SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT.

/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #61  
Part of the problem is possibly having to go in and out of the house fifty times a day. That makes work boots impractical.

Nah, Mate. Quite a few of the work boots I'm seeing now have a zipper up the side... you lace them up to where they're comfortable and thereafter use the zip to put-on/take-off. Or there are the (Aussie-popular) elastic-sided work boots.

I have a Navy issued pair of "Oliver", steel-toed, firefighter boots. Lace-up but they come with a zipper 'insert' that goes where the laces are. A bit 'weighty', but extremely comfy once they're broken in.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #62  
Steel toes are just a part of the total protection a boot can offer. The second thing you want is metatarsal protection, which extends behind the steel toe and back towards the ankle.

Metatarsal boots offer better protection, but it sure comes at a cost.

I worked at a place that required them, and what we found was, while it did protect your feet better, because of the way they did so, you could not really walk normal-like. It was sort of stiff-footed if you will. Because of that, it really messed with our backs. Just about everyone in that shop saw a chiropractor for back problems, and even my own attributed my problem, and the problem of other coworkers, to the metatarsal work boots required at our job.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #63  
Part of the problem is possibly having to go in and out of the house fifty times a day. That makes work boots impractical.

I had a JD 640 Fork Carrier I was welding, fall on my toes wearing running shoes. I still remember the unbelievable pain. I think that was the only time I broke or cracked a bone, in my toe. I probably should have been wearing work boots.

Learned something interesting from the ER Doc the next day. He got a bunsen (sp?) burner and made a straightened paper clip red hot, and poked it through my toe nail, like a hot knife through butter. INSTANTLY relieved the pressure and pain. Easily could have done it at home.

I learned that years ago, after jamming my thumb while opening a dump truck tailgate. The blood spurted out and sprayed the nurse... now that would have been a fiasco.
The worst part was that I did it on the job so comp paid for the outpatient visit; the endless paperwork involved was more painful than losing my thumbnail.
Since then I've gone to the Dr just once for a work related injury, after getting a stick in the eye; I just put it on my health insurance and paid the deductible.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #64  
Metatarsal boots offer better protection, but it sure comes at a cost.

I worked at a place that required them, and what we found was, while it did protect your feet better, because of the way they did so, you could not really walk normal-like. It was sort of stiff-footed if you will. Because of that, it really messed with our backs. Just about everyone in that shop saw a chiropractor for back problems, and even my own attributed my problem, and the problem of other coworkers, to the metatarsal work boots required at our job.

Friend of mine had to wear those at work. He called them his Frankenstein boots because of the way they made him walk.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #65  
Imagine getting mowed down because you can't get out of the way fast enough, on account of your "SAFETY" boots? Like a bad dream, running away from danger in wet cement.

ALMOST smashed my pickup into something a few times when a stupid clunky pair of boots got caught between brake and accelerator pedals.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #66  
Imagine getting mowed down because you can't get out of the way fast enough, on account of your "SAFETY" boots? Like a bad dream, running away from danger in wet cement.

ALMOST smashed my pickup into something a few times when a stupid clunky pair of boots got caught between brake and accelerator pedals.

That's one reason that I keep a pair of slip-on shoes under the seat... I wear them in the morning, so that my feet are wet and sweaty by the time that I get out of the truck; and in the evening, so that I don't have to keep my wet, heavy boots on until I get home.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #67  
The older I get, the more and more I just wear sneakers.

I do not do so while logging, but just about everything else I will.

Katie asked me the other day "why I was so hard on my sneakers", and I said it is because "I wear my sneakers like work boots now."
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #68  
^^^^
I used to buy a pair of New Balance sneakers every spring; they were made in Maine, of some material like cordura which handled getting wet. Then NB moved overseas, discontinued that line and I haven't bought a pair of sneakers since.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #69  
My favorite slip-ons are Skechers Dual-Lite. Feather lite and very comfortable. Boots are just to hot and uncomfortable for a fat man.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #70  
Whenever I see that "N" on sneakers, I can't help think "OLD PEOPLE SHOES".

