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Georgia Wellington Boots

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Georgia Men's Carbo Tec Wellington Work Boot - Brown - G5814 - Overlook Boots
Sale price$160.00 Regular price$170.00
Georgia Men's Carbo Tec Wellington Work Boot - Brown - G5814
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Georgia Men's Wedge Wellington Work Boot - Brown - G5153 7 / Medium / Tabacco - Overlook Boots
Sale price$180.00 Regular price$190.00
Georgia Men's Wedge Wellington Work Boot - Brown - G5153
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Georgia Men's Muddog Wellington Work Boot - Brown - G5514 7.5 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
Sale price$143.44 Regular price$180.00
Georgia Men's Muddog Wellington Work Boot - Brown - G5514
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Georgia Men's Wedge Steel Toe Wellington Wedge Work Boot - Brown - G5353 7 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
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Georgia Men's Giant Steel Toe Pul-On Work Boots - Brown - G4374 7.5 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots
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Georgia Men's Giant 11" Wellington Pull On Work Boot -Brown- G4274 6.5 / Medium / Brown - Overlook Boots

Frequently Asked Questions

Two reasons. Speed, since they're on and off in seconds, which matters when you're in and out of a truck all day. And safety in certain trades: around augers, chains, and rotating equipment, a lace is one more thing to catch, so there isn't one. Farmers, oilfield hands, and truckers favor wellingtons for exactly that. The trade-off is fit, since a pull-on can't be cinched like a lace-up, so sizing matters more.
Snugger than you'd size a lace-up, because there are no laces to take up slack. You want firm heel hold with your toes free, and you should feel some resistance pulling the boot on. A wellington that slides on effortlessly on day one will slip at the heel once the leather relaxes. If you're between sizes, the width is usually the better adjustment than the length.
Most are, and it's stated in the title. A pull-on has a real advantage in the wet: there's no lacing gap, which is the most common entry point for water on a lace-up. Combine that with the Georgia waterproof system and a tall 10 or 11 inch shaft, and a waterproof wellington keeps feet dry very effectively. Check the product title, since a few are built without a membrane.
The Brute 11-inch composite toe pairs its safety toe with a metatarsal guard and waterproof construction. A met guard protects the top of the foot, where a safety toe stops, and it's specified where heavy objects can drop or roll onto the instep. If your site requires metatarsal protection, that's the pull-on here that meets it, and the spec is on the product page.
Yes, across steel, composite, and alloy. The Homeland and Muddog come in steel toe, the Muddog 11-inch and Rumbler in composite, and the Durablend Edge in alloy, all as pull-ons. There's also a steel toe static dissipative wellington for work around sensitive electronics. Toe type is listed in every product title.
Both are tall pull-ons, but a wellington has a plainer, straighter profile and usually a walking heel, built purely around work. A western keeps the angled heel and often the square or roper toe of a cowboy boot. If you want the tall, laceless convenience without the western styling, the wellington is the more understated choice.

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