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Boat shoes
"NotNow" wrote in message ... Calif Bill wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message ... Calif Bill wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message ... Gene wrote: On Tue, 25 Aug 2009 11:08:07 -0700, Jordon penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: |Same kind of things as Crocs but not nearly as dorky looking... You're kidding, right? If I were wearing Crocs, alone in my own home, I'd embarrassed myself. For one thing, I don't wear bright pastel colored shoes. For another thing, I don't wear plastic bright pastel colored dorky looking shoes. But since this is rec.boats and this thread is titled boat shoes, like I said previously, my vote is for bare feet. What in the hell do you need shoes for on a boat? Unless you're in Alaska. But hey, if they work for you... whatever blows your skirt up. Fish hooks and fish spines are hard on bare feet. You have fish spines on the deck of your boat? Are you eating the fish raw and throwing their bones wherever they land? Are you not strong enough to get them past the gunwale? :) Kidding aside... it sounds like either you're a commercial fisherman, messy, or take lots of alcohol with you when you're fishing. But then again, I guess I know plenty of people that qualify for all three. -- Jordon Never drink on the boat. And when a rockcod gets on the deck, those dorsal spines will do a number on you. Like a Sculpin is part of the scorpion fish family. I use boots when fishing tuna, as there are hooks and flapping tuna on decks at times. Seems as if you are not very versed in fishing. Got to be damned careful with tuna, they'll break a leg in a heartbeat! I did not know tuna had legs. |
Boat shoes
Calif Bill wrote:
"Jordon" wrote in message Calif Bill wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message Gene wrote: You're kidding, right? If I were wearing Crocs, alone in my own home, I'd embarrassed myself. For one thing, I don't wear bright pastel colored shoes. For another thing, I don't wear plastic bright pastel colored dorky looking shoes. But since this is rec.boats and this thread is titled boat shoes, like I said previously, my vote is for bare feet. What in the hell do you need shoes for on a boat? Unless you're in Alaska. But hey, if they work for you... whatever blows your skirt up. Fish hooks and fish spines are hard on bare feet. You have fish spines on the deck of your boat? Are you eating the fish raw and throwing their bones wherever they land? Are you not strong enough to get them past the gunwale? :) Kidding aside... it sounds like either you're a commercial fisherman, messy, or take lots of alcohol with you when you're fishing. But then again, I guess I know plenty of people that qualify for all three. Never drink on the boat. And when a rockcod gets on the deck, those dorsal spines will do a number on you. Like a Sculpin is part of the scorpion fish family. I use boots when fishing tuna, as there are hooks and flapping tuna on decks at times. Seems as if you are not very versed in fishing. Not too many tuna where I'm from. We have some rock cod up here but they usually call them rockfish and they're not really a cod, but they are pretty spiny. As far as cod goes, there's a lot more ling and true cod. My fish of choice is salmon, trout and sometimes stealhead. And crab, clams and oysters are plentiful around here but you can't exactly call it fishing. It's more like what you do on your way to, and coming back from, fishing. Not versed in fishing? I have enough tackle to outfit half a dozen guys and have been fishing all over the Pacific Northwest for 50 years. And for the most part, barefoot. -- Jordon |
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What I want to know, is if I go get one of them spendy pair of shoes (you
know the ones with the laces), will I really be better boater? I need all th help I can get. Steve |
Boat shoes
