Vivo Barefoot Tundra ESC Review

Shraggs

WKR
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Jan 24, 2014
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Location
Zeeland, MI
Vivo Barefoot Tundra ESC Review: (sorry was not able to add pics in between paragraphs)

My quest, for the perfect late season mountain hunting boot, led me to this VIVO product, based on information presented in Rokslide regarding mukluks for late season mountain hunting. What I value in a boot is warmth and traction. More specifically sustained warmth through high exertion walking and then remain warm through inactive times like extended glassing. This unique boot from Vivo Barefoot may just be the best late season mountain boot I have used.



Description:

The Tundra ESC mukluk is similar looking to a pack boot but the outer shell is a breathable fabric which allows all moisture created to readily escape (and therefore not water proof) unlike more traditional pac boots which generally are sealed in with rubber bottoms and retain your moisture over time. The wool liners are the thickest and warmest I’ve ever seen and used (I measured 1” thick), much thicker than most that typically range from 9 to 13 mm. The liner also has Velcro adjustability presumably for a custom fit. The sole is remarkable deep lugged, tacky and flexible and wraps over the toe box for toe protection. Like all Vivo Barefoot products it is zero drop with minimal sole cushioning and has one simple lacing system like more historic mukluks with modern styling. This boot is very light for an extreme cold and terrain boot at around two and a half pounds each. This is size 11, a 10 would have been fine but I like the flexibility of slightly oversized – more on that later. The current cost is a steep $550…

First 3 pics



Testing:

Prior to my 2025 elk hunt, I bought these in 2024 and fortunately our winter in Michigan was pretty darn cold and a lot of snow and wind. All of my testing was done in blowing snow and temperatures ranging from low single digits to mid teens. I was only able to hunt one day, gun opener and loved them!

Pic in camo

My historical first test is to snow blow the driveway! Usually any minimally insulated boot is all you need for high exertion to stay warm while active. If I put a warm boot on of any kind I’ll wet it out from sweat and my feet will get chilled, and get cold very quickly if I stop for a few minutes - a reasonable representation of active hunting in my estimation. It took a little over an hour to clear the drive and I chatted with my neighbor after in the street standing in about 10” of snow and blowing. Never once were my feet chilled or cold during or after. This is the only cold weather boot this has ever happened. As always I checked my socks for moisture once inside and I was not able to detect any…

pic in jeans

Next I walked round our block .7 miles with 31 lbs in my pack 3 times at a brisk pace. The snow on the street and sidewalks was about 10” deep, blowing and very cold. I wanted to be sure I was sweating in minimal hunting clothes, as I knew my feet would also be sweating and affecting the insulation ability of the boots.

Even though this was relatively flat ground the traction was fantastic! I sat on my snowy porch immediately after adding a puffs and hat for an hour and a half to replicate glassing. I gotta say my feet were very comfortable and warm!

Pic on steps

My last pre-test was sitting in brutal cold vs an old stand by - the white Beta rubber moon boots. For those that know these are vapor barrier technology and with two internal layers of wool (about equivalent to 1600 gr thinsulate) but impossible for moisture to ever get to insulation. I can stay in these forever it seems if I just have dry socks every couple of hours. If fit correctly with thick warm socks they are very warm. With one of each on after two hours at 9* I’d call it a draw with minor chill spots in both sitting motionless that were easily remedied with toe/foot wiggles.

Pic in carharts

After 5 decades of hunting and being outdoors with “cold feet syndrome” I feel the last 15 years I’ve finally learned that getting more insulation is not always the key or not the only key. If you have sweaty feet the moisture is the the first thing to solve for. I do have many traditional very warm pac boots for typical local whitetail stand hunting, and if I wet them out walking to a stand I’ll will be freezing right away until I learned to keep my feet sweat from the insulation. My methods take some effort and not very practical on the move in mountains. I’m very confident these Tundra ESCs may be the best option.

