dr_wu002
Well-known member
My wife, Jess, is finishing up her NH48 so we took a 3-day weekend with some vague plans of doing a bunch of 4000'ers. I've had the Vibram Five Fingers KSO "shoes" for about six months but never use them hiking so I figured this would be a good opportunity. Wore them on all three hikes.
Flume via Slide Trail (Fri)
Wasn't sure how the Five Fingers would hold up having never taken them on rocky trails before (only used them street running and baby, very soft dirt trails). Flume Slide is of course a fairly fun trail although I'd rather go up the real slide instead of the blazed, overgrown one. Wasn't gonna happen this day. From Flume we went over to Liberty. Once we got past some of the steep stuff on the way down Jess and I ran the final 3 miles or so -- five fingers held up great on the rocky terrain.
Passaconaway & Whiteface (Sat)
My feet felt good the next day so I decided to wear the Five Fingers again. We parked @ Downes Brook, took the X-C ski trail to the Oliverian Brook Trail, Passaconaway Cuttoff, Square Ledge Trail (all new to me), went over to Whiteface then down the Downes Brook Trail. Ran most of / whatever we could on Downes Brook -- generally walked anything that seemed like dry stream bed a well, it hurts pretty bad running on that crap nearly barefoot. The remainder of Downes Brook is a cool and wild trail with its 10 (!) stream crossings (all easy on Saturday) and although runnable, very rocky. Good tryout of the Five Fingers running on mixed very rocky terrain. Feet hurt at the end a little but no bruising or blistering at all.
Cannon (Sun)
We were camping with my sister and family so we ended up getting a late start on Sunday so we decided to do Cannon via. High Cannon Trail (new trail for me) and then took Lonesome Lake Trail back to the lake and headed out. Plenty of tchotchke lovers on Cannon -- I love the summit of Washington.... it's a fun atmosphere with lot of people wandering around. The summit of Cannon sucks, everyone is herded around the rim trail and none of the "tourists" seem all that happy to be there. I don't particularly like it. But going down the KRT from Cannon summit is interesting boulder climbs and whatnot. NO running at all on the way down -- these boulder intensive trails are lousy for running so far with the VFF's plus I didn't feel like wrecking my feet on this trail.
Vibram Five Fingers KSOs These "shoes" are pretty great on trails. For a little background, I've been running routinely with "minimal" shoes -- Nike Free 5.0 and now 3.0 on roads and dirt trails, Inov-8 Roclite 295's on hikes and more serious trail running. VFF KSO's on some road runs and other things. I'm kind of used to being up on my toes and not heal striking but the VFF's force you to be honest all the time about it. The good point is you have tremendous stability and maneuverability: your arches and toes are naturally incredible springy and I didn't have a single instance of smashing my heel on anything. The balls of your feet, despite being soft can absorb tremendous impact: I did ~35 miles of hiking and running this weekend on fairly rocky trails and my feet feel awesome now. Also, no blisters, not even hot spots. My feet even with trail runners can get hot and develop hot spots (rarely blisters) but with the VFF's my feel were very surprisingly cool the entire time. NO hot spots, no crap pebbles and dirt getting in the shoe. There's no protection at all from mud and crap but in general they seem to dry out quick. I didn't dunk them in the water but they get wet/muddy a few times with no significant drop in performance. One last thing.... the VFF KSO's have absolutely zero traction (the new Bikila's do) you make up for it by being able to feel everything underneath you and move your toes around to grip the rocks in anyway you need -- no falls and not even many slips (no more than usual and I rarely fall to begin with).
Overall, they're way cool and I'll definitely be hiking more with them It's hard to run real fast with them because you have to be much more careful with foot placements than with normal trail runners but it's still a lot of fun running with them, plus a great workout on your calves.
Great weather too -- trails were all in great condition and we had a blast on all the peaks this weekend.
-Dr. Wu
Flume via Slide Trail (Fri)
Wasn't sure how the Five Fingers would hold up having never taken them on rocky trails before (only used them street running and baby, very soft dirt trails). Flume Slide is of course a fairly fun trail although I'd rather go up the real slide instead of the blazed, overgrown one. Wasn't gonna happen this day. From Flume we went over to Liberty. Once we got past some of the steep stuff on the way down Jess and I ran the final 3 miles or so -- five fingers held up great on the rocky terrain.
Passaconaway & Whiteface (Sat)
My feet felt good the next day so I decided to wear the Five Fingers again. We parked @ Downes Brook, took the X-C ski trail to the Oliverian Brook Trail, Passaconaway Cuttoff, Square Ledge Trail (all new to me), went over to Whiteface then down the Downes Brook Trail. Ran most of / whatever we could on Downes Brook -- generally walked anything that seemed like dry stream bed a well, it hurts pretty bad running on that crap nearly barefoot. The remainder of Downes Brook is a cool and wild trail with its 10 (!) stream crossings (all easy on Saturday) and although runnable, very rocky. Good tryout of the Five Fingers running on mixed very rocky terrain. Feet hurt at the end a little but no bruising or blistering at all.
Cannon (Sun)
We were camping with my sister and family so we ended up getting a late start on Sunday so we decided to do Cannon via. High Cannon Trail (new trail for me) and then took Lonesome Lake Trail back to the lake and headed out. Plenty of tchotchke lovers on Cannon -- I love the summit of Washington.... it's a fun atmosphere with lot of people wandering around. The summit of Cannon sucks, everyone is herded around the rim trail and none of the "tourists" seem all that happy to be there. I don't particularly like it. But going down the KRT from Cannon summit is interesting boulder climbs and whatnot. NO running at all on the way down -- these boulder intensive trails are lousy for running so far with the VFF's plus I didn't feel like wrecking my feet on this trail.
Vibram Five Fingers KSOs These "shoes" are pretty great on trails. For a little background, I've been running routinely with "minimal" shoes -- Nike Free 5.0 and now 3.0 on roads and dirt trails, Inov-8 Roclite 295's on hikes and more serious trail running. VFF KSO's on some road runs and other things. I'm kind of used to being up on my toes and not heal striking but the VFF's force you to be honest all the time about it. The good point is you have tremendous stability and maneuverability: your arches and toes are naturally incredible springy and I didn't have a single instance of smashing my heel on anything. The balls of your feet, despite being soft can absorb tremendous impact: I did ~35 miles of hiking and running this weekend on fairly rocky trails and my feet feel awesome now. Also, no blisters, not even hot spots. My feet even with trail runners can get hot and develop hot spots (rarely blisters) but with the VFF's my feel were very surprisingly cool the entire time. NO hot spots, no crap pebbles and dirt getting in the shoe. There's no protection at all from mud and crap but in general they seem to dry out quick. I didn't dunk them in the water but they get wet/muddy a few times with no significant drop in performance. One last thing.... the VFF KSO's have absolutely zero traction (the new Bikila's do) you make up for it by being able to feel everything underneath you and move your toes around to grip the rocks in anyway you need -- no falls and not even many slips (no more than usual and I rarely fall to begin with).
Overall, they're way cool and I'll definitely be hiking more with them It's hard to run real fast with them because you have to be much more careful with foot placements than with normal trail runners but it's still a lot of fun running with them, plus a great workout on your calves.
Great weather too -- trails were all in great condition and we had a blast on all the peaks this weekend.
-Dr. Wu
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