OK. When I was 18-22ish or so, I used to see the old guys (like 40 years old and older) clomping around in their Daleboots.
I asked a few about them; they all said basically the same thing, albeit worded slightly differently:
"At some point you'll stop being a dumbass and trade the last 5% of performance for a comfortable boot, rather than the other way around."
Hrmph. Nah. Race boots are just WAY better, yo!
I've pretty much always fought with ski boots. I've had foam liners, Zipfits, several Thermoflex/Intuitions, I had my own boot stretcher clamp-dealie for a while, I worked in shops, made footbeds for lots of customers, went to boot fitting clinics, had a fair number of happy customers (only one sticks out as unhappy), shrug, I was an OK bootfitter. Not "Larry from Boulder" good, but better than the average ski shop meatstick.
I could always make my boots SKI well, but they sucked for the rest of the day.
Last year, I had a Bad Boot Year. Nasty shin issues (a new one for me), super painful, and combined with the new method of going UP (snowmobiles), I came to the conclusion that I _really_ had to do something about boots.
I'm not 40, but I now have Daleboots. I called Daleboot directly, asked them if I should go to SLC. They said no, they have a "great" guy in Denver. Lee @ The Custom Foot:
http://www.thecustomfoot.com/
<spoiler>
Lee is in fact great.
</spoiler>
So, I went and saw Lee. Told him my story - longtime skier, lots and lots of boot problems, short, wide, high volume foot, mellowing-aggressive skier, like to ski fast AND I'm pretty damned heavy.
I went in with lots of "common knowledge." I've been around ski-crap for a long time. I just kept an open mind. I forced myself to become The Customer. I let Lee do his thing.
He told me I needed the VFF Pro, not the riveted "race" shell - if, for no other reason, I can always -add- the rivet to the VFF Pro shell and get basically the same result. I liked the logic. All I really ski is natural snow now (will ride lifts 2-5 times this year, if that), I don't need a stupid-stiff shell (but I do need a fair bit, simply due to the fact that I weigh a LOT - like 280).
He made me footbeds. Yay. Probably the 10th or 11th pair I've had made.
He measured my feet - length, width, girth (kinda Salomon "heel-instep perimeter" measurement), as well as a couple of places on the lower leg. Traced them. Looks roughly like a square tissue box with toes. Rad.
The shells took a while to come back from Daleboot, but I got the ball rolling in late September anticipating some delays.
A week ago, our schedules meshed, he finished the boots. Adjusted the under-footbed-thingy (adjustable ramp/pseudo cant dealio under the liner), cooked the liners - Daleboot spec Intuitions - smashed it all together.
Lee pays all KINDS of attention to the details; various bits of this and that covering sensitive areas, good toe-box-pad-thing, shrug, he does a great job prepping the foot to get into the cooked liner.
Cooked liner got put on foot with all sorts of stuff taped to it, whole thing goes into shell, do this, do that, walk around, remove, remove taped-on stuff, have fun!
This is where it got weird.
THEY'RE FREAKING HUGE.
ok, not really. The shells are a bit longer than I'm used to skiing, about 15mm. Big difference, right? The liners are also a bit bigger. Lee/Daleboot's logic was simple - my foot and calf are wide/big, so a bigger shell with an even bigger liner will gain the desired results.
(nothing else has worked....nothing else has worked....nothing else has worked......)
"OK!" I'm the customer. I'm the customer.
Put them on. SUPER easy to put on, move the shell a bit, plomp, foot is in. Buckle. Ummm, they're WAY too loose.
Lee is smirking. "Everyone says that....." he says. "Go ski them."
I can't make my foot do weird things INSIDE the boot, but, well, they don't hurt, even a LITTLE!
"Go ski them....." Still smirking. Super nice guy.
ok.
Skied them this morning. Lee/Daleboot are freaking magicians. Buckled the boots at about 9am at the top of the lift. Left them buckled until I got to the car at ~12:30.
THAT, by itself, is freaking unbelievable in the Republic of Iain. 3+ hours of buckled tight enough to ski? LIES!
True.
I was skiing with my kid (11), who was not feeling all that well & having a rough day. IE, stand for a while, let her get ahead, 4-10 fast turns, stop, repeat.
NORMALLY, standing around = numb, tingly, burning, painful feet.
Nah. Fine.
No unbuckling routine at the bottom of the lift.
No rebuckling routine at the top of the lift.
They ski -very- well. I can drive the ski (although, the ski I was on did not like being driven, so the jury is a bit out there). They're super responsive, comfortable, shrug, they're pretty astounding.
Complaints - they're so "loose" (comfortable) that I kinda got weirded out a couple of times mid-turn - it did not "feel" right. No slop, though, there were no problems, I'm just more accustomed to having a freaking vise on my foot.
I suspect that I'd miss the raceboot feel on a big GS ski on a hard day going _fast_. Did not really have the opportunity to go "fast" today. WROD.
I think my left ankle pocket/area could use a slight shim, or simply a thicker sock, but again, that might just be a feel thing.
I doubt you'll see any WC racers in these boots. They're softish (although my forward flex adjuster is barely adjusted, there's room). Laterally, they're very stiff/responsive - no complaints there.
Almost everyone else? Shrug, why not. My last pair of boots - thoroughly molested Dobermans - arguably skied better on hard snow. LOTS of power, but there's no way I could have "skied" for 3 hours in them like I did today. I think that with some more time in the Daleboots, I'll get used to the "looseness" - they're not ACTUALLY loose, they, well, they FIT, shock and surprise - and *I* will not notice the difference between them and my other boots (I'm a good, solid skier, but let's be realistic, racers demand a LOT more from their boots than even a typical, good "freeskier.") IE, I'll get closer to maximizing the potential of the Daleboots than I would the Dobermans - but I doubt I'm going to eclipse the capabilities of the Daleboots (and certainly not the Dobermans).
I am SOLD. Holy crap. Today was pretty much the worst case scenario for me and my feet - fair bit of standing around, not as much skiing. Buckled once, skied-stopped-stood-repeat many, many times, no foot pain, no funky feelings, no floppy ankle within the boot, zero problems.
If you've had good luck with off-the-shelf boots, then you're the lucky one - I know people who can try on 4 or 5 pair of boots, narrow it to 2 or 3, then choose a price. I'm not that guy. That guy does not need Daleboots (although he'd probably like them).
Sick of buckling/unbuckling (try riding a sled in deep snow with buckles hanging off your foot sometime...)? Have problem feet? DEFINITELY give Daleboot some thought. I've been skiing for a long time, I've tried all kinds of stuff, and I have never, ever had a boot that skis THIS well, this comfortably - and this is straight out of the box. I normally ski a new boot 2-3 runs & make a list of Things to Fix.
I have no list this time.
Me likey.
Iain
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