• Buyers Guide 2005 home
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Outside Athelte
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Outside Expidition
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Outside Travel
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Outside Style
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Gear of the Year
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Gear to Covet
  • Buyers Guide 2005 Killer Values
  • Letter from the editor

Browse Outdoor Gear

Gear Blog Gear Guy

Today's Question
What set of walkie-talkies should I get for a three-month trip on Hawaii’s Big Island? answer

Who makes the best three-season one-person condensation-free tent? answer

Gear Favorites

Buyers Guide 2004

Outside Buyers Guide 2005
Montrail Hardrock Wide
Gear Category: Trail-Running Shoes
$93
by Jonathan Hanson
Montrail Hardrock Wide - Trail-Running Shoes
Mark Wiens
Five Fab Features:

When we finally terraform Mars, the first colonists will doubtless be issued Montrail Hardrock Wides—kicks perfectly suited to the dusty slopes of 78,740-foot-high Olympus Mons. OK, admittedly, we're reaching, but our 2005 Gear of the Year trail runners have more than proved their worth on this planet, moving effortlessly from scree to sandstone to the blacktop that took us there.

1. The Hardrock Wide's firm and deeply sculpted heel cup fits as if it's been bone-grafted onto your foot. Superstellar. It's impossible to fumble your stride with your heel so locked in place.

2. Size-EE feet feel at home in the Wides yet never go unsupported—thanks to a full-length polyurethane plate that wraps up, taco style, around the midfoot for torsional control. (There's a standard width available for skinnier feet.) Overpronation is regulated with the authority of a strict school nun.

3. Montrail embraces chaos theory on the outsole—it's bristling with triangles, bars, and dots—and the result is traction uphill, downhill, and sideways in dirt. On rock, the rubber lugs are shallow and stiff enough to grip tightly.

4. A midsole of dual-density EVA and a gel insert in the forefoot lend perfect plumpness—enough for forays on asphalt (not always the case with trail shoes) without the foot/trail disconnect that gives you that whoa! feeling on steep switchbacks.

5. Nylon mesh in the uppers ensures good ventilation, and copious synthetic leather embellished with raised rubber bumpers fends off rock scrapes and debris collisions.

More Trail-Running Shoes Info

More Gear Reviews

Related Gear Features

  • Gear of the Year: Trail Runners 2006 Buyer's Guide

    Vasque Blur

  • State of the Art 2006 Buyer's Guide

    Trail Runners

  • Ultrarunning 2007 Summer Buyer's Guide

    Strange but true: It feels good to run all day. Prep yourself with this go-far gear.

  • Miles Ahead Outside Magazine August 2004

    Eight ingenious innovations to help you dial in your run, hike, or scramble

  • Need to Know: Trail Runners 2006 Buyer's Guide

    Trail Runners

  • Think on Your Feet Outside Magazine July 2002

    To sort through this season's trail-runner bounty, mix equal parts rugged design and motivational psychology

  • Traction Heroes Outside Magazine, August 2005

    Whether your happy medium is mud, water, or plain old dirt, there's a trick new trail runner built to take you there

  • Vasque Aether Tech Trail Runners Outside Buyer's Guide Summer 2008

    Freedom of the Hills

  • Trail-Running Gear Essentials Outside Buyer's Guide Summer 2008
  • Light Fantastic Outside Magazine, June 2006

    Get the most out of long summer days with featherweight performance gear for running, riding, climbing, and hiking

The Gear Guy on Trail-Running Shoes

Recent Gear Blogs