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Cold Feet Tips
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:02 am
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:02 am
I’ve tried a million different things to keep my feet and toes warm. In 45 degree weather my feet get cold. It’s not unbearable but more of just an annoyance that I can’t keep them warm. My feet sweat easily and I know that’s why they’re getting cold.
Anyone suffer with this and found something that worked? Any and all recommendations are accepted! Lol
Anyone suffer with this and found something that worked? Any and all recommendations are accepted! Lol
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:04 am to LSUTiger23
Merino wool socks. Wool insulates even when wet. Get away from cotton products and find material that wicks away moisture.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:06 am to LSUTiger23
Wool socks. Non insulated boots.
If you walk to your stand, change socks or let your feet air out to dry when you get in the stand.
If you walk to your stand, change socks or let your feet air out to dry when you get in the stand.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:07 am to LSUTiger23
Darn tough merino wool socks
Non insulated boots
Minimal upper layers when walking in and no hat so your core temp doesn’t get warm add layers once sitting.
Second pair of socks to swap into if needed.
Non insulated boots
Minimal upper layers when walking in and no hat so your core temp doesn’t get warm add layers once sitting.
Second pair of socks to swap into if needed.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:18 am to LSUTiger23
What are you doing now?
What kind of boots do you wear?
I say, get a good liner sock with a good wool sock. Boots that are a size or so too big will help a little. I have arctic shield boot covers as well.
What kind of boots do you wear?
I say, get a good liner sock with a good wool sock. Boots that are a size or so too big will help a little. I have arctic shield boot covers as well.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:23 am to bbvdd
This morning I did Non Insulated Muck Boots with the under armour boot socks. Mid 40s outside and feet are chilly.
I don’t put socks on until right before I leave out for the hunt. I do walk in with an orange beanie and a jacket usually on a cold morning. May have to try without a jacket and beanie and layer up Once in the stand.
I don’t put socks on until right before I leave out for the hunt. I do walk in with an orange beanie and a jacket usually on a cold morning. May have to try without a jacket and beanie and layer up Once in the stand.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:39 am to LSUTiger23
quote:
In 45 degree weather my feet get cold
You're doing a lot of things wrong for that to be the case.
Core temp management and good circulation are what keep your extremities warm. You're either way off the mark with one of those or both. Odds are your boots are too tight and you arent layering your torso correctly.
Ive hunted in below zero weather with uninsulated boots and normal wool socks and my feet were fine. Wrapping more shite around your feet is not the solution.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:43 am to LSUTiger23
I cured my cold feet issues by going with ankle socks first, then apply the stick on toe warmers on top of my toes, followed by a merino wool sock on top. No issues at all after that.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:48 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
Yea. I can’t seem to find the right combination. My feet sweat easily. In the mornings before the hunt, walk around with no socks and slippers on and they will start sweating. I definitely don’t just add layers to my feet because that will just cause them to sweat more.
I am going to try walking to stand with minimal upper layers and bring extra pair of socks and change them when I get to stand.
I am going to try walking to stand with minimal upper layers and bring extra pair of socks and change them when I get to stand.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:48 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
quote:
Core temp management and good circulation are what keep your extremities warm. You're either way off the mark with one of those or both. Odds are your boots are too tight and you arent layering your torso correctly.
I'd also tell the OP to have his iron and ferritin levels checked depending on age. That's the long term stores and can impact extremities
Posted on 11/16/24 at 8:56 am to LSUTiger23
Perhaps an antiperspirant?
or
Maybe swapping out damp socks with dry once you get to the stand?
or
Could you inadvertently be making your boots too tight?
or
Maybe swapping out damp socks with dry once you get to the stand?
or
Could you inadvertently be making your boots too tight?
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:02 am to LSUTiger23
Dress socks under wool socks and regular leather boots that breathe properly are the ticket for sweaty feet, assuming where you hunt doesn't require rubber boots.
Rubber boots are a real bitch and there's no good way to deal with that. If the terrain allows or if you're walking to a stand, bringing slippers and swapping the rubbers out for the slippers in the stand works OK. I have some of those north face puffy camp shoes for that when needed.