Three boots I have used for late season elk hunting are the Kenetrek Mountain Extreme 400, Cabelas Artic Bruin 1400 and a LaCrosse version of a western pack boot. I really like my Kenetreks, but given I’ve been using zero drop for nearly 20 years socially and for working out I was about to buy the Vivo Trackers until this boot surfaced (to live in barefoot shoes then use stiff mountain boots only for a hunt really takes a toll on my knees). 400 gram insulation is enough to be on the move but not when glassing for me. Once I used the LaCrosse pack boot, another well made boot with a 13mm liner of felt/polypropolane, my liner and socks were soaked within 30 minutes and I was miserable. The best to date is a Cabelas Artic Bruin (no longer made), heavily insulated with 1400 gram thinsulate – which was no different then the kenetrek while active but did offer a bit more time before my feet were cold glassing. These have really good grip and they breath very well compared to all leather and have very little drop in the sole. Using all three of these I would always use my Artic shield pull overs to get through a long inactive period.

3 pics on scale

And finally… I was able to make 1st rifle in CO this year after a few years hiatus, and I was excited to use these boots! Unfortunelately it was quite warm and no snow… But there were a couple of mornings in the high teens so I used the Tundras anyway! Never cold standing or moving and even as the temps rose to the 50s I was still comfortable. That evening I set up on a meadow and my feet and the liner were very damp from sweat after a miles of hiking in high temps not made for a boot like this, yet as the temps dropped to the low thirties I should have had cold feet but they were not! I showed no mercy on steep terrain and blowdowns hiking in mukluk without “support” and was not handicaped without a stiff boot in such terrain as I’ve been programmed. I was surprised and appreciated the night and day difference in knee fatigue compared to the mountain extremes which I used the rest of time. The liners dried in our warm tent.

4 hunting pics



Summary and Conlusion:

A few misses I feel are worth mentioning given the price. First, Vivo does not offer a replacement liner for any reason and when I talked with them I was told they have never even considered it. Spares are important to me… Second, I embrace the zero drop and minimal foot cushion philosophy – however if your going to get a chill it likely will be from the ground up since there simply is minimal insulation with a thin 5 mm wool insole. A thin foam barrier under the liner would do wonders for stopping ground cold. The Velcro and strap could be sewn on so that one may actually tailor the fit to their leg. Last, the one long 13’ lace although traditional does not allow lacing for fitting ones foot and lower leg shape.

Therefore, I did some minor changes to my boots. I used a Velcro strap to compress the ankle area to stop heel rising while walking. Not pictured, is a 9mm Alpaca wool inner sole instead of the 5 mm and I cut foam insoles for under the liner to add a cold barrier from the ground. It still walks and feels the same, but if walking over rocks the feeling of sharpness into your foot is slightly reduced. Sizing up allowed room for the thicker insole and foam. Last, I used one 4’ and 6’ lengths of paracord lace to better lace the areas I wanted snugger.

3 pics customized

The Vivo Barefoot Tundra ESC are unique and an overall balanced cold and snow hunting boot comparatively – specifically they are not heavy, very warm, breath extremely well with amazing traction. When using these I can omit my artic shield boot covers and/or micro spikes and won’t be cold while active or inactive in cold snowy mountain conditions.
 

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I just got mine a little over a month back. Overall seem great and cant wait to really test them in the cold. Agree the lacing system could be a bit better. It will work but a few velcro straps would be welcome.
 
Pics continued:
 

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I’ve had them for a bit. Two elk and 30’ish miles packing in/out over 4 days, and a deer so far in a mix of dry ground and snow.
The lacing system as noted is functionally useless. Cut mine and just did the foot to ankle- much better.
IMG_1412.jpeg


The first time in my life I have used a pair of shoes that I could hike in, and didn’t have agony from cold feet.
 
I’ve had them for a bit. Two elk and 30’ish miles packing in/out over 4 days, and a deer so far in a mix of dry ground and snow.
The lacing system as noted is functionally useless. Cut mine and just did the foot to ankle- much better.
View attachment 964424


The first time in my life I have used a pair of shoes that I could hike in, and didn’t have agony from cold feet.
I swear I didn’t need another pair of boots. But I’ll be picking a pair of these up apparently. At what point did you decide to switch to these vs the standard esc?
 
What socks are y'all using?

