View Full Version : Meet the Russells
Dave Fuller
09-25-2009, 12:04 PM
Next to my dog and a couple of shotguns, my favorite hunting gear would have to be my Russell boots. Just put a fresh coat of bacon grease on my Bird Shooters in preparation for my Grouse trip.
Francis Morin
09-26-2009, 08:17 PM
[QUOTE=Dave Fuller;4546]Next to my dog and a couple of shotguns, my favorite hunting gear would have to be my Russell boots. Just put a fresh coat of bacon grease on my Bird Shooters in preparation for my Grouse trip.[/
I'll second that Dave. I've had a pair of 11D Russell Birdshooters for 25 years, still wear them-I'm a tad fussy about three things re: outdoors and hunting/shooting- proper gun cleaning and care, quality ammo (handloads included) and quality foot wear- My favorite dress shoes are Johnson and Murphy and Bass, and my favorite huting boots are W.C. Russell and Red Wing, and I don't skimp on the sox, liners and foot powder.
I'd use bacon grease but my first choice is Sno-Seal, as my Lab "Khartoum" loves BLT's and those Russell's are not his, they are mine.:)
Jay Gardner
09-28-2009, 01:26 PM
15-years ago I bought a pair of Russell Sheep Hunters, thinking they woudl be the 4x4 of all boots. (What the hell was I thinking?) A couple of years ago I sent them back and had them resoled with Birdsuooter soles and they are much mire enjoyable. I have been planning to dress the boots but I am not sure what I want to use. Bacon grease - not going to happen as I have a hard enough time already keeping my dogs from chewing on my boots and shoes. Sno-seal is certainly an option but what else have you used?
Thanks,
JDG
Dave Fuller
09-28-2009, 01:57 PM
Bacon grease helps the dog get us back to the truck!!! Just kidding about the bacon grease, its actually Hubard's Shoe Grease which looks like bacon grease but works really well, keeps them soft and semi-water resistant.
Francis Morin
09-28-2009, 01:57 PM
[QUOTE=Jay Gardner;4640]15-years ago I bought a pair of Russell Sheep Hunters, thinking they woudl be the 4x4 of all boots. (What the hell was I thinking?) A couple of years ago I sent them back and had them resoled with Birdsuooter soles and they are much mire enjoyable. I have been planning to dress the boots but I am not sure what I want to use. Bacon grease - not going to happen as I have a hard enough time already keeping my dogs from chewing on my boots and shoes. Sno-seal is certainly an option but what else have you used?
Thanks, Jay- I think those Sheep hunter series soles were often called waffle stompers, heavy treads that would plug up with gunk and mud and clay. I have also used Mink Oil on the Birshooters- I think I once read about putting leather boots after being treated into a warm oven to "set" the Sno-Seal or Mink Oil- probably the same guy that suggested washing the many times fired AA red hulls in the Missus' Maytag to clean off the black powder crud--
As a former "grunt- 0311) the old trick of getting a new pair of leather boots wet and walking them dry to mold to your feet (heavy sox recommended) comes to mind, and my Russell's qualify- but my newer Red Wings (heavier and no moccasin toe style) require no treatment except removal of mud-
I can't recall what I spent when I ordered my Birdshooters, but it was money well spent and I even remember the name of the manager of their order dept. back then - Ralph Fabricius if memory serves. Doing business with small specialized American companies is, to me, more personal and gratifying than buying from Cabelas, Gander Mountain, Scheels or even L.L. Beanies!!:cool:
John Dallas
09-29-2009, 12:46 PM
Jay - Russell includes a little tub of dressing with thier new boots. I'd call them and get some of that. I've heard it said that Sno Seal, having a lot of silicone in it, dries out the leather ( ? ), and that Mink oil softens the leather too much
Jay Gardner
09-29-2009, 02:20 PM
Jay - Russell includes a little tub of dressing with thier new boots. I'd call them and get some of that. I've heard it said that Sno Seal, having a lot of silicone in it, dries out the leather ( ? ), and that Mink oil softens the leather too much
Mr. Dallas, great minds think alike. I ordered a tub of their boot dressing as well as a bar of Saddle Soap last evening. You are correct - Sno-seal will stiffen the leather and really needs heat to get the seal to "set." Russell suggests that boots be scrubbed with Saddle Soap and allowed to dry before the application of a waterproof dressing so I will follow their directions - to the"T."
