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Post by Woody Williams on Nov 16, 2005 12:52:19 GMT -5
I've got a pair of LaCrosse Alpha Burleys that I dearly love, but my feet get cold in them.
My plain old LaCross Burleys are much warmer.
Anyone else notice this?
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Post by indianadan on Nov 16, 2005 15:42:54 GMT -5
With a good pair of socks on I can live through temps of 25-30 degrees Farenheit for 3 hours or so with my Alphas. Any longer or colder than that I break out the insulated Wolverines. I also place an old scrap piece of carpet (that I keep hanging outside year around) on my stands when it gets really cold out.
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Post by indianagooseman on Nov 17, 2005 16:48:37 GMT -5
I bought the Cabelas 800 gr version called Dura-trax that I wore all last winter to work and never once got cold. I'm an equipment operator on an open cab dozer and let me tell you that steel floor gets REALLY cold! I was never impressed with any boot before I bought the Dura-trax and I would recommend them to anyone.
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Post by mbogo on Nov 18, 2005 9:24:14 GMT -5
I bought the Cabelas 800 gr version called Dura-trax that I wore all last winter to work and never once got cold. I'm an equipment operator on an open cab dozer and let me tell you that steel floor gets REALLY cold! I was never impressed with any boot before I bought the Dura-trax and I would recommend them to anyone. I am on my second pair of Cabela's Comfor-Trax boots and they are without a doubt the warmest most comfortable rubber boots I have worn.
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Post by indianagooseman on Nov 18, 2005 17:41:17 GMT -5
Do the Comfort-Trax have neoprene uppers like the Dura-Trax or are they rubber?
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Post by mbogo on Nov 21, 2005 12:14:57 GMT -5
They are all rubber.
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Post by dec on Dec 1, 2005 15:33:51 GMT -5
I have the 1200 gr. Burley and I can wear them while hunting in the 20's with just a pair of regular athletic socks on. Once it gets down into the teens and lower, I've got to break out the heavier socks though.
I always wondered if the Alphas were as warm as the regular ones. I guess not.
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