Nameless Range
Well-known member
Unfortunately, I feel like buying boots is a coin toss. Feet are unique.
I hunted on Danners for years, then decided to step up to the plate and purchased a pair of Kenetrek Mountain Extremes(400s). My brother had been hunting on the same model for a couple years, including some week long backpacking trips and he loved them.
I gave them one season, went through enough moleskin to raise the Titanic, and sold them off. I don't believe it is because those boots are bad boots, they just didn't work for my paws.
I've been wearing 8 " Danner Mountain Assaults (China!) and they worked well on some heavy pack-outs last year.
One thing that I have done when purchasing boots that has helped me : Feel the inside of both boots with your hand very carefully for any folded material, ridges, or irregularities that occur on one boot, but not the other. The tiniest irregular bump or ridge can cause blisters over the course of many mountain miles.
I hunted on Danners for years, then decided to step up to the plate and purchased a pair of Kenetrek Mountain Extremes(400s). My brother had been hunting on the same model for a couple years, including some week long backpacking trips and he loved them.
I gave them one season, went through enough moleskin to raise the Titanic, and sold them off. I don't believe it is because those boots are bad boots, they just didn't work for my paws.
I've been wearing 8 " Danner Mountain Assaults (China!) and they worked well on some heavy pack-outs last year.
One thing that I have done when purchasing boots that has helped me : Feel the inside of both boots with your hand very carefully for any folded material, ridges, or irregularities that occur on one boot, but not the other. The tiniest irregular bump or ridge can cause blisters over the course of many mountain miles.