Look for Irish Setters with prairie soles if you don't want to track mud.
I originally bought mine for the desert ---uninsulated, but they make an insulated version as well.
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I've had good luck with Asolo hiking boots.
My work boots are Catepillars, with steel toes. Mostly only use them around the farm though--the steel toes get cold in winter. For work boots I'd suggest going to your local farm & ranch store. They'll have a good selection and what they stock will be quality. The newer boots with a lot of Cordura nylon are turning out to wear better than the all leather ones I have. As for brand, my philosophy is to try them on. If they feel good, they are good. Still don't like cotton socks though. They just get wet and stay wet.
Here's a list of the work boots that Bomgaars carries in my regional farm & ranch store, to give you an idea:
http://www.bomgaars.com/departments/footwear/
Kent in SD
Had a chance yesterday to use my Vasque Talus Trek Ultradry boots I purchased last summer from REI in Greensboro. Footwear is, I think, a very personal item. One man's steak is another man's boiled beets. Both have nutritional value, but the gustatory experience is vastly different.
I have always been very difficult to fit for shoes and recall painful trips with my mom to the shoe store as a very young child. I don't think I could ever buy online for that reason.
But, as mentioned above, REI has a very generous return policy for members which was the final straw in getting me to part with my hard-earned cash.
Yesterday's outing at Hanging Rock SP was mild by any standard. A very short loop (0.3 miles, I believe, one-way). The boots proved splendid. It was my legs, knees, lungs and back that were the limiting factor, by far. Now, I never went as far as splashing about in the water, so can't speak to water repellency. But the boots and my feet were never part of my discomfort.
Or, perhaps, the rest of me was in enough pain and discomfort to mask any discomfort from the feet. But I am diabetic and deal daily with the associated neuropathy in my feet. I think I found a great pair of boots (for me). YMMV.
Perhaps not "work" boots, but I have both low- and mid-cut Merrill Moab 2 hiking shoes and plan on getting the high-cut boots next. I've actually switched all of my shoes to Merrills - I LOVE the Moabs.
I have a pair of the all leather Moabs and mostly wear those for summer hikes. They are very sturdy. I call them my "adventure shoes."
Kent in SD
Red Wing boots made in Red Wing, Minnesota.
(Not their foreign mades.)
Lifetime rebuilds. Great fit.
.
Here you go:
http://www.redwingshoes.com/leather-boots
I refer to them as Irish Setter. My bad.
My pair are over 25 years old and I'll send them in for resoling and restoration before too long.