I actually came to this thread for my wife who has been looking for zero drop hiking boots. The whole minimalist thing does not work so hot in angry Texas mesquite country or the Sonoran desert with jumping cholla. Where she works everything is covered in 2-3” spines or hot black rock. Even the Altras and the other non-minimalist options available do not provide sufficient foot protection to keep the spines from going through the sole. Anyone have thoughts on this? Seems there is a at least a small market out there for tougher, zero-drop, non-minimalist hiking boots. Any desert folks out there that have experience with this?
I had to deal with that exact problem. I was using Lems Boulder boots because the leather was good at keeping thorns and cactus out of my toes, but one day after removing three thorns that had punctured the Lems soles in less than a hundred yards leaving my socks a bloody mess, I took them to get a real sole put on them-
It worked to stop the thorns from puncturing the feet, but the real answer are shoes made for that environment
Courtney Selous boots.
Thick Cape buffalo hide for the wear areas, impala hide in the flex areas, and a tire tread for a sole. I have not had anything puncture these, including trying. They are not true barefoot shoes, but they are minimalist in that there is no arch support and only a strip of leather over the flat rubber sole inside.
The Vivo Tracker ESC has been better than one would think for punctures- I haven’t gotten any yet, though I haven’t used them a ton where big thorns are, but cactus doesn’t hurt them.
If barefoot, absolute lightweight minimalist is the only option, the Lems with a new sole work well. However, the Courtney’s are
the shoes if big thorns and big cactus are an issue. If just standard cactus and thorns are the problem, the Trackers do well.
