LUCKY INDEED ! & probably saved a few $$$ & no 6+ month wait...
did you have em on the pegs riding home probably slippery but the shark will shift with no scratches huh... highway no stop & go i would...
Man there are some real nice boots on this thread! I have a sort of Boot Tale I would like to share.
Some years back My wife and daughter decide to do a "Girl Trip" for about a week out to the state of Washington...their goal was to do "High Tea" at the Empress Hotel in British Columbia. "Hmmm they are going to be gone for 10 days" I thought "What can Wilbur do?" "Ride my Harley across country"!!!! "Goal in Mind?" Paul Bond Boot Company in Nogales, AZ!!!! Yea I can do that!
I left Chattanooga, TN went down through the deep southern route and ended up in Nogales and damned if I didn't find a pair of Sharkskin boots that fit spot on! Made the trip perfect!
I think this guys name was "Spider" he was managing the floor of the shop.
This was the Man that made my boots just way cool!!
Since we are on a Western Theme, My Horse in front of the Tom Mix Memorial
That's a twofer: attractive boots AND and attractive Harley color scheme. Forgive me, but I rarely am attracted to Harleys, but the black over maroon reminds me of an Indian in my past, and of course, the Royal Livery--the Queen's new Bentley is the same scheme).
Great tale of solo daring do! I had similar luck at the Lucchese factory shop (the big one just outside main ElPaso Airport gate)with chocolate stingrays. They even stretched my left instep while I waited.
My only cowboy boots adapted for bike riding (Victory Hammer S, not the BMW K1200 GT) is a pair of Flaming Youths by Tres Outlaws; they run about $1200, but I ran across them online at a store that was closing them out ($750). Two months later they were still closing them out, so I offered them $450 and they took it! I've worn them a couple of times after getting them back from Tres to have neoprene half-soles hitched up. They did a fine job--can't tell from profile that they are rubber. They really are handsome even though they look outrageous at first.
I realize every cowboy's got to start somewhere, but are boots like these just junk, or are they pretty decent for the price?
http://www.sheplers.com/Brands/Old-...Boots-medium-toe/pc/447/c/316/sc/317/3883.pro
Is it much more worth saving up for a pair of custom made boots or a more expensive one? What if the purpose is actual trail-use rather than fashion or dress?
TipTop;
Great answers to the questions raised by brother The Good. Informative and no B.S. and you are 100% correct of course.
Regards,
coffee
I agree, thank you. I'm not getting the boots right now, but I may in the future, so it's always good to know that for planning ahead.
[video=youtube_share;E1xbDlym8_8]http://youtu.be/E1xbDlym8_8[/video]
Former ranch hand Kyle Rosfeld (bootmaker.etsy.com) found a new path making traditional cowboy boots.
Just got a pair of used Tony Lama Black Label Elephant boots, I'll get some pictures later.