The waterproof and non-slip boots that you won't want to take off all winter long!

Every winter the same problem... The cold weather arrives and with it, the dilemma of choosing footwear that allows us to keep our feet warm and protected from the rain, snow and low temperatures. A bad choice of footwear at this time of year can be costly, both for our feet and for our health in general.

Although it may seem otherwise, it is not easy to find boots that are comfortable, waterproof, non-slip and that protect us from the cold.

There are boots that meet all these characteristics and that are also ideal for preventing the most common foot problems that appear at this time of year.



If you want to reduce the chances of this happening to you, BooJoy boots, thanks to their rugged sole, are the best solution to avoid having to recover from a silly fall in the street on rainy days.
 
BooJoy Winter Shoes
 

















 

duling system has been criticised by some as being cumbersome. In England and Wales it also has a limited definition of what constitutes a monument. Features such as ritual landscapes, battlefields and flint scatters are difficult to schedule; recent amendment in Scotland (see below) has widened the definition to include "any site... comprising any thing, or group of things, that evidences previous human activity". The wide range of legislation means that the terminology describing how historic sites are protected varies according to the type of heritage asset. Monuments are "scheduled", buildings are "listed", whilst battlefields, parks and gardens are "registered", and historic wrecks are "protected". Historic urban spaces receive protection through designation as "conservation areas", and historic landscapes are designated through national park and Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) legislation. In addition, there are areas in the UK are also protected as World Heritage Sites. To add to the confusion, some heritage assets can be both listed buildings and scheduled monuments (e.g. Dunblane Cathedral). World Heritage Sites, conservation areas and protected landscapes can also contain both scheduled monuments and listed buildings. Where a heritage asset is both scheduled and listed, many provisions of the listing legislation are dis-applied (for example those relating to building preservation notices). In England, Scotland and Wales, protection of monuments can also be given by another process, additional to or separate from scheduling, taking the monument into state ownership or placing it under guardianship, classifying it as a guardianship monument under the terms of Section 12 of the 1979 Act (as amended by the National Heritage Act 1983 in England, and by the Historic Environment (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2011) (e.g. St Rule's Church in St Andrew s). The latter meaning that the owner retains possession, while the appropriate national heritage body maintains it and