What Do You Wear For Boots While You Are Logging?

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mercer_me

mercer_me

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I wear Labonville Kevlar 2" High Heel Chainsaw Safety Steel Box Toe in the summer and when it's warm and dry, and I wear Viking Bushwacker Ballistic Nylon Boot when it's cold or wet.
 
chemist

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I wear the viking boots with bama socks year round. I stuck some Dr. Scholes insoles in as well... they are quite comfortable.

The key with the rubber boots in the warmer months is the bama socks!
 
RRSsawshop

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Hathorn explorer loggers for spring/summer/fall,have 3 pair and rotate daily.Winter I wear whites pac boots or my Schnees pacs both with felt liners.The key is to rotate daily.:cheers:
 
2dogs

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The key to choosing proper boots is, of course, who is your target audience. When dealing with fellow cutters then I wear black White's that I leave dirty so it looks like I'm a logger. These can be worn with black or blue pants. Any shirt will do. When dealing with the authority having jurisdiction then it is hiking boots, blue jeans, and a generic environmental t-shirt under a long sleeve shirt with the sleeves rolled up. For Fish and Game it is hiking boots and a flannel shirt, green pants and a Trout Unlimited baseball cap. When I meet with environmentalists I wear Earth Shoes (Crocs in the winter), no name jeans with colored webbing sewn on the cuffs and a back pocket missing. Match that with an Earth First t-shirt, 3 day stubble and no bath for a few days, and a few beads and I'm good to go.
 
redprospector

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I wear White's Pac's in the winter, and Wesco 12" Jobmaster's (that will be replaced with White's when they wear out) in the summer.
The only thing I do different when meeting with people mentioned in 2dogs post, is to pin a piece of mistletoe to my shirt tail. Then if they don't like me because of my boots (or any other reason), I tell them to take notice of the mistletoe pinned to my shirt tail as I walk away. ;)

Andy
 
slowp
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:bang:
The key to choosing proper boots is, of course, who is your target audience. When dealing with fellow cutters then I wear black White's that I leave dirty so it looks like I'm a logger. These can be worn with black or blue pants. Any shirt will do. When dealing with the authority having jurisdiction then it is hiking boots, blue jeans, and a generic environmental t-shirt under a long sleeve shirt with the sleeves rolled up. For Fish and Game it is hiking boots and a flannel shirt, green pants and a Trout Unlimited baseball cap. When I meet with environmentalists I wear Earth Shoes (Crocs in the winter), no name jeans with colored webbing sewn on the cuffs and a back pocket missing. Match that with an Earth First t-shirt, 3 day stubble and no bath for a few days, and a few beads and I'm good to go.

:bowdown: I believe you are now a fashionista. But I think Birkies are better to wear when meeting with the environmentalists. For your state, they'd best be the vegan style, not made out of leather. :biggrinbounce2:
I believe the same holds true for the Oregon crowd too.

My salmon shirt wore out. :bang: They don't make that print anymore!
 
tramp bushler

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He said BOOTS , not Hippy shoes

I wear Viberg 105T corks ..... summer , and Hoffman felt lined rubber bottom leather top corks until 20 below 20-below I wearwhite Bata bunny boots or Lacrosse Icemans .... I found out Hoffman's will put a cork sole on bunny boots so I am going to send them a pair .......I am probably the only man who actually wears Corks in Prudhoe Bay ................. Cork tracks on the Kaparuk .....
 
Gologit

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The key to choosing proper boots is, of course, who is your target audience. When dealing with fellow cutters then I wear black White's that I leave dirty so it looks like I'm a logger. These can be worn with black or blue pants. Any shirt will do. When dealing with the authority having jurisdiction then it is hiking boots, blue jeans, and a generic environmental t-shirt under a long sleeve shirt with the sleeves rolled up. For Fish and Game it is hiking boots and a flannel shirt, green pants and a Trout Unlimited baseball cap. When I meet with environmentalists I wear Earth Shoes (Crocs in the winter), no name jeans with colored webbing sewn on the cuffs and a back pocket missing. Match that with an Earth First t-shirt, 3 day stubble and no bath for a few days, and a few beads and I'm good to go.

:ices_rofl:
 
oregoncutter

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boots

I only wear caulks for work. I rotate boots depending on the weather, and how much my feet sweat. I have a couple pair of goretex lined Danner Super Rainforests which I use year round, a pair of Hathorn Hi-lines, and when it's real hot and or I am on gentle ground I''ll wear Danner Pronghorns uninsulated by Hoffman. For me the rubber and rubber leather caulks just couldn't provide the fit, comfort or support I wanted.
 
slowp
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WELL! There are Birkie hiking boots too. I wore a pair to the bottom and back of the Grand Canyon. If it is boots you want, they'll satisfy the enviros too, except they only came in leather.

I am one with the latest fad and I shop locally. That means I wear Kuliens for my logger harassment work until it snows. That reminds me, I need to remember to throw them in the pickup this morning. Then I switch to da Viking caulks, you know eh. I can actually find my size of the latter at the almost local saw shop. Den I put dem on and I talk like a Viking, you knowwwww. No lutafisk please.
 
Gologit

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I'm still clogging along in my worn out Wesco caulks. I put new caulks in this summer so I have to at least wear them long enough to justify the cost. Like most caulks there's about a three hour time span when the caulks are just right...not too sharp and not too blunt.

I might get Kuliens next. Do they make them in adult sizes?
 
slowp
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I keep losing the spikes. I'm not sure what is going on. I tighten them up, but then one or two are gone. I may give Kulien's a call, except they wanted me to get the permanent ones. I like to be able to replace them without a trip to Centralia.

Maybe I need an air compressor run tool to drive them in? Maybe it is the brand I bought?

The timer is going off. Time to go check the HUCKLEBERRY PIE made out of this year's berries. :hmm3grin2orange:
 
Humptulips

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I can't understand why anyone would want the screw in caulks when drive caulks available. I replace my own at home but they last so much longer I don't do it often. To each his own I guess, maybe I'm just old fashioned.
 
tramp bushler

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Shoe Goo

. Un bolt all the corks , put a dab of shoe goo in the nut then screw the corks back in while the stuff is still nice and wet and goooy ......... Thats a Boom mans and tug boaters trick .. It makes a gasket that keeps the salt water away from the threads of the nut and cork .. I found it also eliminated loose or missing corks ... It is not enough adhesion to make changing them out when dull a problem ....... I use a cordless screw gun to change corks ... I cut the handle off a t handle wrench and save my wrist .. I set the torque real light when running them back in and do the final torquing by hand with a diff t wrench ..
 

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