I’ve been using some Lem’s boulder boots and some wildling Arni shoes for a little while and this seems to be a great way to do most situations well but there’s an occasional few times where I think some other shoes with some other benefit would do well in a specific situation.

In the past I didn’t understand why some people have so many shoes but I’m starting to see why some might do that, like I’d imagine 4 pairs one for each season wouldn’t be a terrible idea as long as they cover enough points on a scale in a gradual way between sunny concrete and wet mud.

I like all the wildling shoes a lot but I think they are all pretty sameish besides a handful and some of that is to do with the bottom of their shoes always being pretty much the same, like no form of serious wet or winter or mud shoes would be from them simply because none of their shoes besides the one pair that looks like big classic yellow rain boots would have the right tread for those conditions.

At the moment my Arni’s are about done but ithink I could probably squeeze the rest of this year out of them and then my boulder boots from lems will last a long time still.

I do a bit of running and I find that is an important factor for shoes in all the conditions too because you can have those classic yellow rain boots that would do fine in a lot of rough conditions but you couldn’t run in them too well I don’t think.

Sometimes I wear the toe socks from injiji, sometimes I go no socks, the barefoot shoes from wildling are close enough to clothes for your feet that going without socks tends to be ok but not always. They say not to put them in the washer but they have done fine which is nice because I can treat it literally like clothes.

  • kubok@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    Barefoot shoes convert since two years now. I have three use cases and also own three pairs of barefoot shoes.

    1. Running. Wanted to switch, but I still use my classic running shoes. I mostly run on hard surfaces. It’s just too much wear and tear on the joints. Having said that, my running stride has changed, making me a forefoot lander instead of midfoot. I have also switched from anti-pronation to neutral shoes. Yes, I still pronate, but I have had no related injuries so far.
    2. Hiking: I fully switched to barefoot. For any hike up to a few hours, both my Xeros and Vivos work well. The only issue I have with them is that they are not waterproof.
    3. Business. I have Vivos that look slightly like moccasins. I have been assured that they look fine as well as comfortable. If I cared about looks, I’'d consider that a win.