Love them, Loved them, Loved them
bobandgeri said:
How did you do with the boots? I picked up a pair at IME Friday for $175, then wore them Sat and Sun - no issues.
No issues at all. No rubbing, no hot spots, no blisters. I wore them around for a couple jaunts up & down Mt. Wachusett (a few minutes from my house) before going out this weekend (ended up doing Flume Slide Trail, but only to the Slide, couldn't summit... ran out of time and energy). The soles felt a little harder on the bottom of my feet than my leather Merrils (naturally) so I threw in a pair of "soft sole" gelsoles... and I was gellin' after that. Worked great!
The only two things I wish was: 1) that I could have tried them with crampons... the trail was totally unbroken, DEEP & SOFT in the warm spring sun, and 2) that I was better prepared for the weight (they're fully twice the weight of my Merrils).
I'm sure they'll be awesome in my crampons. That's actually why I got plastics anyway... my leathers were far too flexible, & gave my foot little support for crampons, especially when frontpointing. As far as the weight, I'm not sure if it was just me that day (had my 2 year old sons birthday party the night before & not nearly enough sleep), the 30 pound pack I decided to carry (I had enough stuff, food water, tent, sleeping bag & pad to support a couple nights up there... just in case), the additional weight of the boots, or the additional weight of the snow on my snowshoes, but the weight seemed particularly heavy. Every time I sank in knee to waist deep, which was pretty often, no matter how delicately I stepped, I had to pull my leg/foot up out of the snow and there would be 10 pounds of snow on top. The snow wasn't light and powdery. It was the kind that makes great snowballs damp & sticky (and HEAVY).
That's basically the reason I couldn't summit. I changed my plans from Carter to the Flume/Liberty loop. I started about 8:30 from the parking lot. The first couple miles went fine, took me probably a little over an hour. The last couple miles however was another story. Once the Flume Slide Trail branched off from the Liberty trail
there was only 1 set of snowshoe prints for the first half mile... then even they turned back and the last 2 miles was totally virgin!
Although I tried my best to step gingerly I was still sinking 8" - 12" in the soft snow.
I truged and I sank and I fell and I truged some more... it took me almost 5 hours from parking lot to the base of the Slide.
By then it was 1:00 pm and I was beat! Looking up at that wall of snow (no ice, so I couldn't take off the snowshoes and switch to crampons) and my watch I decided discretion was the better part of valor. I turned around and headed back, doing a little bushwacking along the way (another mistake... sprucetraps everwhere).
I just plain ran out of time & steam! There was No Way I was going to be able to ascend Flume Slide, traverse the ridge to Liberty and decend the Liberty Trail in daylight, not to mention the exhaustion factor. I had lights and I might have gone for it if I wasn't soloing. All in all though I had a FANTASTIC time anyway, despite all the adversity, frustration, muscle cramps and exhaustion. It was a "good" kind of exhaustion! And after all... the mountains will still be there tomorrow.
Until tomorrow...
Peace Out,
Capt. Jim
ps: a Positive vote for the Degres!