eggs wrote:I have a pair of modern volleys, and I do believe that the modern version is not as good as the ones I wore playing tennis as a teenager.
corvus wrote:With all due respects to Dave and his mates I suspect their choice of gear was dictated to by monetary restraints and a paucity of choice hence the cotton garb add to that I believe the bravado of youth saying we can do this in "sandshoes" anywhere
PedroArvy wrote:Dunlop Volleys have amazing grip because of their unique sole. So they work well on wet rock, canyoning and climbing domestic house roofs. But the hikes these guys are going on are far from that. They are full on bush bashes in the roughest terrain with really heavy packs. I am an ultralight hiker and generally wear tough runners but if I was going bush bashing in south west Tassie I would assume only leather boots would have the durability of tearing through scrub and colliding with abrasive rocks. Dunlop Volleys also have little support, the sole is thin and the shoe fabric seems like it would easily tear. At a glance they look like the exact opposite of what you would wear in the places in which they are photographed.
Clearly I am wrong as these guys have chosen these shoes time after time. Can anyone enlighten me as to why they prefer them?
GPSGuided wrote:Is linking a photo in a forum post a copyright offence?
icefest wrote:I think trail runners have taken up the place where Volleys used to stand. And they have the benefit of being tough enough for quite serious walks.
nq111 wrote:I think the trail runners I have now are better - the volleys in particular were not so good on loose gravel and the like where the lugs on trail runners improve the grip significantly in these conditions. Volleys were fantastic on rock but my Inov8s are very good as well.
GPSGuided wrote:nq111 wrote:I think the trail runners I have now are better - the volleys in particular were not so good on loose gravel and the like where the lugs on trail runners improve the grip significantly in these conditions. Volleys were fantastic on rock but my Inov8s are very good as well.
Volleys are far cheaper than Inov8's offerings and I think that's also part of the attraction for Volley lovers.
Xplora wrote:Carrying a heavy pack and not wearing a shoe or boot that supports your foot can lead to problems as I mentioned before. It may not affect all people but as you get older your arch naturally drops and more support is needed. This comes as already said in the form of a stiffer sole or shank that should only bend at the ball of the foot and have very little twist.
Xplora wrote:People who wear thongs all the time are tending to suffer from foot problems as well. This is due to the lack of support and the clawing of the toes when walking.
Xplora wrote:I think this could also be a problem with volleys when scrambling.
slparker wrote:What you're talking about is not 'support' but splinting. that's what stiff-shanked footwear does: splints the bones in the forefoot so that they deform less on footstrike. This can lead to loss of flexibility and muscular function in the foot... leading to the requirement for continued splinting.
Sure, a shanked or stiff boot can be advantageous in bushwalking but you're changing the structure and function of the foot if you persist in wearing them.
GPSGuided wrote:I think it's fair to say our legs and feet evolved to support our normal body weight (average of those before the modern age), not one that has 'obesity' or other weights added to it. When significantly exceeded, there'll be consequences.
slparker wrote:The consequences are that the bony and soft tissues undergo hypertrophy in response to more loading. The point being that our feet have already evolved the processes to respond to greater stresses from weight bearing.
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