SILVERTIP BOAT SHOE BY STRIKE

               

Reviewed by: CAPT. MIKE SCHOONVELD

I have fishing clothes that I only wear when I’m fishing and I have some fishing clothes that I also wear when I’m not fishing. Does that sound stupid? It is, to a degree, but when I’m fishing, I don’t much worry about how I look or what’s going to happen if what I’m wearing gets wet or slimed by a fish as much as I want those clothes to be warm when it’s cold, cool when it’s warm and always functions as it should. When it comes to shoes, they need to be non-slip on wet surfaces and feel comfortable for those days when I’m on my feet at the back of the boat almost all of the time.

                When I’m wearing “fishy” clothes when I’m not fishing, it’s a personal fashion statement. I am a fisherman, I’m proud to be a fisherman and I don’t mind it when others recognize me as an angler, as long as it’s not just because I’m spattered with fish gore.

                The two “wardrobes” are not mutually exclusive and when I was looking for a pair of boat shoes, I wanted a pair that would easily go from “work shoes” on my boat and “go anywhere shoes” when I’m off the job.

                The Strike Silvertip Boat Shoe is one of those crossover products. And why not? Stephan Palmer, owner of Strike, is both a shoe designer and an ardent angler. Many of his shoes and boots are more boating and fishing than fashion, but the Silvertip is a solid performer in both categories. It has a proprietary tread on the bottom that ensures a firm grip, stylish leather uppers – highly water resistant – and unique outsole with “gills” – holes that channel water away from the shoe as you move around the deck that also give the shoes a racy look.

                The shoes have an “inner sock” made from a recycled polyester knitted yarn that feels good on my feet when I choose to wear the shoes without socks, but isn’t so bulky than I can’t wear the shoes when I want to wear stockings. One doesn’t often think much about a shoe’s lacings and fastenings, but I noticed and appreciated how the shoestrings pulled snuggly without having to pull them to my preferred tightness, up and down the tongue.

                All of Strike’s line up of footwear uses recycled plastic and bio-based new components throughout their construction.

Check them all out at:www.strike-footwear.com.