I wear institutional "no hole" crocks all summer around here, not off property. For chain sawing and just about everything. Feet can get pretty gross though! Sweat and dirt in a rubber shoe make mud!
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #71  
I live in a house with a wife and four daughters, so at just under 100 pairs of shoes (as of the 2020 great BrokenTrack Shoe census), I think we have every kind of shoe style there is.

Some girls are forever barefoot, and some just love their shoes, but my youngest daughter is the strangest I have ever seen. She forever has one sock on, and one sock off. She has been like that since she was an infant, and turns 7 this week. I figured it was something she would grow out of. but nope. It is the darndest thing I have ever seen.

As for me, LL Bean made a half-boot/half-clog that I really liked because you could slip them on and run out to the barn or the shop, in snow, rain, dew, etc. Then they quit making them. I called up and asked, and the guy was even perturbed saying they were hugely popular, but then they changed the design. Today they have a type of clog, but it is nothing like the decent style they had.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #72  
I live in a house with a wife and four daughters, so at just under 100 pairs of shoes (as of the 2020 great BrokenTrack Shoe census), I think we have every kind of shoe style there is.

Some girls are forever barefoot, and some just love their shoes, but my youngest daughter is the strangest I have ever seen. She forever has one sock on, and one sock off. She has been like that since she was an infant, and turns 7 this week. I figured it was something she would grow out of. but nope. It is the darndest thing I have ever seen.

As for me, LL Bean made a half-boot/half-clog that I really liked because you could slip them on and run out to the barn or the shop, in snow, rain, dew, etc. Then they quit making them. I called up and asked, and the guy was even perturbed saying they were hugely popular, but then they changed the design. Today they have a type of clog, but it is nothing like the decent style they had.

That seems to be typical, doesn't it? No matter how popular an item is, somebody has to "improve" it.

I have a set of "Old Man's" slip on rubbers which are great for that, sliding right over whatever shoes I'm wearing. They're especially handy when going into the chicken coop... if I remember to wear them.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #73  
Whenever I see that "N" on sneakers, I can't help think "OLD PEOPLE SHOES".

I wear institutional "no hole" crocks all summer around here, not off property. For chain sawing and just about everything. Feet can get pretty gross though! Sweat and dirt in a rubber shoe make mud!

For those of you blessed with normal size feet, I am envious. My foot measures at 4E. As a result, I patronize companies like New Balance and Red Wing. They realize not everyone fits in a medium. I have alway worn New Balance, now I am getting "old" too. :)

Doug in SW IA
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #74  
For those of you blessed with normal size feet, I am envious. My foot measures at 4E. As a result, I patronize companies like New Balance and Red Wing. They realize not everyone fits in a medium. I have alway worn New Balance, now I am getting "old" too. :)

Doug in SW IA

Just wanted you to know that you are not alone in this world. I am a 4E as well. It really limits you shoe/boot selections.
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #75  
Metatarsal boots offer better protection, but it sure comes at a cost.

I worked at a place that required them, and what we found was, while it did protect your feet better, because of the way they did so, you could not really walk normal-like. It was sort of stiff-footed if you will. Because of that, it really messed with our backs. Just about everyone in that shop saw a chiropractor for back problems, and even my own attributed my problem, and the problem of other coworkers, to the metatarsal work boots required at our job.

This may be true for all I know! I can tell you the original metatarsal boots I used to wear, that had the metatarsal protection on the outside of the boots, used to catch on the bottoms of industrial type steps when going up, which was inconvenient to say the least. Never had them affect my ability to walk though.

New metatarsal boots have the protection built in and looking at them you would think they are a normal boot. These also do not cause any difficulty for me personally. Been wearing these boots for years, and actually they are the most comfortable boots I have ever owned. But NOT cheap. Happily the company paid for a number of pairs of them...:)
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #76  
That figures. As soon as I say something, something comes along to challenge my notions.

Had my morning coffee yesterday, googling whatever, and couldn't help but notice those shoes.

N shoes.jpg

I bet she's not a day past 50!
 
/ SAFETY TOE BOOTS OR NOT. #79  
Her watch probably weighs as much as she does. Another "modern" trend I don't get.
 

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