Ouch, that looks gnarly.  Hard to tell what is a blister from heel lift (I assume), and what is macerated skin from (perhaps) too much time under duct tape and/or generally soft feet.
First, you need boots that fit.  Any heel movement whatsoever is totally unacceptable.  If you have to buy boots or shoes with less then ideal tread, durability, color, etc to get a perfect fit, do it.
Second, you need to find the above in a shoe/boot which has enough midfoot and forefoot room to accomodate the aforementioned swelling, which is inevitable and can be considerable.  Feet mostly swell in volume, not length.
Third, toughen your feet better pre-season.  This cannot be accomplished on pavement.  If you live in Missouri or some other unfortunate place, you'll need to get creative with finding adequately steep terrrain.  I backpack year-round in the mountains so I'm sorted here.
Beyond that, I'm still trying to sort out hunting footwear.  I haven't used boots or waterproof footwear backpacking for years, and regard doing so as a rather quaint practice.  While fall backpacking wet feet aren't such a big deal, just wear light neo socks if it's cold and if your feet get cold, hike faster.  As you found out, keeping your feet dry is usually not possible, so why worry.  The problem hunting is that you don't have all-day movement as a resource for foot heat.  Still not sure what the solution is.
The stiff boots which seem to be the norm hunting make the above fit issues pretty difficult to negotiate, especially heel lift.  They're also heavy.  Carrying a big pack over rough terrain certain demands more padding and stiffness than carrying a light pack on a trail, but I don't see mountaineering class boots as necessary for most people just about anywhere.  Get strong feet and carrying 50 pounds in gnarly terrain in mid-structure trail runners is very doable.