Six years ago I walked into an Army-Navy surplus store and bought a
pair of Hi-Tec hiking boots for something like 30 dollars. They're
sturdy and very comfortable, have given me good service in all sorts
of places and conditions, and are likely to keep doing so for years
to come. The laces, however, were beginning to show their age and
experience; the anglets had come off and the inner
core of the laces had retreated into the outer sheath. I had an
opportunity, therefore, to replace them with a much stronger and
more useful type of bootlace: mil-spec 550 parachute
cord.
Black never goes out of style
This fits into the trend of survival experts
and EDC enthusiasts carrying miles of paracord on
their persons at all times, usually by tightly weaving it into
something like a watch band or key chain. I'm impressed by their
techniques but I'm far from being a serious student of wilderness
survival—I only sniff around the edges of that
community—but I enjoy hiking now and again and I'm very much a
fan of preparedness and capability in all aspects of life.