Even if your feet are wet though, they shouldn't be cold if your core temp and blood circulation are good. If this is happing in one particular stand, the chair could be the problem. Might need a lil foot rest on the floor or something.
Rubber boots are a real bitch and there's no good way to deal with that. If the terrain allows or if you're walking to a stand, bringing slippers and swapping the rubbers out for the slippers in the stand works OK. I have some of those north face puffy camp shoes for that when needed.
Even if your feet are wet though, they shouldn't be cold if your core temp and blood circulation are good. If this is happing in one particular stand, the chair could be the problem. Might need a lil foot rest on the floor or something.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:11 am to LSUTiger23
May sound stupid but wear a vest, keep your core warmer.
On you feet, 1 pau of merino wool socks with some quality boots.
On you feet, 1 pau of merino wool socks with some quality boots.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:21 am to LSUTiger23
quote:
under armour boot socks
Polyester is not a good substitute for wool. As other have said, merino wool socks. Get some darn tough.
Rubber boots are also terrible. You could probably be better with uninsulated lace ups compared to 800gram rubber boots.
I have to wear rubber boots and the 1600gram lacrosse are the best I’ve had. Rogers has them on sale. I wear 1 pair of merino wools socks, either heavy or mid weight depending on temp. Even if my feet sweat they stay warm.
You can also stock up on foot warmers for really cold days.
Someone also mentioned boot insulators for after you get where you’re going. I was going to buy some but since I got the 1600gram lacrosse I haven’t needed them.
This post was edited on 11/16/24 at 9:26 am
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:23 am to DownshiftAndFloorIt
quote:Amen Brother
Even if your feet are wet though, they shouldn't be cold if your core temp and blood circulation are good.
Long time whitewater boater here (canoe not kayak) and we regularly paddle in temps cold enough to ice. Thirties and wet is no problem... but too tight will get you every time. Not only does tight hinder circulation it also reduces the amount of air which is your insulation. You soon learn that wet doesn't automatically mean cold and all that high dollar insulation is about holding air.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:29 am to LSUTiger23
quote:
My feet sweat easily and I know that’s why they’re getting cold.
I'm with you on this one. I've tried wool, llama, cotton, polyester, different layers, antiperspirant, foot masks. You name it, I've tried it. My feet sweat in flip flops, in leather boots, no shoes, rubber boots, tennis shoes.
I've never found anything that helps. I can change socks and within 5 minutes the new pair are wet and cold.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:32 am to Theduckhunter
quote:
merino wool socks. Get some darn tough
Ive had very good luck with store-brand wool socks, particularly redhead and midway. Store brand wool in general can be had on sale for excellent price and ive never found an advantage in the expensive stuff vs store brand, except for specific features like zip-off leggings. Not that the name brand stuff isn't good, it just costs way more.
Boot wraps can help but that's really for extreme cold and I don't think it'd fix OPs problem. He has core temp and/or circulation problems. Cold feet above freezing should be easily rectified.
With rubber boots, I prefer uninsulated and sized to allow for heavy weight wool socks.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:34 am to BoogaBear
quote:
within 5 minutes the new pair are wet and cold.
Guys, wet is not your problem. Your sweat comes out at 98*F. Unless you're feet are exposed, it doesnt matter. Again, Wet is not a problem unless exposed. Core temp and circulation. That's all that matters, assuming you are a healthy man.
If youre 75 years old, it may be a different story.
Your feet are not cold because they are wet. They are cold because there is not enough warm blood flowing through them.
Posted on 11/16/24 at 9:45 am to LSUTiger23
Good foot powder goes a long way, on feet and dump in boots and socks
Posted on 11/16/24 at 10:01 am to LSUTiger23
Wool socks with muck boots and I’ve hunted in single digits and not had cold feet.
If I have a long walk, I’ll wear regular cotton socks for the walk then change to wool socks once on the stand.
If I have a long walk, I’ll wear regular cotton socks for the walk then change to wool socks once on the stand.
This post was edited on 11/16/24 at 10:34 am
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