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Keen Targhee II Mid Boots

A durable shoe made for hiking in damp terrain, the Targhee II sports water resistant and breathable eVENT® liner that allows your feet to breathe, keeping dry from perspiration as well as from the elements. The 4mm tread provide heavy-duty traction for all surfaces and the rigid form provide strong support for traveling over loose terrain. Constructed of leather, mesh, and webbing upper with moisture wicking liner and eVENT® and non-marking carbon rubber soles. Available in 4 colors. Weight: 14.2oz

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Keen Targhee II Mid Boots
MSRP $125.00
Release date January, 2009
Brand Keen
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Pros & Cons9
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Pros & Cons

ProSCORE
1 review
78
negative
mixed
positive
1 positive
0 mixed
0 negative

[i] How is the ProSCORE calculated?

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Pros:
Do you agree?
Extremely durable, doesn't fall apart after a few months like cheap brands
+1agreedisagree

Lace clips at top of boot prevent untied strings from loosening the boot - very handy
+1agreedisagree

Webbing is reflective at night
+1agreedisagree

Lighter than many cheaper hiking boots
+1agreedisagree

Very comfortable design available in very wide sizes
+1agreedisagree

Newer models are 2+ oz lighter
+1agreedisagree

Available in a "low-top" version
+1agreedisagree

Cons:
Do you agree?
Wicking ability is limited; doesn't withstand the sweatiest feet
+1agreedisagree

Waterproofing degrades after time
+1agreedisagree


1 person added to this review by submitting or voting on pros and cons. Add your say!

Details

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This report was started October 29, 2009 at 5:58 pm by Howlsthunder
with the last edit occurring October 29, 2009 at 6:23 pm by Howlsthunder
This page has been viewed 50 times, with 15 edits by 1 contributor.
See the full report history »

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Comments

1.  avatar Howlsthunder said:

I've been a fan of Columbia hiking boots for some time, having gone through dozens of cheaper brands in my youth and finding them to all be shoddy excuses for footwear. I'd pretty much replaced most of my shoes with Vibram FiveFingers but this summer I had to have a pair of "real shoes" for work at a remote wilderness lodge. I figured if I was going to have to buy shoes, I would buy hiking boots/shoes. Having been introduced to Keens through several acquaintances I thought I would give them a try.

While I am still not a fan of shoes in general, these Keens went above and beyond my expectations. They look a little odd on your foot, making your feet look shorter than they are but the width was really nice and they gave my foot space and support in all the right spots. More importantly, it didn't feel like I was tying a brick of leather and rubber to my foot - it felt like a shoe.

I pretty much wore these for 4 months straight, alternating with a pair of FiveFinger KSOs, and wore them in a huge variety of terrain including gravel, dirt, grass, mud, brush, stone, beaches, mountains, and even volcanic ash and pumice, a notoriously bizarre footing. After the abuse I put them through, the leather isn't falling off, the laces are intact, the soles aren't worn flat, and the backs of the ankles are doing pretty well considering I am notoriously hard on my shoes since I'm often too lazy to tie/untie my shoes. I want to point out that these are very good at keeping fine particles out of your shoe - I hiked for 3 days across a volcanic valley filled with ash and though my shoes turned white in color and ash got into EVERYTHING else, it didn't get into my Keens.

The waterproofing is pretty good and lasted longer than all of my Columbia boots though it did degrade after awhile like most waterproofing seems to. I can't really compare it wicking ability to other shoes because I'd never spent NEAR as much time wearing one pair of shoes as I did this pair of Keens, and I was in them a LOT, doing a lot of work in 80?F weather. I wouldn't reccommend these for hot weather where your feet will sweat to death but they are great for cooler weather.

The laces seem to run a bit short on Keens - they are just long enough to tie normally or even "double knot" but not long enough to do a modified tie where you loop twice "around the tree". But the lace clips at the top of the shoe work so well that when my laces come undone I only notice when I hear them clicking against the sides of my boot; they're too short to drag on the ground and the clips keep the tension in the lacing so your shoe doesn't come loose.

I did have problems standing for long periods of time with these shoes but I think that would of been a problem no matter what I was wearing due to the nature of my job. But for outdoors, these shoes did great.

When this pair finally wears out and dies, I will definitely be replacing them with another pair of Keens.
Oct 29, 2009 6:22pm
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Reviews

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Howlsthunder

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October 29, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
78
negative
mixed
positive
7 pros
2 cons
have ithave it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Extremely durable, doesn't fall apart after a few months like cheap brands
  • Lace clips at top of boot prevent untied strings from loosening the boot - very handy
  • Webbing is reflective at night
  • Lighter than many cheaper hiking boots
  • Very comfortable design available in very wide sizes
  • Newer models are 2+ oz lighter
  • Available in a "low-top" version

Cons

  • Wicking ability is limited; doesn't withstand the sweatiest feet
  • Waterproofing degrades after time

Comments

"I've been a fan of Columbia hiking boots for some time, having gone through dozens of cheaper brands in my youth and finding them to all be shoddy excuses for footwear. I'd pretty much replaced most of my shoes with Vibram FiveFingers but this summer I had to have a pair of "real shoes" for work at a remote wilderness lodge. I figured if I was going to have to buy shoes, I would buy hiking boots/shoes. Having been introduced to Keens through several acquaintances I thought I would give them a try.

While I am still not a fan of shoes in general, these Keens went above and beyond my expectations. They look a little odd on your foot, making your feet look shorter than they are but the width was really nice and they gave my foot space and support in all the right spots. More importantly, it didn't feel like I was tying a brick of leather and rubber to my foot - it felt like a shoe.

I pretty much wore these for 4 months straight, alternating with a pair of FiveFinger KSOs, and wore them in a huge variety of terrain including gravel, dirt, grass, mud, brush, stone, beaches, mountains, and even volcanic ash and pumice, a notoriously bizarre footing. After the abuse I put them through, the leather isn't falling off, the laces are intact, the soles aren't worn flat, and the backs of the ankles are doing pretty well considering I am notoriously hard on my shoes since I'm often too lazy to tie/untie my shoes. I want to point out that these are very good at keeping fine particles out of your shoe - I hiked for 3 days across a volcanic valley filled with ash and though my shoes turned white in color and ash got into EVERYTHING else, it didn't get into my Keens.

The waterproofing is pretty good and lasted longer than all of my Columbia boots though it did degrade after awhile like most waterproofing seems to. I can't really compare it wicking ability to other shoes because I'd never spent NEAR as much time wearing one pair of shoes as I did this pair of Keens, and I was in them a LOT, doing a lot of work in 80?F weather. I wouldn't reccommend these for hot weather where your feet will sweat to death but they are great for cooler weather.

The laces seem to run a bit short on Keens - they are just long enough to tie normally or even "double knot" but not long enough to do a modified tie where you loop twice "around the tree". But the lace clips at the top of the shoe work so well that when my laces come undone I only notice when I hear them clicking against the sides of my boot; they're too short to drag on the ground and the clips keep the tension in the lacing so your shoe doesn't come loose.

I did have problems standing for long periods of time with these shoes but I think that would of been a problem no matter what I was wearing due to the nature of my job. But for outdoors, these shoes did great.

When this pair finally wears out and dies, I will definitely be replacing them with another pair of Keens."
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