Touring Boots Vs Alpine Boots
Id like to get a dedicated touring setup for the spring season here in the PNW. It will not be used when the resort chairs are spinning, but in late april through june i would like to take advantage of what i have around me to explore. Ive been using CAST 1.0, with alpine boots with a tech toe for a few years and after some long days out bushwacking with multiple shoe-boot-skin transitions im ready to just bite the bullet and get a used lightweight touring setup intended for easier travel up, and milking the turns down. My real question is about the boots- I have a super high arch and my shoe size is 11-11.5, but my boot size is 27.5 with a 28 intuition prowrap stuffed in (a proper insole shrinks my foot a full size). I cant decide if a tight/dialed fit in a touring boot is super important, or if it will be OK to go with a slightly looser fit like a 28/28.5 because its mostly about comfort on the up, not a performance fit for shredding down. But i also dont want rubbing and blisters.... I was hoping to buy used everything, including boots, otherwise i would just do the normal program of going into Evo and letting the bootfitter set me up. Is a dialed, "proper" fit in a dedicated lightweight touring boot just as important as in a dedicated Alpine boot, or is it almost preferable to have some level of slop?
Touring Boots Vs Alpine Boots
Yer basically describing me.
Hawx 130 for alpine, and Scarpa F1LT for bc.
Even in the bottomless mushy crap, leg-breaking shit I ski today, my Praxis BC’s, ATK’s with the Scarpas were fine enough.
And if the conditions are powder or corn, it’s great.
Heel hold is by far the most important thing. Then toe space. When fitting, put a tow dam on, and put spacers between your toes etc. to make space. I had a fitter once call it yoga toes.
I’m probably gonna get the new zip fits for next season to really lock in the heel fit.
Find a really lightweight boot that fits your foot.
Greg L at EVO can help you