a size for children." And your own Hestra size tells you nothing about your child's — "junior size 7 and unisex size 7 are not the same." A mitt should also leave a small gap around the hand — that trapped air is part of the insulation. One a child has outgrown gets colder, not just tighter: too tight, Hestra says, "may feel cold because insulation is reduced."
It suits a child who skis regularly in cold, mostly dry snow. A mitt holds the fingers in one chamber where they share heat; what makes it warm makes it clumsy. If your child has to work zips, buckles and pole straps unaided, fingers win — PTO stocks the five-finger Patrol Jr in the same 5, 6 and 7. If the snow they actually ski is wet, buy a membrane instead: CZone is Hestra's membrane line, and PTO stocks the Ferox CZone Jr in 5, 6 and 7.