Not barefoot. minimalist. I've done a few runs barefoot but nothing substantial. I do road (and trail) running using a mix of Nike Free (3.0 and 5.0) as well as Vibram Five Finger KSO and Inov-8 Roclite 295 for hiking / trail running. This is in addition to a stronger workout regime including more weights and running on a daily basis. I feel like the "near barefoot" running has helped my feet, calves, posture, running style/technique etc. It seems pretty normal though considering humans evolved this way...Wu... Wu... Beuller... Beuller...
I'd start on a clean beach there near you or a yard you're familiar avec.
Run barefoot only on the beach, very infrequently. Only other place I'd consider it would be a golf course. Might be a different story if I'd walked barefoot all my life, but my Western tootsies are rather wimpy so protection is necessary. Anyway, even the Tarahumara wear rope-and-tire sandals.
Me too! I've long thought the idea of having croc type bottoms (interior) to a trail runner would be awesome. They seem to have covered a lot of ideas with them, like wider with height is key. The one, possible, bad thing about them I could see is the durability of the treads, regardless of whether or not there is 30+% more surface area.I wanna try 'em!!
There site is still not giving a US distributer but I remember looking deeper a few months back and thought I came across a place in Utah with a name that had Wasatch in the title actually carrying them. Obviously can see why that area and the Wasatch and Bear would draw a lot of people trying them.In contrast to barefoot/minimalist running, Hoka running shoes have recently made their debut in the USA:
http://www.hokaoneone.com/en/catalog.html
Ran a 100 miler in Utah last weekend and was surprised to see quite a few pair out there.
but for me socks had an effect on my form. I could feel a great difference in socks vs. barefoot though.
Ihave gone in Vibram Five Fingers a handfull of times. I took it slow and ran one mile or so. I had heard that people who start will notice weakness in the calf, which is the case for me. I don't have any knee or ankle tendon/ligamaent pain. I just feel like I over exerted muscle and feel sore the day after. While running everythign feels great. Of course my form has changed but everything fell into place with little to no effort.
In contrast to barefoot/minimalist running, Hoka running shoes have recently made their debut in the USA:
http://www.hokaoneone.com/en/catalog.html
Ran a 100 miler in Utah last weekend and was surprised to see quite a few pair out there. I wanna try 'em!!
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