Nick’s boots - on the trail?

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Apr 28, 2026
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About 5 months ago I ordered these boots for work. It will be my first pair of Nick’s. I hear they’re the most comfortable boot on earth. That being said..they’re not hiking boots. Nonetheless I am considering hiking and camp with them. Curious if anyone has experience with this type of boot in this context.
 

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I've never had Nicks, but I've had Hawthorn back when they were top shelf quality, and Nicks is supposed to be better. If you get the right size, they will be more comfortable than any hunting boot, but in my opinion, smoke jumper style boots like that can be painful on the ball and heels of the foot when on hard and rocky terrain for long periods of time, but in the woods, they can't be beat. These are the boots you wear when sawing, setting chokers, etc., and that's a lot more demanding than hunting.
 
Thanks for the replies fellas. I do have to say they aren’t full on smoke jumpers (I could absolutely be wrong, I don’t know much about boots), they are 8” height. From what I’ve seen smoke jumpers are usually 12” or more?

I love White’s. I have their MP boot. Never felt anything like it.

If Nick’s meets their lead time schedule I should have them in 4-5 weeks. I’ll update the thread once I get some experience with them.
 
Thanks for the replies fellas. I do have to say they aren’t full on smoke jumpers (I could absolutely be wrong, I don’t know much about boots), they are 8” height. From what I’ve seen smoke jumpers are usually 12” or more?
I believe that's correct, and anything over 12" in a lineman boot? I was just using the term smokejumper boot to reference an non-corked, hard lug Vibram with the tall heel.
 
I wouldn’t recommend. I wore nicks for 10 years for work and tried hiking in them a few times. They’re heavy as hell, they don’t breathe even the slightest, if you’re doing multiple days they don’t dry out without a boot dryer, they’re the coldest boot I’ve ever put on my foot when sitting still (colder than cowboy boots somehow) and it doesn’t matter how well they fit my feet or how tight I laced them I rolled my ankles all the time in those high rise things.
 
I’m not a big fan of that style of boot and I’ve worn them for years doing the stuff IdahoBeav is talking about. One of the biggest issues is that the heels walk over when you’re on steep ground all day. I realize a lot of older things are better but 100 year old footwear technology isn’t it in my opinion.
 
I’m not a big fan of that style of boot and I’ve worn them for years doing the stuff IdahoBeav is talking about. One of the biggest issues is that the heels walk over when you’re on steep ground all day. I realize a lot of older things are better but 100 year old footwear technology isn’t it in my opinion.
If you wear them long enough, it’s hard to go back to a flat bottom style boot without pain in your Achilles for a while. I deleted a post earlier but I’ve been wearing them since I got out of high school in 93. They wouldn’t be my first choice for a hiking boot. On a log landing or down in a trench, they are tough to beat.
 
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