What boots are PH's wearing these days?

I got a new pair of Merrill MOAB waterproof boots last year for use in South Africa this year. I hiked in them for weeks up to 5mi/day and hunted in them last fall. They are very water resistant and comfortable. I use Smartwool heavy or extra-heavy socks with them. They are mainly used by hikers. Warm in the cold and cooler in the heat.

In RSA on Safari they performed well scrambling over the ancient rocks, trudging up sandy hills and since I had tweaked one of my ankles two weeks prior to the trip they also turned out to be more comfortable than my other shoes which were used for travel and evening wear. They came home permanently coated with that rust red dust from Limpopo. I chose them because they were some of the lighter options and were as comfortable as a pair of sneakers. On the way to the airport my PH bought a new pair of Courtneys in Joburg. If I had more room in my bags, I might have gotten a pair also. The Courtneys looked cool but honestly, they also looked very crude. That may not be a bad thing as old mentor friends always said a good tough pair of well broken in basic boots is all that is needed. The Courtneys reminded me of an old old pair of green Browning boots that I had as a young man which were made from Kangaroo skin. Those were great!
 
I know there are a million threads on here about what proper footwear for hunting in Africa is, but was curious what most PH's are wearing for footwear since they are almost ALWAYS out in the bush. Besides Courteney's, I have heard of Blundstone and Redback being in use, as well as many different forms of vellies. Anyone know if there is a strong preference towards any one of these in particular? Looking for a leather boot I can use for work as a test bed (lots of walking) and if they come in black, that is even better. Looking towards Tanzania, Zim and Mozambique for a future hunt for reference if there is any particular forms of footwear that work better depending on location.

Charles
You will get plenty of answers here and most will be traditional and of course terrain dependent. There is a new trend among some mountain hunters and PH's toward lighter weight shoes/boots. Traditionally long wearing leather boots have been the norm and that will not change for many. I've seen Ph's in Zim wearing trail running shoes such as Solomon and I have followed that myself. They are great in many circumstances but the professionals will only get a season or so out of them. I had been hearing about lighter hikers from the Hunt The Backcountry Podcast for some time but never paid too much attention until I saw their theory out into practice in Zim. One benefit to the lighter shoes is that there is virtually no break in period versus the more traditional leather.
 
@JG26Irish_2 , I agree on those old Browning kangaroo leather boots, I had a pair for about 10 years but they got wet in Mozambique and I left them outside my tent in the sun to dry and an opportunistic hyena decided to make a meal of them.
 
During all my hunts in SA I must have met over 30 PH´s, none wore Courtneys.

I saw a mixture of locally made boots.
 

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Grz63 wrote on x84958's profile.
Good Morning x84958
I have read your post about Jamy Traut and your hunt in Caprivi. I am planning such a hunt for 2026, Oct with Jamy.
Just a question , because I will combine Caprivi and Panorama for PG, is the daily rate the same the week long, I mean the one for Caprivi or when in Panorama it will be a PG rate ?
thank you and congrats for your story.
Best regards
Philippe from France
dlmac wrote on Buckums's profile.
ok, will do.
 
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