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Chip pics
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In the past couple years, there has been some talk about the Chippewa boots we were issued while at Flint Kaserne. Sooooo. A few months ago, I grabbed a gal's camera, hauled the boots and stuff outside........ along with my outstanding photographic skills :rolleyes: and snapped a couple pictures. These have seen aaaaaaaaaaalot of miles in the mountains and below in all types of weather. However! I have tried to keep them in shape. It's only been 37 years or so. ;)
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Wow, now htere is a throwback. I was fortunate enough to have both the low and high cuts during my double digit years with the 10th. I still have a pair or 2 somewhere.
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Low tops
Ya' beat me to it, bost.
The first pair I was issed was the low tops. Along with Head 210s and NATO cable bindings I had tons of fun in the mountains. Then again I liked growing up in northern Michigan so I liked getting that "high speed" military stuff issued to me. Pete |
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I still have two pair from the 60s. They are indestructible and I wear them all the time outside around the property. Because I no longer am capable of getting them on without assistance, I have come up with the FOGCPOD(FOG Chippewa Pull on Device). I have attached a hook to my cane which allows me to slip the hook through the finger loop, pull the boots on, and head out back with the pups. Works great!
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Do you also wear the wool shirt in the background of your pic, Sir? ;)
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I did not know they had high tops. All I remember is the low brown ones and the big Mickey Mouse boots. They would not let me have any Chippewas, so I had to clump around in the Mickey Mouses. The only time I ever wore them was on Saturdays when there was snow on the ground and the rifle team wanted to practice.
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Shirt, Men's, Wool, M-1950 TR |
And what is wrong with wearing my wool shirt, it is very warm! :p
My chips look just as worn out, I thought I was the only masochist that still kept those things. :D |
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Oh, and those buttons are stetched like that because of all of the undergarments. :munchin
:D :D And NO, I will not show you my tensioned buttons! :p |
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Heck, I'll buy that one, as long as I can use it. :D
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I will have to snap a pic of my Chips - only from the 80's - didn't get the diver toes.... Had to use mine last week, it got very cold and snowy here.
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Buy you a pair of Danners X SF MED. Your old chips are still wet from your days at Devens.
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I do have a pair of HiTec Magnums for 'normal' temps, and a pair of Bass Hikers that are a good 4 season boot (6" tops, waterproof, lightly insulated) and my old issued brown Gore-Tex, jungles, and leg boots. |
Oh no, not the old brown gortex with the square toe for the bindings. Now that would make a statement in today's world.
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Herman Survivors?
So nobody has any kind words to say for their Herman Survivors?
American made in Maine? I still have that first pair, from before all the high speed, low drag boot makers came out with the good stuff. In just down right nasty cold weather they worked great. Still wear mine around Fayetteville when it snows. Pete |
Herman's were great. It weems they were the Cadilacs back in our era. Later I grew to like Danner's pretty good. I still use them when I go hunting for something worth hunting for.
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Herman Survivors? I wore them in HS (well, and in the field in SF) and you are making fun of my LSHD goretex boots - the hideousness will haunt my dreams forever!!! |
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COL Jack!! I have to blame you for those Natick inspired nightmares? (Yup Devens was great, got to be guinea pigs for a lot of cool stuff) Actually, until they get a little oil on them they're pretty good dry boots - the soles are a bit hard (mine are the gen 1 s from early 84) especially after they've gotten cold then warm a few times - but you are right - you can't kill 'em, so you have to keep 'em around until they die. Sorbithane insoles are great in them, especially for long patrols. I have 2 pr of boots to post now. Oh a final thought - they did not fit into any binding on any of the skis we tried, the toes would slip ourt or the cables would 'jump the track' on the heels. |
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COL Jack,
Were you involved in the 1986 "New Long Range Field Ration Test"? We wandered around the Burlington area for a month in November, listened to the vulcans at GE, and were also field testing some pretty powerful laptops, hmmm, was it really a rations test? Hmmmmmm... Ah yes, Tac vests, Lowe packs, eco-tats, goretex ponchos, polypro, goretex rain gear --- Natick had some cool stuff, and all the S-4 pogues had it before the teams that didn't get on the tests. |
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I used to "sport" my brown, squared toed, gortex slabs around Devens for a while. I did get some interesting looks when up around the "regular" guys. I did it for kicks until the SGM convinced me it was not a good idea for a Tm SGT to be doing that. I gues the company or battalion had been threatened about sporting them around on post. They were some ugly critters. Yes I still have them too.
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I had to turn in my Chipps when I left Tölz. But I still have my brown boots. I always liked them and even in the summer, I didn't find them too hot. I just used lighter socks.
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My brown goretex boots cracked really bad and I finally had to throw the things. Believe it or not we got issued them in SWC in 86. :D
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