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Diabetes Management
Fitness, Exercise and Sport
Any recommendations for walking/hiking shoes?
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<blockquote data-quote="zauberflote" data-source="post: 2305004" data-attributes="member: 496650"><p>@teddietottie I think my brother used to run in shoes like you describe. I had painful gyn issues for decades, and jogged ball-of-foot-lands-first during that time. It's definitely my tens of thousands of miles of pavement jogging that landed me with two bionic hips in my 60's!! It's hard to push a baby-jogger on a park trail lol and who wants the spiderwebs and mosquitoes anyway. </p><p>I wear flat shoes all the time except formally, but they may have thick soles for reasons such as protection on a rocky rough mountain trail, or sure footing on wet or icy surfaces. Around here, we have to watch out for snakes while hiking, so the more sturdy your shoe, the safer your foot/ankle.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="zauberflote, post: 2305004, member: 496650"] @teddietottie I think my brother used to run in shoes like you describe. I had painful gyn issues for decades, and jogged ball-of-foot-lands-first during that time. It's definitely my tens of thousands of miles of pavement jogging that landed me with two bionic hips in my 60's!! It's hard to push a baby-jogger on a park trail lol and who wants the spiderwebs and mosquitoes anyway. I wear flat shoes all the time except formally, but they may have thick soles for reasons such as protection on a rocky rough mountain trail, or sure footing on wet or icy surfaces. Around here, we have to watch out for snakes while hiking, so the more sturdy your shoe, the safer your foot/ankle. [/QUOTE]
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Any recommendations for walking/hiking shoes?
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