by midger » October 13th, 2012, 7:39 am
Well I now have over 50 days on these rubber soled boots. They have worked great on places like the lower and upper O and other places that are relatively easy wading rivers. Awful on places like the Klamath, Trinity and other rivers with large rocks that are slick. You'll be doing a lot of fish dances when wearing them in this type of structure. As far as durability, the stitching in the right boot is starting to pull loose and the soles wear pretty fast.
FINAL VERDICT: Just okay. I won't be buying another pair of these and will stick with felt if I'm not wading in a snowy area (felts tend to grow in snow as snow sticks to them and becomes cumbersome).
ORIGINAL POST:
The question often arises concerning the functionality of rubber vs felt. I've got around 15 days on the Patagonia Riverwalkers--enough to make an assessment. They are comfortable to wear when walking the banks and they do do well when walking across dry, shoreside boulders, but then that's not the primary reason for a wading boot. In the water they are not nearly as gripping as my felt soled boots, and definitely not as sure footed as my studded felt soled boots--both of these are Weinbrenners. You really notice the difference if you are in a river with large cobbles or boulder sized rocks with any slime or vegetative growth. I will probably try installing some aftermarket studding on them to see if that increases their functionality.
Studded felt has proven to be best for me in waters that allow felt (everywhere in California does at this time). They are not ideal when boulder hopping though as the tungsten or other studs slip easily on dry granite boulders and you have to be very careful to avoid busting your tail (I haven't tried aluminum studs). I've smacked granite several times so have now think before I leap on the Kern and also on the locals in SoCal.
Bottomline. Use what works for you on the watersheds you fish. I fish more freestones and love hammering pocketwater. I like fishing for steelhead on the Klamath with its slimy cobbles. I used to fish the Pit with its granite boulders (be careful with studded boots there when walking the shorelines). For the majority of my fishing, the studded felt works best. However for wading rivers like the Upper or lower Owens the Patagonias would be fine--much different stream structure without the large boulders and an entirely different stream bed.
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"Should you cast your fly into a branch overhead or into a bush behind you, or miss a fish striking, or lose him,or slip into a hole up to your armpits-keep your temper; above all things don't swear, for he that swears will catch no fish."