DayTrip
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 13, 2013
- Messages
- 4,014
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Not to sound like a smart ass but if you love the Scarpa's so much how come you aren't going with another pair? You mentioned wearing them out on the 48 4k's but that probably entailed 300+ miles of hiking. Not phenomenal longevity but certainly way beyond the 100 miles I got out of my first pair of Merrill's. The other concern mentioned was that they get uncomfortable on longer hikes. How many miles are we talking, and with what kind of backpack weight? With most hikes in the Whites in the 10-14 mile range I'd think just about any shoe should stay reasonably comfortable with day pack weight. Are you sure it is the shoe and not just your feet not being used to longer hikes? When I first started hiking my arches and calfs would get really sore on hikes over 10 miles. I can now do hikes well over 20 miles without this problem (a combination of better conditioning, better fitting footwear and foot beds in my shoes).
For me, after fit (i.e. getting shoes that don't rip your feet to shreds) the grip on rock and slab is my next most important concern, especially for hiking in New England. You pretty much have me sold on going out and trying a pair of these shoes because you made them sound awesome. Just curious what the specifics of your hikes are now and where the shoes become uncomfortable). Sounds like you already have a pretty good shoe.
I've never owned an approach shoe but maybe some sort of footbed added to these shoes would give you comfort over longer miles with a shoe you already know delivers good traction. Is there enough room inside an approach shoe for a footbed? I use in all of my boots and they definitely improve comfort significantly.
For me, after fit (i.e. getting shoes that don't rip your feet to shreds) the grip on rock and slab is my next most important concern, especially for hiking in New England. You pretty much have me sold on going out and trying a pair of these shoes because you made them sound awesome. Just curious what the specifics of your hikes are now and where the shoes become uncomfortable). Sounds like you already have a pretty good shoe.
I've never owned an approach shoe but maybe some sort of footbed added to these shoes would give you comfort over longer miles with a shoe you already know delivers good traction. Is there enough room inside an approach shoe for a footbed? I use in all of my boots and they definitely improve comfort significantly.