I’ve decided - for no particular reason, just because - to
write about the weekend just passed in terms of footwear. If you object to this… well I won’t actually
change it back, so there’s probably no point complaining about it.
Folk dancers use a range of different shoes, generally based
on the style they do most or that first introduced them to dancing. Scottish
and Irish soft dancing shoes are exceedingly common, swing dancing shoes as
well, Irish hard shoes less so. I’m possibly unique and certainly rare, in that
I dance wearing hiking sandals. Essentially the sole of a hiking boot held on
with a few straps instead of leather and laces (straps, leather and lace…
somewhere along the way this post took a turn for the strange). They’re heavy,
the grip’s all wrong for dancing and they look bizarre, but they’re also
extremely comfortable. I’ve learned to work around the rest. That said, I still
dance barefoot half the time because it’s even more comfortable. That’s how I
spent Friday night, dancing barefoot through a few hours of Irish and folk
dancing.
Saturday morning brought a new challenge. Riding uses
particular footwear as well, but I normally ride wearing work shoes because
that’s where I’m going to or from. So when I go mountain biking, I don’t have
any special riding shoes to wear. Though it makes people wince to see all the
exposed skin, I often ride wearing my hiking sandals (look, they’re really comfortable!). I deviated from
that this weekend by using some high-top volleys. The track was pretty narrow and
I didn’t want my feet getting too shredded by passing shrubbery. As it was, I
should have worried more about my hands and face, which both sustained injuries
when falling in the line of duty.
I’ve done very little climbing over the years and have no
fancy climbing shoes either. So I stuck with the volleys on Saturday arvo,
figuring that the grip they gave would be good. Wrong, very wrong. The toe on a
pair of volleys is a soft thing that bends easily, regardless of how your toes
are positioned. Trying to maintain a grip on a precarious toehold proved nigh
on impossible. I also wore half the remaining tread off the soles trying to use
their grip on the weathered dolerite. If you’ve not spent much time in Tas,
it’s entirely possible you haven’t studied this rock up close. Freshly cut,
it’s a mottled grey and can be quite smooth. It weathers to an ochre hue with a
texture like grit 1 sandpaper, if there is such a thing. Nice and grippy, but
death for any soft-soled shoes.
Sunday morning was an easy choice. Making cheese requires no
special footwear, so I could wear my hiking sandals! Alas, some exercises in
the afternoon required some creative thought. The soles of my volleys were
already worn thin by a couple of the exercises at Hell Night in Wellington, and
the climbing had nearly finished them off. They wouldn’t give me any good grip.
A discussion at Hell Night had me tempted to just go barefoot. The guy running
it mentioned that cushioned modern shoes encourage really bad practices when
running, which cause a lot of additional wear on the joints. He had us practice
a running style that avoids those problems and mentioned that it was almost
instinctive whenever running barefoot. I’ve tried and I think he’s right.
Unfortunately I’m less inclined to run around in the dark barefoot, lest some
unkind person leaves glass strewn amid the concealing grass. So I needed a thin
but tough sole, with no padding… Something I had already considered for the
next time I go rockclimbing is my old pair of rafting shoes. Turns out five
fingers are pretty much ideal, with a tough grippy sole and absolutely no
padding. I’ll give them a try next time I go climbing as well, though I’m told I
will soon have to try climbing in walking boots.
(I actually have some photos, and not all of shoes! For the sake of not delaying this any longer, I'll post this now and upload the photos in an edit later.)
EDIT: See, one of them was of people who'd just donned their shoes!
(I actually have some photos, and not all of shoes! For the sake of not delaying this any longer, I'll post this now and upload the photos in an edit later.)
EDIT: See, one of them was of people who'd just donned their shoes!
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