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Georgia Logger Boots

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Georgia Men's Comfort Core 9" Logger Work Boot Brown GB00096 8 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
Sale price$202.74 Regular price$255.00
Georgia Men's Comfort Core 9" Logger Work Boot Brown GB00096
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Georgia Men's 8" Steel Toe Waterproof Logger Work Boot - Brown - G7313 7 / Medium / Chocolate - Overlook Boots
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Georgia Men's 8" Waterproof Logger Work Boot - Brown - G7113 7 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
Sale price$175.00 Regular price$185.00
Georgia Men's 8" Waterproof Logger Work Boot - Brown - G7113
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Georgia Men's 8" Waterproof Lace to Toe Work Boot - Brown - G101 8 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
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Georgia Men's Comfort Core 8" Low Heel Logger Work Boot Brown GB00122 8 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
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Georgia Men's 8" Logger Work Boot - Black - G8120 7.5 / Medium / Black - Overlook Boots
Sale price$155.00 Regular price$165.00
Georgia Men's 8" Logger Work Boot - Black - G8120
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Georgia Men's USA Made Waterproof Logger Work Boot - Brown - GB00538 8 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
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Georgia Men's Forestry 8" Soft Toe Logger Work Boot- Black- GB00648 8 / Medium / Black - Overlook Boots

Frequently Asked Questions

The heel is there to catch. On a slope, in mud, or on a ladder rung, a defined heel gives you an edge that bites instead of sliding, and it keeps your foot from creeping forward on a descent. It's the same reason a riding boot has one. The trade-off is that a heeled boot concentrates weight under a smaller area, so on flat concrete all day a wedge or low-heel is more comfortable.
Just the heel. A traditional logger heel is tall and sharply defined for hooking rungs and biting slopes; a low-heel logger keeps the aggressive lug outsole and the height but drops the heel closer to flat. Georgia builds both across the Amped Lightweight and Core 37 lines. If you split time between rough ground and flat concrete, the low-heel is the more comfortable compromise.
Georgia builds several loggers in its Puerto Rico facility, and footwear produced there is made in the USA and Berry-compliant, including the USA Logger 9-inch and the USA Made Waterproof Logger. Berry compliance matters if your job or a government contract requires domestically sourced footwear. Country of origin is listed on each product page, so check the specific model.
Not at all. Logger boots turn up on linemen, pipeliners, heavy construction crews, and farmers. The traits that make them work in timber, which are ankle coverage, an aggressive lug outsole, and a heel that grips, are just as useful on any jobsite with trenches, mud, and uneven ground. If your work keeps you off flat surfaces, a logger earns its keep whatever the trade.
Some are, and it's stated in the title. The insulated loggers here run from a steel toe waterproof insulated model up to the Amped Lightweight Logger at 600G and the Logger LTX at 400G. The rest are uninsulated, which is what you want if you work hard or in a warmer climate, since insulation you don't need just makes you sweat. Insulation weight is on each product page.
Heel locked, toes free, and no pressure across the ball of the foot. Because loggers run 8 inches or taller, pay attention to how the shaft meets your calf when you flex your ankle, since a boot that fits the foot can still bite at the top. Lace-to-toe models give the most fit control, because you can adjust tension the full length of the foot.

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