"Jordon" wrote in message ... Calif Bill wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message Calif Bill wrote: "Jordon" wrote in message Gene wrote: You're kidding, right? If I were wearing Crocs, alone in my own home, I'd embarrassed myself. For one thing, I don't wear bright pastel colored shoes. For another thing, I don't wear plastic bright pastel colored dorky looking shoes. But since this is rec.boats and this thread is titled boat shoes, like I said previously, my vote is for bare feet. What in the hell do you need shoes for on a boat? Unless you're in Alaska. But hey, if they work for you... whatever blows your skirt up. Fish hooks and fish spines are hard on bare feet. You have fish spines on the deck of your boat? Are you eating the fish raw and throwing their bones wherever they land? Are you not strong enough to get them past the gunwale? :) Kidding aside... it sounds like either you're a commercial fisherman, messy, or take lots of alcohol with you when you're fishing. But then again, I guess I know plenty of people that qualify for all three. Never drink on the boat. And when a rockcod gets on the deck, those dorsal spines will do a number on you. Like a Sculpin is part of the scorpion fish family. I use boots when fishing tuna, as there are hooks and flapping tuna on decks at times. Seems as if you are not very versed in fishing. Not too many tuna where I'm from. We have some rock cod up here but they usually call them rockfish and they're not really a cod, but they are pretty spiny. As far as cod goes, there's a lot more ling and true cod. My fish of choice is salmon, trout and sometimes stealhead. And crab, clams and oysters are plentiful around here but you can't exactly call it fishing. It's more like what you do on your way to, and coming back from, fishing. Not versed in fishing? I have enough tackle to outfit half a dozen guys and have been fishing all over the Pacific Northwest for 50 years. And for the most part, barefoot. -- Jordon You have a lot of Tuna off Oregon and Washington. Google Albacore. There are a bunch of charters running these days. Most are 30-60 miles offshore. And I tow my boat to BC and fish out of Ganges and Tofino and we were going to Rivers Inlet, but due to one boat sinking in Hells Canyon and me tearing up a knee we postponed until next year. So familiar with Fishing in the region. |
Boat shoes
Don White wrote:
"Jordon" wrote in message ... U-joint Buster wrote: I was raised on Puget Sound, and with the exception of being on a sail boat heeled over in a stiff wind, I've found no use for shoes on a boat. With the other exception being around the end of salmon season. Good on ya. I've done most of my boating in the Chesapeake Bay. It doesn't get nearly as rought and tumble as Puget Sound. But, I've slipped on my boat while barefoot. That's why I went back to boat shoes. I also want shoes on my feet when I launch or retrieve my boat. Yeah, I guess there is a third exception, but only if the bottom is rocky. Maybe it's the calluses. -- Jordon JohnnyH has plenty of calluses...but they are between his ears. What happened to your mission to improve this group, dummy? You post nothing but attacks. |
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Don White wrote:
"Jim" wrote in message ... wrote: On Mon, 24 Aug 2009 16:20:46 -0400, Jeem wrote: That looks like a 'duck shoe' or duckys. I like the easy slip on/off. If I had to tie the laces each time. I'd look for a better fitting type of water shoe. Almost bought a pair of LandsEnd water shoes at Sears but by the time I decided and went back...no more size 12s. Size 12? (OMG) I'll bet you waterski barefoot. Isn't that the regular size for grown men ? ;-) I have problems finding the 12W too. Not when you have an personal elevation of 5' 6". You are either too short or you have too much turned under. BTW 5'6' is the perfect height for a Rav 4 owner. You mixing me up with Justhate or Kevin? Dunno. Am I? BTW who is Kevin? |
Boat shoes
Don White wrote:
"Jim" wrote in message ... wrote: On Mon, 24 Aug 2009 16:20:46 -0400, Jeem wrote: That looks like a 'duck shoe' or duckys. I like the easy slip on/off. If I had to tie the laces each time. I'd look for a better fitting type of water shoe. Almost bought a pair of LandsEnd water shoes at Sears but by the time I decided and went back...no more size 12s. Size 12? (OMG) I'll bet you waterski barefoot. Isn't that the regular size for grown men ? ;-) I have problems finding the 12W too. Not when you have an personal elevation of 5' 6". You are either too short or you have too much turned under. BTW 5'6' is the perfect height for a Rav 4 owner. You mixing me up with Justhate or Kevin? *No one* ever said you were perfect, dummy. |
Boat shoes
wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 Aug 2009 07:44:59 -0600, "SteveB" wrote: What I want to know, is if I go get one of them spendy pair of shoes (you know the ones with the laces), will I really be better boater? I need all th help I can get. Steve I like the Sperry Topsiders (I assume those are the spendy ones you are talking about) but I wear them al the time and lesser shoes just don't hold up. You can find them in the $40 range online occasionally. Last time I wore those on my Lund runabout, my fishing pardner took one look at me and went home. Then the guy in the next boat cast his sinker at me. Steve |
Boat shoes
SteveB wrote:
wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 Aug 2009 07:44:59 -0600, "SteveB" wrote: What I want to know, is if I go get one of them spendy pair of shoes (you know the ones with the laces), will I really be better boater? I need all th help I can get. Steve I like the Sperry Topsiders (I assume those are the spendy ones you are talking about) but I wear them al the time and lesser shoes just don't hold up. You can find them in the $40 range online occasionally. Last time I wore those on my Lund runabout, my fishing pardner took one look at me and went home. Then the guy in the next boat cast his sinker at me. Steve Damn! They might have shot you if you wore Crocs! |
Boat shoes
"D 2" wrote in message ... SteveB wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 Aug 2009 07:44:59 -0600, "SteveB" wrote: What I want to know, is if I go get one of them spendy pair of shoes (you know the ones with the laces), will I really be better boater? I need all th help I can get. Steve I like the Sperry Topsiders (I assume those are the spendy ones you are talking about) but I wear them al the time and lesser shoes just don't hold up. You can find them in the $40 range online occasionally. Last time I wore those on my Lund runabout, my fishing pardner took one look at me and went home. Then the guy in the next boat cast his sinker at me. Steve Damn! They might have shot you if you wore Crocs! Kind of a redneck bubba homophobic thing around here. Steve, who, btw, prefers fish, if you know whut uh mean ........... |
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JustWait wrote:
In article , says... Don White wrote: "Jim" wrote in message ... wrote: On Mon, 24 Aug 2009 16:20:46 -0400, Jeem wrote: That looks like a 'duck shoe' or duckys. I like the easy slip on/off. If I had to tie the laces each time. I'd look for a better fitting type of water shoe. Almost bought a pair of LandsEnd water shoes at Sears but by the time I decided and went back...no more size 12s. Size 12? (OMG) I'll bet you waterski barefoot. Isn't that the regular size for grown men ? ;-) I have problems finding the 12W too. Not when you have an personal elevation of 5' 6". You are either too short or you have too much turned under. BTW 5'6' is the perfect height for a Rav 4 owner. You mixing me up with Justhate or Kevin? Dunno. Am I? BTW who is Kevin? Just another poster Donnie is hiding under his desk from... Seems like you and your brain dead buds around here are the ones hiding... -- Birther-Deather-Tenther-Teabagger: Idiots All |
Boat shoes
On Sat, 05 Sep 2009 22:35:51 -0400, wrote:
On Sat, 05 Sep 2009 16:55:07 -0400, John H. wrote: Size 12? (OMG) I'll bet you waterski barefoot. Isn't that the regular size for grown men ? ;-) I have problems finding the 12W too. Check LLBean. I've found 14s and 15s there. -- I do OK online, it is the B&M stores that have limited selections in my size There's something about Sperry's that just kill the bottoms of my feet. Don't know why. I normally wear Sebago's but bought a pair of these at the Bean store. They're great for boating or just wearing. http://tinyurl.com/mq5t5s -- John H All decisions, even those made by liberals, are the result of binary thinking. |
Boat shoes
SteveB wrote:
"D 2" wrote in message ... SteveB wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 Aug 2009 07:44:59 -0600, "SteveB" wrote: What I want to know, is if I go get one of them spendy pair of shoes (you know the ones with the laces), will I really be better boater? I need all th help I can get. Steve I like the Sperry Topsiders (I assume those are the spendy ones you are talking about) but I wear them al the time and lesser shoes just don't hold up. You can find them in the $40 range online occasionally. Last time I wore those on my Lund runabout, my fishing pardner took one look at me and went home. Then the guy in the next boat cast his sinker at me. Steve Damn! They might have shot you if you wore Crocs! Kind of a redneck bubba homophobic thing around here. Steve, who, btw, prefers fish, if you know whut uh mean ........... Yep. |
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