Sun 30 May, 2010 12:15 pm
Sun 30 May, 2010 4:30 pm
flatfoot wrote:I ride a hybrid bike for fitness and I've never bothered with the fancy pedals. I just use an old pair of trainers.
I was drenched on a ride yesterday and my only pair of shoes suitable for cycling are saturated and hence hanging on the clothesline. The weather was ok this morning for a ride but I didn't fancy putting on cold and wet shoes.
Can anyone suggest a quick-drying trainer? If they are inexpensive I might get two pairs.
Volleys might be an option ...? Are they quick-drying? Anything else you can suggest?
Sun 30 May, 2010 7:06 pm
corvus wrote:
G'day flatfoot,
You could try Crocs especially the knock off ones![]()
corvus
Sun 30 May, 2010 11:58 pm
flatfoot wrote:I ride a hybrid bike for fitness and I've never bothered with the fancy pedals. I just use an old pair of trainers.
I was drenched on a ride yesterday and my only pair of shoes suitable for cycling are saturated and hence hanging on the clothesline. The weather was ok this morning for a ride but I didn't fancy putting on cold and wet shoes.
Can anyone suggest a quick-drying trainer? If they are inexpensive I might get two pairs.
Volleys might be an option ...? Are they quick-drying? Anything else you can suggest?
Mon 31 May, 2010 5:10 pm
johnw wrote:Wore volleys on my MTB for a longish road ride this morning (trails too wet at present for any other type of ride). They're not really what I would call quick drying, uppers being a type of heavy cotton canvas. In summer they don't take too long to dry out, but in the current weather I doubt it. Most trail running shoes would probably do the job I think. I bought a pair of Adidas Kanadia recently, for similar reasons, but haven't tried them out yet.
Tue 15 Jun, 2010 9:01 pm
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