Jay
Francis Morin
09-29-2009, 04:52 PM
[QUOTE=Jay Gardner;4731]Mr. Dallas, great minds think alike. I ordered a tub of their boot dressing as well as a bar of Saddle Soap last evening. You are correct - Sno-seal will stiffen the leather and really needs heat to get the seal to "set." Russell suggests that boots be scrubbed with Saddle Soap and allowed to dry before the application of a waterproof dressing so I will follow their directions - to the"T."
Jay Thanks John- I forgot to mention that Saddle Soap (I use Feibings) first to get out the debris and soften the leather- and I open the tin of sno-seal and place it a dish of very hot water to soften it up-I do more waterfowling nowadays than grouse "chasing" so the Russell Birdshooters get plenty of "downtime" in the Fall-but when I wear them, never have worn anything more comfortable outdoors yet on my feet- well worth the $ spent!!:bigbye:
Kent Nickerson
10-16-2009, 10:03 PM
This one rubbed with Pecard out of the tub with the little red Duck on it...
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y298/bluetoon/rus3.jpg
This is a fine dressing....kept my Imperials and zip back Russells flexible for many years and these old Carters have killed some turkeys and birds.
Years ago I dressed jesses with bacon grease...but learned that straight fresh Crisco was better. Try Pecard.
Francis Morin
10-17-2009, 07:38 AM
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y298/bluetoon/rus3.jpg
This is a fine dressing....kept my Imperials and zip back Russells flexible for many years and these old Carters have killed some turkeys and birds.
Years ago I dressed jesses with bacon grease...but learned that straight fresh Crisco was better. Try Pecard. Thanks Kent, I forgot about that brand. I heard something at last night's poker game (Friday 10/16) a new member to the "Busted Flushers" with gun deer season only a month away, here in MI we are "encouraged" to take any feral pigs we might encounter. He has had some experience hunting them in other States- mentioned that a sure fire way to attract feral pigs is to fry up until crisp a pound of bacon and place it in a mesh bag upwind several hundred yards from your stand- apparently that draws feral pigs in like bears go for blueberries. So perhaps a bacon grease odor on the Imperials or Bird Shooters may not be the way to go. Hunting grouse in heavy cover with your 28 gauge DHE and number 8 shot- and you are charged by a wild pig- certainly would make for quite an experience.:cool:
Dave Fuller
10-17-2009, 07:46 AM
I was charged by a wild pig in California once and I had no bacon grease on my Russells at all. I gotta tell ya, I would much rather be in a tree stand with a pound of fried bacon up wind of me for my next wild pig encounter. I was a little hairy.
Kent Nickerson
11-08-2009, 05:54 PM
It occurs to me I forgot the before picture of that old boot.
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y298/bluetoon/rus2.jpg
Richard Flanders
11-08-2009, 09:30 PM
How do you Russel fans keep the stitching that holds the moccasin sole to the main boot leather from wearing off? That stitching wouldn't last me a week in the heavy brush, especially around the toe. I rub aquaseal into all boot stitching to try to keep it from wearing off. Some heavy mountaineering boots USED to have shallow slits cut between the stitching holes so that the stitching was below the leather surface and not exposed where it would wear on the rocks. That worked very well.
Dave Fuller
11-08-2009, 11:29 PM
Rich - I've never seen a pair wear out there but I suppose they do. Also, not all of them have the moccasin sole its an extra layer. My favorite pair doesn't have the moccasin sole at all. I only wish I could spend enough time afield to wear out a pair! Since my geology career ended, my boots no longer need to stand up to 'A'a, Scoria and pumice... just wheat stubble and sage brush which my Russels have done pretty well.
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