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13th September 15, 12:05 PM
#1
Any non-formal brogues?
I've been on the hunt for a ruggedized all-weather outdoor brogue with decent tread for a long while now and haven't really discovered anything. I love the look of a brogue, but the only ones I can find are really just a dress shoe ... great for the office party or a wedding, but totally useless for hiking about outdoors in the wilds of Pennsylvania.
I have a pair of decent, brown leather wing tips, which are way more comfortable than my ghillies and a fair sight cheaper, but they're really just a more casual dress shoe ... still not what I want in the woods where I go kilted most of the time.
It's entirely a personal preference, of course, but I don't particularly like the look of a modern hiking boot or hiking shoe with my kilt. I have to do it, unfortunately, but I just cringe when I see it in photos of me; from the ankles up, great! But what are those Danners doing there on my feet?(Even worse, what are those Chaco sandles doing there?!?)
If the tongue-less brogues were developed to meet the wet, boggy environmental conditions of the Highlands, I assume they must have originally been (relatively, for the mid-19th century) more an actually outdoor shoe than the formalized, stylized dress shoe we have available today.
So, does anyone know where to find a brogue designed as a hiker, with decent tread and some actual comfort in the lining of the uppers?
Last edited by Cymrych; 13th September 15 at 12:08 PM.
Lechyd da!
-Jason
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13th September 15, 12:31 PM
#2
OK, there may be some confusion over terms.
The word Brogue does not indicate a type of shoe. It refers to the pattern of holes or Broguing on the shoe. What many people in N. America refer to as a Wing-Tip is an oxford style shoe with Broguing and a wing shaped toe cap.
In the UK any shoe with the pattern of holes is called a Brogue. In the UK the brogue is thought of not as a dress shoe but one for 'çountry wear'. Sort of like Tweed was not thought of as formal but country day wear.
The Ghillie Brogue is a recent invention. It is the dance shoe turned into a street shoe. .I personally don't like the Ghillie Brogues and don't wear them. I wear a full brogued oxford or Wing-Tip shoe.
There are all manner of boots with the pattern of holes. Simply google Brogue boot. Some are actual outdoor or rough use boots and others are more urban wear that will never see any mud or rocks.
Steve Ashton
www.freedomkilts.com
Skype (webcam enabled) thewizardofbc
I wear the kilt because: Swish + Swagger = Swoon.
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13th September 15, 01:11 PM
#3
Yep, I was using "brogue" colloquially as the shoe-type with the distinctive hole pattern, and "ghillie" as the tongue-less version of the brogue.
So the ghillie closure without the tongue and tieing the laces around the lower leg; a total modern invention then? It seems like such a logical design given the rural environmental conditions... (Definitely wouldn't be the first time an item with apparent historicity turned out to be more modern than one would think at first blush!)
But if that's the case, then my options are greatly improved. You ever go searching for a tongue-less hiking boot/shoe? Talk about a Sisyphean task!
Lechyd da!
-Jason
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13th September 15, 02:54 PM
#4
For years I've worn steel toecap safety shoes also wore them on digs in the UK. Example from ebay uk
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Mens-PSF-E...item4198584a56
A telephone has no Constitutional right to be answered. Ignore it and it will go away.
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13th September 15, 11:03 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by tripod
I'd second this, It's what I wear every day for work with my Saxon clothing, though there is no requirement for safety shoes, many just wear Cheap trainers /Sneakers.
Having spent many hours on digs, when I was somewhat younger, I'd bet the steel toecap was showing through before the end of the Digging season!!
"We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give"
Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill
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13th September 15, 02:55 PM
#6
Are these an idea? I use them a lot out fishing when there is no need to wade, and out on the drier parts of the hill when pursuing the grouse and the deer. No ankle support of course, but I and many others wear then quite happily, although mainly with plus fours rather than the kilt as there ARE sometimes better alternatives to the kilt for SOME activities. Some rare individuals may not agree on that of course, but just so you know, few kilts are worn out on the hill. These shoes are made by Hoggs of Fife.

With the kilt.
Last edited by Jock Scot; 13th September 15 at 03:05 PM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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13th September 15, 03:20 PM
#7
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13th September 15, 06:22 PM
#8
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13th September 15, 03:21 PM
#9
Last edited by Bruce Scott; 13th September 15 at 03:43 PM.
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13th September 15, 05:44 PM
#10
These are a very comfortable, but expensive, pair of boots from Allen Edmonds. They are the Longbranch and are full leather, hand made with a heavy duty vibram sole. I spent 3 weeks in Scotland using them as my only shoe except my Merrell boots for heavy hiking.
"Greater understanding properly leads to an increasing sense of responsibility, and not to arrogance."
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