Mark F wrote:With your pack weight I would wait until after your walk. Then get your weight down to something reasonable before trying shoes; but do try them. You will find over the 38 days that your feet will expand by at least 1/2 a size so ensure your boots will still fit - at least have some thinner sock options available even if you put them in one of your drops.Also take time to look after your feet - dry them at end of each day and apply a dab of anti fungal every now and then. Boots off at lunch time to allow feet, socks and boots to dry and air. I have seen too many people neglect this on long walks and watched them suffer for it after a few days.
I did the Canberra to Hotham section of the AAWT in 25 days (including 1 day snowed in at Grey Mare) - about your proposed pace - but carrying a base weight of 5kg and a maximum of 5kg food. I used a pair of Oboz shoes which worked well but it is really a matter of what fits and what works for you as far as brands/models goes.
madmacca wrote:I disagree a bit with wayno - good training should provide sufficient ankle strength that shoes should be fine (barefoot calf raises are great for this).
Tony wrote:It is a myth that boots support the ankle, they just make it feel that they support the ankle, there has been a lot of research into boots vs shoes and there is no evidence that boots (or high top shoes) stop or reduce ankle injuries.
wayno wrote:its not jut about spraining ankles, if you walk across a slope it can be more difficult in shoes, than in boots i find, the fet are less like to slip in the shoe where the shoe sole ends up at a difficult angle and is pushed sideways round the foot.
wayno wrote:its not jut about spraining ankles, if you walk across a slope it can be more difficult in shoes, than in boots i find, the fet are less like to slip in the shoe where the shoe sole ends up at a difficult angle and is pushed sideways round the foot.
nq111 wrote:The scientific studies finding boots cost x energy per mile more than shoes were done by the US military years ago. I am sure they did more research. They still insist all soldiers wear boots.
ollster wrote:Tony wrote:It is a myth that boots support the ankle, they just make it feel that they support the ankle, there has been a lot of research into boots vs shoes and there is no evidence that boots (or high top shoes) stop or reduce ankle injuries.
It's not a myth with regards to the Scarpa SLs. They are very stiff boots with high ankle support, and they so stop twisted ankles. I know, my ankles are made of noodle. If I do my SLs up correctly, they completely prevent over-rotation. Completely. It's just not possible.
The studies might be correct with regards to synthetic boots, or lightweight leather, but not the SLs.
EDIT: still, there's no friggin way I'd wear them for 38 days, on a hard track. That would be torture. They're superb for offtrack though.
ollster wrote:Tony wrote:It is a myth that boots support the ankle, they just make it feel that they support the ankle, there has been a lot of research into boots vs shoes and there is no evidence that boots (or high top shoes) stop or reduce ankle injuries.
It's not a myth with regards to the Scarpa SLs. They are very stiff boots with high ankle support, and they so stop twisted ankles. I know, my ankles are made of noodle. If I do my SLs up correctly, they completely prevent over-rotation. Completely. It's just not possible.
The studies might be correct with regards to synthetic boots, or lightweight leather, but not the SLs.
EDIT: still, there's no friggin way I'd wear them for 38 days, on a hard track. That would be torture. They're superb for offtrack though.
forest wrote:nq111 wrote:The scientific studies finding boots cost x energy per mile more than shoes were done by the US military years ago. I am sure they did more research. They still insist all soldiers wear boots.
SAS wears runners a lot now. But I know the other solders get in the poo for not wearing boots ??
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