Salomon XA pros non gortex. Laces have held up for a few years so far. I shoot in them but don't wear them every day.
Salomon XA pros non gortex. Laces have held up for a few years so far. I shoot in them but don't wear them every day.
Reebok First Responders Mids. Side zip, wide sizes and comfortable arch support.
I have been wearing Merrells for years. I almost switched but, I did not like how the more expensive shoe felt when I moved.
I like my Salomon XA pro 3D GTX and Keens....................... FWIW
Regards,
Ranger325
"People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf"
George Orwell
lowa zephyr mid. no goretex. awesome boots. light like sneakers but offer plenty of support.
I am not a one size fits all type... it all depends on weather and activity so I have a number of choices.
Summer, running around I have speedcross 3's
Rucking, Salomon Quest GTX
Winter hunting, Kenetrek 400 gram insulated boots.
Working around the yard I still have my Belleville steel toe issues from 20 years ago.
Last edited by soulezoo; 10-10-16 at 12:06. Reason: typo
Just my personal experience, but I've been wearing some variant of Merell Moab since about 2010-2011 now. If I could get away with it, that's all I'd wear. I'll be following this thread to see if there would anything better.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur."
RE: Moabs.
I wore them almost exclusively while living in Alaska and over my first two deployments. Changed to Salomons towards the middle of my third deployment.
This is my seventh pair of Moabs, and I noticed a substantial drop in their life cycle around mid-2013. I've averaged 500-600 miles of hiking from around 6-8 months of daily wear before before the sole starts to separate. This pair was purchased before my last deployment and only made it 5 months before this started to happen. I just keep Shoe Goo on hand and patch the soles as needed, but I have consistently had the soles separate at the tongue and inside heel. My last three pairs have all blown out in those areas.
Everyone's different with how hard they beat their feet, but the quality of the Moabs became too poor for me to keep dropping the money for them, even if it was the Promotive price.
The Salomons I'm wearing right now have 7 months and a few weekend-long backpacking trips trough Pisgah and weekly rucks through Sweetwater in addition to being my off-duty boots. They're holding up great, and I'll definitely buy another pair whenever these shit the bed.
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