Can one boot do it all?

NEPkaspot

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 6, 2020
Messages
184
Location
South Central NE
I'm a one bow guy, one arrow, one bino harness, etc. Is there such a thing as one boot that does it all? I'm not as hardcore as some of you I'm sure, mostly a weekend warrior who gets to go on one trip a year, maybe two. When you look at 10" vs. 8", insulated or not, stiff or flexible sole, is there a type of boot out there that does a lot of things well? Which style, height, flex is the most versatile?
 
Not for me, if nothing else just due to insulation needs. Many years I hunt in temps ranging from 60s or even 70s down to zero or occasionally below.

Personally I keep going further and further into barefoot boots only. This year I will be hunting in the Tracker Forest, Tracker winter, and vivo tundras.

Many past years I used a combo of uninsulated crispi guides, and one of the more heavily insulated ones (dont recall the name) and finaly sorel pack boots if it got real cold.
 
For me it's simply one pair of waterproof and one pair of non-waterproof. Sort of translates into early season pair and late season pair. Other than that, lightweight, minimal drop, trail shoe/low boot - currently a pair of Topos and a pair of Xeros for rucking, big game, chukar hunting, taking my wife out to dinner, etc.
 
I have a stiffer, burlier pair of boots for sustained hunts in more difficult terrain. I found them a little too hot and stiff for summer backpacking and warm September hunting so I have a pair of softer flex, more breathable boots as well.
 
I figure no matter what boot I have my feet sweat in the summer and no matter how much insulation I have my feet are cold in the winter so I just wear a uninsulated full leather crispi year round.
 
This is like asking if you can use a 30-06 as do-all rifle. I mean, yes, you can, but you'll be wishing you had something smaller on rabbits and squirrels.

A lot of guys above list waterproof/not-waterproof, which makes sense for a large part of the country.

Where I live, there's a bit more utility in breaking it down between lightweight vs rugged. Salomon Quest 4s for lightweight and fast for long sandy/rolling stretches, and hot days. Kenetrek Mountain Extreme 400g insulated for rugged, and cold-weather. The Salomon's, though, are as close to a do-all, all-around boot as I have found, and they get worn about 90% of the time.
 
I have one pair of warm weather boots, one pair of cold weather boots, and one pair of mud boots. I don’t know how I could cut down below that in my climate.
 
I would say no, but that depends on where and when you hunt. The rubber boots I wear hunting the river bottoms for whitetail, turkey, and pheasant won't work on the steep rocky mountains when I'm elk hunting. The boots I wear when it is 75⁰ and dry are way different than the boots I wear when it is -10⁰ and a foot of snow.

If I only hunted one spot for one species then I could probably make things work but I'm all over the state for 6 months out of the year hunting whatever is legal and open.

Jay
 
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