Most of the time, my vanity works against me. This is a story about one time that it didn鈥檛.听
A couple years ago, I was looking at photos on the Fjallraven website and realized one of the reasons the pants looked so good on the models was because they were paired with some really nice boots. Lean and purposeful, yet understated and classy, they were made from a leather upper fitted with a sole that reminded me of an athletic shoe. I decided I had to own them, if only so that my Fjallraven pants could look as good on me as they did on those models.听

Digging into a Google image search, I eventually found a photo from the same shoot that gave me a glimpse of a logo on the boots. I spotted the giant red circle that Hanwag emblazons on all its boots.听
I鈥檝e tried a few pairs of Hanwags before, but they鈥檝e never really worked for me. In fact, hiking boots have never really worked for me. I鈥檇 wear them sometimes, sure, but usually just around town, or in bad weather. Anything that called for a lot of miles or exertion had me reaching for my trusty trail runners instead. No pair of boots, I was convinced, could ever match the comfort, agility, support, or light weight of a pair of sneakers.听
The problem was that trail runners look goofy, especially with a full-length pair of pants. And I wanted to look like the guy in those Fjallraven ads.听
I texted a few friends who rep major footwear brands, but the photos they sent back were of brightly colored synthetic boots and leather ones that looked like loves of bread. They just didn鈥檛 get what I was asking for. So I turned to social media, where a request for help eventually led me to a boot brand I鈥檇 only ever heard of in passing: Lowa.听
It turns out that the guy who founded Lowa 99 years ago, , was the brother of the guy who founded Hanwag, Hans Wagner. Hans beat Lorenz to the contracted naming convention by two years. Lowa is still headquartered in the Bavarian Alps, and makes its boots in Germany and Austria. More importantly, the brand鈥檚 website featured exactly what I was after: a pair of leather boots that looked technical and athletic. The logos weren鈥檛 garish, and there was even a brown option with understated gray trim. I pulled out my credit card and tried to order a pair, only to find them sold out in my size, in that color. If I wanted an 11, I鈥檇 have to go with gray and baby vomit green, or black and ugly orange.听
Eventually, Google led me to a third-party reseller that had a brown pair of Lowa Baldos in stock. I spent $270 ordering the last pair available.
When the Baldos arrived a few days later, I slipped a pair of Superfeet Flex insoles into them, put on my favorite Fjallraven pants, and looked in the mirror. It was love at first lace.听
The top two lace loops on the Baldos are made from ball bearings retained in metal loops. A lacing point holds the tongue in a centered position, so it won鈥檛 slip down to the side as you move. This means I can lace up Baldos tighter than any other boot I鈥檝e ever worn, but without any hint of a hot spot. A snug fit forces my foot down into the insole, and draws the upper tight around my ankle, eliminating any potential for play between boot and foot.听
It鈥檚 not a boot鈥檚 tall upper that provides ankles stability鈥攖hose only offer protection from foreign objects and weather intrusion鈥攊t鈥檚 actually up to the insole and foot bed. When your toes to spread out and your foot gets the correct support for your individual arch shape, you get that stability.听
One of the reasons I鈥檝e never been very happy in a real boot is that I haven鈥檛 been able to cinch them down onto my feet tightly enough. Even in boots that match the length and width of my feet, and put the arches in the right places at the right height, my toes would slide forward going downhill.听

I鈥檇 only planned to wear the Baldos for video and photo shoots, and maybe in bad weather. But from the moment I put them on, my other footwear began gathering dust in my closet. From multi-day backcountry hunts to shoveling snow out of my driveway to walking downtown for dinner, these Lowas were the right choice. In addition to comfort and stability, the pronounced heel and aggressively-lugged Vibram soles provided traction everywhere, in every weather. Twenty-two months later, I can count the number of times I鈥檝e worn something else on two hands.听
After what must have been thousands of miles, my original pair of Lowas was starting to look pretty worn out. They鈥檇 get soaked through in high alpine snow storms and river crossings, and salt from winter sidewalks had totally disappeared the angular heat embossing details on the sides. The lugs on the soles were worn bald, and the foam behind the rubber was beginning to show through. With another hunting season rapidly approaching, I desperately needed a new pair of boots. And I didn鈥檛 want to try anything other than another pair of Baldos.听

But it turns out that the pair I ordered almost two years ago was the last pair of brown elevens out there. I鈥檓 so happy in these things that it didn鈥檛 feel like a hard decision to settle on , but those truly bad colors do relegate this new pair to outdoor duty only. While they鈥檒l keep my feet happy in the elk country this fall, I also need secure, comfortable, good looking boots to wear around humans.听
My search is back on. I鈥檓 looking for a boot that鈥檚 as durable and well made as these Baldos, that achieves a similar tech-meets-leather look, and that鈥檚 so comfortable it may as well have been custom made for my feet. Is it too much to ask that they come in brown?听