Lorna said:
Carl
Very good info about shoes, lacing and socks.? I just talked to our friend/hike leader and since he hikes in the Palm Springs area mostly that is why he suggested a heavy cotton sock because wool gets to hot.?
I could not disagree with him more strenuously! ?
Cotton hiking socks are an invitation to blistering in the summer and trench foot in the winter. ? My background is in Sierra and desert mountaineering bacl in my salad days (the middle Pleistocene). ? ?I even taught the subject for the Sierra Club and was on the Los Angeles Chapter's mountaineering training committee and lead trips for it. ? I cannot number all the sad cases I have nursemaided that involved cotton socks. ?
Wool is an insulator. ?Cotton is not, except as batting, and even then not very well. ? All it does is sop up moisture and lose insulation the minute it gets wet from sweat or rain. ?Wool, otoh, as any Scot will tell you, insulates, wet or dry. ? Why do you need insulation in the summer? ? Heat. ? Back when I was field mapping as a student geologist, my mapping partner on a warm day in El Paso, in July, stuck a thermometer into the ground. ?It registered 154?! ? The air temp was in the 100-110? range.
I found a single combination to work in all situations, from 110? in the Grand Canyon to God only knows what on the summit of Mt. Rainier. ? The thin inner sock should be of silk, WickDry?, or olefin. ? The outer sock should be ragg wool or a similar thick wool sock. ? Now there are some thick artificial fiber socks that claim to be as good, but I have not tried them in the range of conditions I describe. ? There is some hope for them; there is none for cotton.