Felt Sole Boots

Hello all. Looking for a little advice from the collective wisdom of this board. I am heading out to colorado in a week to fish the Arkansas, South Platte, and possibly the frying pan or roaring fork rivers. My question for any of you that have fished these rivers is: are felt sole wading boots a necessity or are rubber cleated ones ok? Here in michigan my rubber ones are great, but I have heard out west a lot of rivers can be pretty nasty to walk in if you dont have felt. I can get a pair of felt soled boots for around $50 at a local store, but would rather spend that money on fly tying supplies or something else if they arent necessary.

Any help is much appreciated.

Thanks
Yonks

Yonks,

Here’s my equation on the subject from about two years ago:

Rubber cleated hip boots + slippery mountain stream in Virginia = finishing off old football injured right knee + three months off work (luckily on short term disability) + some rehab + missing about a whole best part of the season (March to June)

Felt soled chest waders = hardly any slipping

And, I always carry and use a wading staff now

My good friend who fishes 50+ days a year here in Colorado prefers rubber soled wading boots over felt soled boots.

Dear yonks,

Anywhere you don’t have a stream bottom of clean gravel or mud the felt soles are an advantage. Studded felt soles are even better.

Rubber soled boots and the Roaring Fork is a recipe for disaster, I know because I actually tried it for a half a day before I broke down and rented waders with felt soles for the rest of my trip.

Best Wishes,
Avalon

Went to the Roaring Fork and Frying Pan end of May and would recommend felt soles and a wading stick. They were moving pretty good. In fact Roaring Fork was mostly unfishable then bt fast and slippery.

Have a great trip and tight lines.


The best time to go fishing is when it’s raining and when it’s not

I fish the South Platte and a lot of other creeks and rivers in Colorado a fair amount. Felt soles are fine but I do slip around some in them. I also have rubber soles with large screw in carbide and steel cleats. They are by far a lot more secure both in the water and out of the water.
However if you have the rubber sole with the tiny style of a button stud then I would say get the felt.
Rubber and studs will be better for cleaning.

You are going to be fishing rivers that either have Whirling Disease (Arkansas) and/ or New Zealand Mudsnails (South Platte) or Rock Snot algae (Arkansas) [url=http://www.westdenvertu.org/Conservation.htm#invasion:689f5]www.westdenvertu.org/Conservation.htm#invasion[/url:689f5]

You need to be sanitizing your all your wading equipment before you move from river to river. Don’t be contaminating anyone’s waters.
Don’t be contaminating your home waters either. Sanitize again when you get home.

Here is what you can do: [url=http://www.westdenvertu.org/snails.htm:689f5]www.westdenvertu.org/snails.htm[/url:689f5]

Enjoy the fishing and the views while you are here.

[This message has been edited by Scruffy Fly (edited 18 July 2006).]

I have the rubber sole with studds in the Rocky Mountain area. Work great for me on all the waters I have fished.
If you want studds, easy to do. Simms uses 1/4" sheet metal screws. Taht is what is on my stealth, but I have customers and clients that have tried it on their felt and it works great.
Plus easy to remove if you get in a boat.

In my many, many years of overly aggressive wading which include a few unintended swims in waders, felt soles have been better than rubber soled boots. However, rubber soles with steel studs are better for footing than felt alone. The best insurance for staying upright for your whole fishing day is a wading staff. I resisted carrying one for years but now I wouldn’t wade deeper, fast rivers without one.

Not sure what they are called but saw some strap on felt soles to go over rubber soles. Not sure of the price either maybe that will save you a few bucks and give you the best of both worlds.

wireguy

When I fished the North Platte, I loved my felt sole. I can’t imagine much of a difference this time of year. Slime is slime.

Enjoy the trip and bring LOTS of bug spray. This time of year there are lots of skeeters.

DianeID wrote:
When I fished the North Platte, I loved my felt sole. I can’t imagine much of a difference this time of year. Slime is slime.

Try studs and you will know what you are missing and wish you had used them a long time ago.

Also, a wading staff is definitely a good thing for a fast flowing river.

Since I’ve not seen them mentioned…

Dan Bailey’s has aluminum cleats that are on a pair of rubbers that slip over your boots. When they are new I’m telling you you feel like you can climb rock walls.

It is kind of embarasing and I hate to mention it because it reflects on myself, but…

remember with cleats not to step on your fly line…I have not found a good use for used fly line yet but I am working on it.


I never fish alone, because I often end up Nderdafilm.

Hey thanks for all the help everyone! It sounds like the general concensus is that studs and a wading staff will be helpful. Opinions seem a little split on felt vs rubber. Still not sure what I will do. I was reading the information about sanitizing your wading gear that Scruffy Fly posted and that site recommends not using felt soles, because they are harder to sanitize and have more spots for microrganisms to get into. I may just try what I have, with the addition of a wading stick, and if that doesn’t work i’m sure there are plenty of fly shops out there that would love to sell me a new pair of boots. Only problem is I wear size 15 and normally that means slim pickins

Thanks again
Yonks

get a pair with aquastealth studded soles…way better than felt studded. If you can spring for a pair of Simms, then do it…

good luck,
~Randy