Reviving this thread to put some additional information out there since there has been some back and forth regarding the ethical/moral side of things and whether or not these bespoke boots are infringing on Courteney turf in some manner, etc..
I didn't know any of this until recently, or I would have posted it much earlier..
So.. here are some facts to consider..
Rice, the founder of Courteney worked for Clarks in the late 1950's.. He left Clarks for a short while for military service.. and also spent some time motorcycle racing around the globe.. then returned to Clarks (he wasn't making a "safari" boot for Clarks.. this is just where he entered the industry, learned the trade, etc)..
Rice moved to Zimbabwe in 1972.. The war was going on however.. so he was not involved in shoe/boot making initially.. and did not open a factory for quite some time after his arrival..
Courteney was founded in 1992.. Rice remained at Courteney until his death (2012)...
Al Dos Santos (the owner of James Leddy Boots) began making his "Safari" boot (the same boot he makes today) in 1972 in Marandellas (Now Maronderra). He called them "Farmer Shoes" back then as they were a common pattern for farmers in the area (neither he, nor Rice came up with the original basic design). The business in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) was called Dos Santos and Sons. Similar shoes were also being made at the same time (early 1970's) by Bata and RK Footwear in Zimbabwe.
Once founded in 1992, Courteney also began making a "farmers" shoe.. (the now beloved hunting boot sought after by international hunters for use in Africa).. a full 20 years after Dos Santos and Sons, Bata, RK Footwear, and others had already been making them..
When Al immigrated to the US, he went to work in the shoe/boot industry, working for other people.. He ultimately bought James Leddy Boots (the Leddy family has been making boots in TX since 1922) from the Leddy family when James Leddy passed away (2008).. he however had already been making "safari" boots in the US long before he owned JLB because people saw that he was wearing his "farmers" boots, commented on them and asked him to make bespoke pairs for them..
Anyway... to summarize the above.. Al has been making these boots since the early 1970s.. others were also making these boots in the 70's... they were a common pattern worn by farmers in the region, and therefore popular.. Courteney was established in 1992.. Rice, the Courteney founder, while he made exceptional footwear, is not the original designer, nor was he the only person in Zimbabwe producing this pattern of boot when his factory opened.. Al has continuously made this pattern of boot for 50 years.. it never went out of production.. he made it under the Dos Santos and Sons flag.. then made them individually.. then began producing them at James Leddy after he bought the business..
There was no "copying" Courteney.. if anything, it looks like Courteney copied what was already a popular design, and simply made it better than everyone else and/or marketed it better than everyone else.. (I would imagine all of the experience Rice brought from Clarks helped to make that happen).. I see no problem with that.. again, looking at earlier discussions.. does anyone really blame Nike when they produce a boot that is extremely similar to something released last year by Converse? If Rice knew the "farmers" pattern would sell (it was already popular) and he knew he could make it better than the competition.. why not produce it?... So why blame Rice for doing something similar to what Bata or RK or Dos Santos was already doing (or whoever else he might have seen a boot from) and trying to improve it?
By the same token.. knowing Dos Santos turned out his first "farmers" boot 20 years before the Courteney factory ever opened its doors.. how does anyone blame him for continuing to produce what he was already making for 2+ decades, after Courteney popularized it with the rest of the world...
FWIW, Al is a former Rhodesian.. who didn't immigrate to the US until he was 35 years old..