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Knut
301
Dec 7, 2017
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I got a pair for a boundary waters canoe trip At a friend‘s recommendation. If you tread in water over the top of the sock, your feet will get and stay wet. that is unless you want to shave your legs and tape-seal the tops. I was glad I had wool socks with me. YMMV
Dec 7, 2017
Hunty
6
Apr 15, 2018
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KnutI'm indecisive for what to kind of shoe/sock to wear for BWCA this year, was thinking about venturing into waterproof socks but on the fence. Would a higher waterproof sock be better?
Apr 15, 2018
Axeguy
1372
Apr 17, 2018
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HuntyThe higher the better because—as @Knut mentioned—once wet, they stayed that way. In fact, they are equally adept at keeping water trapped IN the sock... I found this out the hard way 3 days into a wilderness canoe trip. The water in the sock became nice and warm and I just let it be for the rest of the day. Bad mistake... The flesh of the feet became waterlogged and skin began to slough off. It became a painful lesson in impending ‘trench foot’—although not nearly as bad as it could have been. I still like a waterproof sock for some things but I mostly went back to wool with a thin liner sock.
Apr 17, 2018
Hunty
6
Apr 21, 2018
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AxeguyThanks for the tip, i was thinking the tried and true extra wool socks would still be the best option.
Apr 21, 2018
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