Thats good innings to be fair. Thanks.Had mine 7 years, still going strong. Very comfortable for me.
Thats good innings to be fair. Thanks.Had mine 7 years, still going strong. Very comfortable for me.
Thanks, shall give them a look.Haix High Liability. Comfortable and very durable. They're also much less expensive than many of the named brands above.
As for durability, mine spend time probably 10% of the time stalking, the rest is me walking g around on the farm, busy beef farm so lots of cow **** and wet grass. I average 14,000-20,000 steps a day in them hence why I choose good boots. Welly’s and dealer boots give me a really bad back.
I did use the Lowa Tibets in the Austrian Alps hunting chamois, so they are not bad in the mountains. Would be very good if you walking on long rocky mountain trails. Where they struggle us on steep softish ground or in snow where you need to kick step and support your whole weight on just the edge. Such work needs a stiffer crampon compatible boot.Ideally looking for an all rounder as cover most types of ground, so that's quite helpful, thanks.
Yes currently have a pair, had them about a yearInteresting.
Anyone had any of these.
They are indeed durable, as are the Hanwag Yukon, a little more heavy duty than the Tatra, but not much so, just a higher all round rand.Thanks, how do you find the insole? Really its durability that would concern me.
Hill ground mostly, boggy, rocky, long grass, Heather come across most terrains west scotland has to offer any given day. A lot to think about, thanks.I did use the Lowa Tibets in the Austrian Alps hunting chamois, so they are not bad in the mountains. Would be very good if you walking on long rocky mountain trails. Where they struggle us on steep softish ground or in snow where you need to kick step and support your whole weight on just the edge. Such work needs a stiffer crampon compatible boot.
Unless you on such ground regularly, or a carrying heavy loads, the Tibets are a good boot.
Have the Hunters. Seen a lot of use over past 3 years. Will buy lowa again and from Rob at Monarch again tooInteresting.
Anyone had any of these.
Thanks for that.They are indeed durable, as are the Hanwag Yukon, a little more heavy duty than the Tatra, but not much so, just a higher all round rand.
I use orange superfeet insoles in all my boots, so can’t really comment on the stock soles, they come out before I start wearing the boots. NB neither of these are high leg, but both Lochty and myself are no strangers to the wilder parts of the highlands, and I’ve tried some other brands with generally sub par results. The Hanwags if looked after will serve well, high leg they ain’t, though.
Thanks.Have the Hunters. Seen a lot of use over past 3 years. Will buy lowa again and from Rob at Monarch again too
In that case I would have a look La Sportiva Karakorum or Scarpa Manta 4 Equivalents. Not as soft and comfortable at first as a softer boot, and require breaking in, but once broken in they give huge levels of support and after a hard day your feet are not broken. Its the sort of ground that a 4 season boot is made for.Hill ground mostly, boggy, rocky, long grass, Heather come across most terrains west scotland has to offer any given day. A lot to think about, thanks.
Yeah, was going to have a go with crispis this time. The evos or the hunters looked pretty bang on. Unfortunately could not for love nor money find any in a 9.5.The Dovre take some beating tbh, Lowa are a quality boot, I was stuck between the two but chose the Dovre as is wasn’t insulated.
Danner boots are quality but don’t have a rubber rand so wear quicker! They are super comfortable.
Crispi seemed decent at the Stalking show but most boots had orange in them and looked like they were hivis straight out of screwfix! Only one pair were brown/black!
Thanks, will be in them more or less every day to be fair.In that case I would have a look La Sportiva Karakorum or Scarpa Manta 4 Equivalents. Not as soft and comfortable at first as a softer boot, and require breaking in, but once broken in they give huge levels of support and after a hard day your feet are not broken. Its the sort of ground that a 4 season boot is made for.
But such boots are not the sort of boots all day, every day, driving the truck pottering about a farm type use.
Less Than you I expect but had them 5 years, 20 days a year highland staking and a day a week down here. Holding up well. These are issue boots if that wasn’t clear, hence the price.Interesting. How long have you got out of them, with how much regular use.