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- #21
For cold weather hiking, 35 degrees and under, when you have a specific destination and will be inactive at that destination for several hours until it's time to hike out.why insulated boots for hiking?
For the insulated leather boot to keep you warm at your destination it needs enough insulation in grams, the right socks (I like Darn Tough), and most important, your foot needs a vapor barrier to keep the socks dry.
Wet socks will get as cold as the exterior boot leather. Wet socks have no appreciable insulative quality. Cold, wet socks on your skin will suck the heat out of your foot.
You can spend $40 or so on vapor barrier socks. Or you can put Wonder bread bags (or similar) over your super thin liner socks (Gold Toe over the calf dress socks), and your wool insulative socks over the bread bag.
This system works like a wet suit. The liner sock will get damp to wet, as will your feet. But your feet will be warm.