Mountaineering Boots Seattle WA

While your hiking boots or backpacking boots may be sufficient for the length and difficultly of your trips, if you are in need of a good alpine climbing boot, you will want to invest in Mountaineering Boots. Read on for more detailed information in the following article.

Enter the Studio
206-223-7333
526 1st Ave S
Seattle, WA
Incentives West
206-444-6042
Seattle, WA
Seattle Mariners Baseball Club
206-346-4000
Seattle, WA
Sound Sports
206-624-6717
80 Madison St
Seattle, WA
American Eagle Outfitters
206-361-8435
710 Northgate Mall
Seattle, WA
Outdoor Research
206-467-8197
Seattle, WA
Gap Store Inc The
206-254-8000
5th & Pine
Seattle, WA
Foster & Easley Sports Management Grou
206-362-7780
Seattle, WA
Amphipod Inc
206-788-0291
Seattle, WA
Niketown
206-447-6453
1500 6th Ave
Seattle, WA

Mountaineering Boots

Womens Mountaineering Boots

Womens Mountaineering Boots

For those of you hikers who are like me, and enjoy hiking, backpacking, and climbing in the mountains, you are a “mountaineer” or an “alpinist”. While your hiking boots or backpacking boots may be sufficient for the length and difficultly of your trips, if you are in need of a good alpine climbing boot, you will want to invest in Mountaineering Boots.

Womens Mountaineering Boot Features:

As with your selection of hiking and backpacking boots, fit is the most important factor. To make sure the boots will withstand the challenging terrain you put them through, you’ll need to look for several important features when searching for womens mountaineering boots:

  • Very stiff shank. The sole should provide very stiff and rigid support, which will enable your feet to have better contact with footholds. Believe me, it may be more uncomfortable to wear such stiff boots, but you’ll be happy when you’re climbing up exposed rocky faces, traversing across a glacier, or kick stepping up a steep, snowy slope.
  • Crampon compatible. Why bother to own mountaineering boots if you can’t strap on a pair of crampons and wear them on winter hikes?
  • Durable material. As discussed in my list of terms you should know when buying backpacking boots, make sure that your mountaineering boots are full grain leather, nubuck, or synthetic materials.
  • Weight. Mountaineering boots tend to be quite heavy. If you are an iceclimber, there are slimmed down versions of mountaineering boots that can be used for ice climbing.
  • Insulation. One of the main benefits of mountaineering boots compared to backpacking or hiking boots is their warmth. Most mountaineers end up hiking in cold conditions, often to mountain peaks that are permanently covered in snow. You’re feet with thank you if buy well-insulated mountaineering boots. Mine sure did on a snow trip where I was snowshoeing and backpacking in -5°F temperatures.
  • Made from a women’s specific “last”. A shoe or boot “last” is what manufacturers use to design shoes or boots. Multiple styles can be constructed from the same last. The problem is, in the past, mountaineering boot manufacturers thought that it would be ok to use the same last for men’s and womens mountaineering boots! Most womens mountaineering boots today are made from women specific lasts, so they have a narrower heels, smaller volume, and more support in the instep.
  • FIT, FIT, FIT! I have already mentioned this before, but just to make sure you realize how important this is, blisters and unhappy feet can easily lead to a miserable mountaineering trip.

If you are a little less hardcore of a hiker and don’t think you need a pair of mountaineering boots, consider how cold your feet can get in hiking or backpacking boots when you’re hiking in the winter or snowshoeing… I now use my mountaineering boots for almost eve...

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