| Uggs Adirondacks with wool lining |
These |
It depends if OP is looking for a decent all around winter boot, a fashionable boot or one to keep warm walking in several feet of snow, wind and below zero temps. |
Disagree. Worked fine for me in icy snowy conditions. If there is sheet ice, no other footwear option will be less slippery - except strapping metal pinions on the bottom (which are available as an accessory for Bean Boots, btw.) |
Costco wool socks from a few years back were fine. The current ones are not very good - they “cost optimized” them with less wool, so less sturdy, less warm, and wear out sooner. REI wool socks really are a better choice in 2023. |
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Those Uggs that look like duck boots. They have been rated the best ocerall by NYTimes Wirecutter.
If the Uggs are too pricey, get something from Pajar or Merrell. |
Times a thousand |
Correct. For college students who don't want to look dorky--as they would in Sorels--this, or Blundstones, is the answer. |
NP - not in my experience. I wore them through four years of college in Chicago, and three years after that, also living there. I still have them, actually 25+ years later - they still keep my feet warm and dry. I agree with the suggestion to pair them with warm, thick socks. |
Wire cutter slammed the llbean snow boots as “rain boots masquerading as snow boots”. Pretty harsh. |
I wear mine all winter in Chicago. They are fine. No boots will prevent you from slipping on ice unless they have ice grippers on them. But that is overkill for a college student |
Don’t care. They have been made in Maine and worn on the very snowy northeast and Midwest for decades. Their reputation has stood the test of time |
That doesn’t mean other brands aren’t better. |
DP. You know what? I always disagree with wire cutter. It is inexplicable. I know they have a whole methodology, but it’s just always opposite of what I’ve found. I have both the Sorels and the LL Bean duck boots. The duck boots are a billion times more comfortable and easy on/off and plenty warm. They are too slippery for icy days, yes, and for those I wear the Sorels, which are really too heavy and cumbersome for every day use. I think if I were a college student I’d want a boot like the Blundstone or LL Bean for regular use, and a snow boot for when it’s actually snowy/icy/slushy. |
| I and my brother went to Bowdoin and Bates, respectively - I don’t remember what boots I wore, but the paths to walk around campus are constantly icy and slippery in the winter, because even though they are cleared and salted, the adjacent snow melts a little in the day making the paths wet and then freezes every night. My brother broke his wrist this way and it was not an uncommon fall to take. |