There is probably no piece of gear failure worse than a problem with your hiking boots. Sore feet are a pain in the ..... foot. Sometimes, though it's not the boots fault but how you tied the laces. I posted some time ago on how to lace up your boots for downhill hiking. Just lace your boots up to and through the first set of speed lacers, tie an overhand knot, then through the next set of speed lacers and tie your bow. (If you have more speed lacers continue tying overhand knots after each set of speed lacers until you reach the last one.) This will keep your foot pushed back against the boot heel so your toes aren't scrunched against the front of your boot and you wind up with black toes.
There are a couple of others things you want to do as well. For downhill hiking tighten the front couple of cross laces. It will help keep your foot from slipping inside the boot. Also remember that your feet swell after an hour or so of hiking so it's a good idea to readjust the laces on your boots after an hour.
If you are hiking uphill then you want to loosen those first couple of cross laces to give your foot some room.
If you are doing a lot of uphill hiking it's also a good idea to face downhill when you stop to rest. This streches the shin muscles and relaxes the calf muslces that you have been using on the uphill climb. When hiking downhill a long distance do just the opposite. Face uphill during a rest to give your muscles a breather.
Finally, don't forget the duct tape and mole skin. My personal preference is duct tape. If your foot moves inside your boot it will be duct tape sliding on boot instead of your skin sliding on boot. Pressure spots can disappear with a little duct tape applied.



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