I had Trappeurs, but they were leather. The first buckle boots I ever owned!Who had the foamed Trappeur ski boots back in the day ?
I had Trappeurs, but they were leather. The first buckle boots I ever owned!Who had the foamed Trappeur ski boots back in the day ?
Who had the foamed Trappeur ski boots back in the day ?
Who remembers cutting the Inseam of their jeans so they would fit over the top of their ski boots?
The Trappeur boot had the Narrowest Last of any of the boots I ever sold. When anyone came in to the shop and said they had narrow feet that was the boot for them.Not those older foamed ones, but had these late (and probably well passed prime) Trappeur boots.
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Absurdly heavy. I was young, thought they were awesome. I'm sure they were at least 1 shell too large for me. That metal rod in the back was like 5/16 inch thick. The Lange Tii's that replaced them felt really, really light
Interesting. I bought mine from a shop known for deals. Probably spent 15 -30 minutes. As I do have a narrow foot maybe there was some store input.The Trappeur boot had the Narrowest Last of any of the boots I ever sold. When anyone came in to the shop and said they had narrow feet that was the boot for them.
Last week I was at Blue Mt. PA and saw one person in jeans, I was a bit surprised to see it.I still don't understand why more people don't ski in jeans these days. Heck, no one skis in jeans...and yet, they worked just fine, with a pair of gaiters and long johns. High school girls looked especially good in Jordaches.
I still don't understand why more people don't ski in jeans these days. Heck, no one skis in jeans...and yet, they worked just fine, with a pair of gaiters and long johns. High school girls looked especially good in Jordaches.
Because they see those who do and also see how wet and cold they are.I still don't understand why more people don't ski in jeans these days. .