How much tension are you putting on the ankle portion of the laces?

I just got mine.

I ordered the same size as my Forest Trackers and usually just wear a liner sock with those.

I'm sliding around in these.

I'm going to go put a toe liner and yak sock on and walk around tonight. The low tonight is 33 here which is pretty cold for these parts. I'm only going to have so many cold nights to test stuff out.
 
And here I was looking at the winter tracker as my potential next cold weather option

Steger Mukluks are the first and only shoe that my feet stayed comfortable in, you just can’t really hike in them. Multiple times I hiked in regular shoes and carried the Mukluks to swap once at camp or glassing spots. Now, the Tundras mean one pair of boots does what I need. Below around 30° F I am wearing the Tundra’s.
 
What socks are y'all using?

I’ve use cotton, smart wool, camel wool and yak wool socks- with liner and without.


How much tension are you putting on the ankle portion of the laces?

Tight when hiking. Separate the laces as shraggs and I showed.


I'm sliding around in these.

Yep- that’s partly how your feet stay warm. Separate the laces, tie the foot portion tight, and get used to the little bit of movement when walking.
 
I’ve use cotton, smart wool, camel wool and yak wool socks- with liner and without.




Tight when hiking. Separate the laces as shraggs and I showed.




Yep- that’s partly how your feet stay warm. Separate the laces, tie the foot portion tight, and get used to the little bit of movement when walking.
Thank You.

The way they came laced from the factory seems like its susceptible to getting stuck in deep snow and then you pull your foot out of the boot and step in snow and get a wet sock instead of extracting the boot.

Kinda like the Lacrosse Burly Boots we wear here in the mud. Get in some pluff and you lose it and get a slimy sock.
 
What socks are y'all using?

How much tension are you putting on the ankle portion of the laces?

I just got mine.

I ordered the same size as my Forest Trackers and usually just wear a liner sock with those.

I'm sliding around in these.

I'm going to go put a toe liner and yak sock on and walk around tonight. The low tonight is 33 here which is pretty cold for these parts. I'm only going to have so many cold nights to test stuff out.
I use yak as form recommended and inji liners.

I compressed the liner ankle area. I tie the two strings just snug no compression.
 
Steger Mukluks are the first and only shoe that my feet stayed comfortable in, you just can’t really hike in them. Multiple times I hiked in regular shoes and carried the Mukluks to swap once at camp or glassing spots. Now, the Tundras mean one pair of boots does what I need. Below around 30° F I am wearing the Tundra’s.
Yeah I’m gonna be pushing it for 4th rifle in CO this year and rocking the standard vivos and liner/yak sock combo. Last year it was unseasonably warm so I wasn’t too bad. Dropped pretty good by the end of the week

I may have an opportunity for Wyoming cow elk cull in January - so I’m keeping my eyes open for sales on these now.

How do they fair with rain? I assume fairly well? I’ve run into a number of times it should have been snowing but instead was raining and 20 degrees.
 
Yeah I’m gonna be pushing it for 4th rifle in CO this year and rocking the standard vivos and liner/yak sock combo. Last year it was unseasonably warm so I wasn’t too bad. Dropped pretty good by the end of the week

I may have an opportunity for Wyoming cow elk cull in January - so I’m keeping my eyes open for sales on these now.

How do they fair with rain? I assume fairly well? I’ve run into a number of times it should have been snowing but instead was raining and 20 degrees.
I would not use them rain unless by happenstance. They are not waterproof
 
How do they fair with rain? I assume fairly well? I’ve run into a number of times it should have been snowing but instead was raining and 20 degrees.


They aren’t waterproof. The leather bottom does fine, but the top it goes right through. Having said that, I crossed a marshy creek, soaked the boots inside, yet my feet stayed warm in 30° F temps.
 
I would not use them rain unless by happenstance. They are not waterproof
Yeah never plan on it. But Idaho has some weird weather every time I come to hunt. At a certain point everything wets out. Seems I’ll keep my seal skin socks on standby for the rainy season with my standard vivos and these for the winter. I’m gonna have to put these to the test predator hunting in NC this winter
 
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