ILUVSWTAS wrote:If you have camp shoes to wear at the end of the day, your boots are best to cross rivers by far!!
Though I am also a bit soft and dont like to get wet wet too early in a walk.
corvus wrote:for multi day walks I much prefer to avoid continuous full immersion where possible
Tortoise wrote:corvus wrote:for multi day walks I much prefer to avoid continuous full immersion where possible
+1
I crossed a creek in my boots on day 1 of 8 a few years ago - and got blisters sooooo bad that I ended up doing 6 days (some off track) in my friend's fake Tevas![]()
Not thrilled re crossing in Crocs, but better than barefoot - I gave that up after I got a foot punctured with blackberry thorns, which I didn't notice with my numb feet in the snow-melt. I just make sure that the Crocs still have plenty of tread.
Not so thrilled re creek crossings now you mention it - don't really like any of the options. Soft, I know...
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Couldnt agree more Corvus. Crocs can be slippery underfoot, as well as your foot moves around inside them, not a good choice at all for river crossings i'd say.
Forest wrote:
Im not going to beat the mesh runner drum too much but i just walk through. Let them get wet, they will dry quickly enough as they don't hold water. No delay. No issues. Even in NZ glacial ice melt. Your feet generate a fair bit of heat.
Rob A wrote:My foot went forward between the next large boulder, and the bolder was held back for a moment by the rigidity of the toe cap to heel, and gave me an instant to rip the foot clear before the boulder rolled home. Amazing what you can do when sufficiently motivated.
It will NEVER happen to me again, it was a huge wake up call. In crocs or barefoot the foot would have broken and probably the shin too
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