ColeyG
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2017
- Messages
- 378
I agree, the Wiggy's are essentially a one time use item. They get a hunter by for a short period of time, but inevitably they get holes and are useless. The glacier socks on the other hand, I can get 2-3 seasons out of a pair, and I use them a lot. The ability to use glacier socks are one huge advantage of the plastic boots. When you have to cross a creek 10-15 times in the course of a mile or two, or essentially be in the creek the whole time you work up a drainage, everything is inferior to using glacier socks with plastic boots. Now, I did have a buddy hike two miles up a creek with crocs and glacier socks one time, but that didn't look like much fun and was probably a sprained ankle waiting to happen.
Anyway, I think I'll check out these new double boots you guys are referring to and see if they can match the advantages I find with wearing plastic double boots. For me anyway, I need an extremely stiff boot in the ankles. A plastic boot makes it virtually impossible to "roll" your ankle, not the case with leather boots I have tried such as, crispis, lowas's, kennetreks, etc. The durability is another advantage. Depending where a guy hunts, I've seen leather boots toasted after one hunt. Along with the aforementioned ability to use glacier socks, there are some advantages that I don't think any other boot system can match, but I digress.
I need a ton of ankle support as well having blown out all tendons and ligaments in one of my ankles playing sports as a young lad. I have zero lateral support on my left and I I look at it crooked it rolls. This is the primary reason I use mountaineering boots for sheep hunting when a more moderate hiking boot would work for most of the terrain.
Footwear Philosophy for Mountain Hunting, By Coley Gentzel - Journal of Mountain Hunting
If there is a more commonly debated and frequently agonized category of equipment in the realm of mountain hunting I don’t know what it is. In every pre-trip planning process, ...
journalofmountainhunting.com
I find the ankle support and fit much better in single mountaineering boots than double, even more so than old plastics where there is a lot of play in the plush liner. I just replaced my 2nd pair of Sportiva Trango Cubes with their new Aequilibrium ST and so far I am very impressed. It is a fantastic sheep boot. An awesome combination of light and comfortable on the flats and stiff/supportive with great traction on the steeps. The synthetic materials that these boots are made out of dry much more quickly than leather. I can't think of a sheep trip I've had where, even after a full soaking, my boots have remained wet to the point I'd consider that problematic for more than a day. I do tend to take more socks than most, usually one pair for every 2-3 day in the field.
Good to know on the Glacier Socks. Glad you get some good mileage out of them. I've definitely torn up a few toenails and banged some ankles logging river rock miles in my crocs. Since I usually have these along as camp shoes anyhow, I am too lazy/weak to carry something else just for dealing with water crossings.