Getting cold feet

Don’t ask me why I was wearing crocs and not my normal hunting boots. But it was an inadvertent experiment which showed the effectiveness of the blankets.
This is an often overlooked nugget of truth. The Crocs work so well because they are loose and easily transport moisture away from the foot. In my experience, I am better off with a liner sock, over sock, and boot blanket than I am with the added boots. In other words, warmer WITHOUT boots in the mix. ESPECIALLY if there was a long walk in. Free circulation at the ankle and toe works wonders.

If you are on a metal platform, a couple foot shaped slices of quality closed cell foam mat is the cherry on top. I use the Switchback mat from Nemo for all my closed cell projects. One mat has done two boot blankets, two stands, and a JX3 with more to go. The Nemo version has a ton of channels for air movement and to allow insulation to loft a bit even when against the pad.

 
I find all the reports of good success with boot blankets very different than my experience, and I tried them for two seasons. I was stand hunting in NW Ontario with snow and high temps under 20F, and one day under 10F. I carried them into my stand tied to my backpack and putting them on in the stand I wondered how they’d work over my Lacrosse Burly 800 gram rubber boots as the boots were very cold to the touch, with snow that wouldn’t kick off, and the boot blankets were, well, likely about the same as the air temperature, 7F. They didn’t work. Next sit I put a toe warmer on top of one boot under the boot blanket, and that foot stayed warmer than the one with just the Lacrosse + boot blanket. I concluded that in those conditions, snow and very cold, there was just not enough heat radiating from my Lacrosse boots to warm up the boot blankets to a useful level.

I next bought a pair of Cabela’s Predator Extreme pac boots. They are clumsy enough that if driving to a property I’d wear just slip ons to where I parked, then put the boots on for the walk to the stand. Those boots were very warm with thin wool socks & a toe warmer, but I didn’t like walking in them so bought a pair of Lacrosse Alpha Burly Pro 1600 gm Thinsulate boots, and those work for me with a toe warmer, liner sock and good quality thick wool boot sock. I still have the Predator Extremes but only use those if conditions are getting near unbearable for be, like low teens F with high winds and colder, and fear of frostbitten nose, cheeks etc usually drives me in on those sits, not cold feet.

I hunt in brush blinds out in the elements. I think the boot blankets could work with leather insulated boots but didn’t do it for, me so I gave them to a friend, and he likes them.


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Well, depends on my hunting situation.
Stand hunting -- uninsulated boggs boots, light merino socks (two pair if it's really cold -- I'm talking light dress style merino wool - at least 87% merino -- you have to get the moisture off your feet), right guard non scented spray ------ now if it's going to be really cold, for me --- I use those disposable full sole warmers ---

turkey hunting in cold --- I'll use the same setup as the stand hunting, but I use old red wing non insulated boots ---- I need to feel the sticks under my feet when moving

turkey hunting in anything above 35-40 degrees, very light, very thin sole, tennis shoes and light merino socks, if it might touch a little lower, I'll throw in those feet warmers. I like tennis shoes, because I can feel most anything under my feet for quietly moving through the woods.
 
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