vibram outsoles, tan brown leather upper, canvas fabric tubes; the quintessential US army boot... thirty years ago.
i live in a place that is not the United States to say the least, and, when these little fuckers do make their way here, they're usually sold for an expensive price (for me). so seeing that some of these desert storm boot seem to go for as low as 30-40 dollars (my budget lmao) on Ebay, from high-rated sellers and good conditions, i've been seriously considering them.
how have these things fared with time? do they actually last? are they durable? can you wear them without your feet turning into minced meat? can they be resoled if they wear out?
keep in mind i also don't know jackshit about these things, just some second-hand knowledge and info acquired by osmosis. A vague jerking-off gesture about Vibram, Belleville this, Rocky that. I don't know who makes the durable ones, the comfortable ones, or the bad ones so i'd appreciate any and all info, recommendations or a slap in the face if it's actually a bad idea
I think an important place to start when trying to pick out a shoe or boot is considering what you're going to do in them.
Are you going hiking? In what kind of environment? Desert? Fording rivers and streams? Mud? Are these work boots? Do you need a steel toe? Do you need lineman's boots? Are these just going to be worn indoors?
There is no one boot to rule them all. They're a tool, you need the right one for the job.
i was mostly just thinking of getting some good durable boots that i could use for work and generally walking on practically everything, i don't do anything heavy that requires steel toe, but i am on rough terrain a big portion of the time, like walking around mud and loose dirt, even when i'm not working, mostly due to living in a tropical area where the concrete sidewalk is crumbled to pieces or its just straight up dirt and gravel