Keen Clearwater CNX
The aren鈥檛 as wide, heavy, or high volume as Keen鈥檚 flagship models, and they feature a barefoot-running-shoe-like four millimeters of heel drop, encouraging a more natural stride. You still get all the good stuff鈥攏amely, the armored toe protection and ample arch support鈥攋ust in a slimmed-down version.
OluKai Kia’I Trainer II

With aggressive lugs (for water shoes) and thick midsoles, the are the most substantial shoes here. But they don鈥檛 feel oppressive on bare feet or in the water, thanks to mostly mesh uppers and aerated footbeds. They quickly became our go-to shoes鈥攅ven when we were nowhere near a river or beach.
Sperry Top-Sider Son-R Pong

Sperry claims its technology鈥攁rticulating pods on the sole鈥攈eightens your natural sensory perception to help you react faster in an emergency. That seems like a stretch, but the shoes are impressively grippy, and we liked how the densely woven mesh uppers kept fine sand out but let cool air in.
Columbia Powerdrain Cool

The were supportive enough for an eight-mile day hike yet grippy enough to stick to mossy rocks. The sweat-activated technology in the liners鈥攖iny rings that swell with a cooling polymer when wet鈥攊s no gimmick: it works so well it was actually startling the first time. Bungee laces make 鈥檈m easy to cinch down on the fly.
Astral Brewer

The rockered toes and flexible midsoles are designed to be jammed into cramped whitewater boats, and the sticky rubber adhered to even the slickest rocks while we scouted rapids. Note: the Cordura uppers, while nearly indestructible, are also a bit abrasive against bare skin; we had to wear them with socks.
Teva Bomber

Teva鈥檚 well-named prove the outdoor powerhouse hasn鈥檛 forgotten its raft-guide roots. Supersticky outsoles allowed us to confidently scramble down steep granite rocks. The rugged uppers should stand up to seasons of abuse but were supple enough to ward off hot spots on a two-mile hike.