Let me start this with this advice. If you have some cash ~$500 and up, get yourself some custom made boots (Kulien's, Whites, etc). They will fit better longer and should last longer because they are much better made than a mass produced product like a Georgia.
I've worn Georgia's for about 7 years. They are the only off the shelf boots that fit my feet. They're good on comfort and fit at first, but durability leaves a lot to be desired. I've found that they stretch a lot, after about 2 months my feet just slop around in them and they stretch enough at the seams that they leak like a sieve with in the first month. The only pair I currently own are "waterproof" gor-tex insulated that I got for snowshoeing. I'd only wore them 4 or 5 times until this summer when I was waiting on my Kulien's to be finished. I had to wear them for 2 weeks and after the 3rd day of working in the woods they had stretched and were leaking bad. By the end of that fortnight, I was pretty upset with my boots, my feet were constantly wet from rain and creek crossings and walking hillsides caused them to stretch more and more causing blisters. The pair before that, after 2 months in the woods, the leather rotted causing the heel to fall off in the middle of the forest.
In a former life, I used to repair used appliances and they were the perfect boots for that type of work. They were inexpensive (~$100) so i didn't care about scraping the leather off the toes (I had to kneel a bunch on concrete), they gave great support so by the end of the day my feet and knees weren't begging for mercy. They were durable enough that they would last between a year or two and by the time they needed resoled, they were toast anyways. However, in my opinion they are way out of their league in the woods. If you're off trail in any sort of terrain they just don't last. I've owned my custom boots for 7 months, 5 of which they were on my feet in the woods every day, and they still fit like new and keep the water out unless I step in over the tops.