The Expert
Has been to every Disney park in the world
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2009
- Messages
- 4,424
Another vote for Smartwool. You can often find them at a discount at Sierra Trading Post stores (and online).
Our toes do take a beating. When I ran a marathon I thought for sure I lost a toenail, was afraid to take my sneaker off.It does seem that running is a lot more abusive on socks in my case.My two running issues on toes in the past four years cannot be blamed on socks.
Please allow to demonstrate
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I nearly always have one sock MIA. It'll finally show up tucked into a pair of tights or a shirt, and then another one will get "lost." They always show up eventually, though!I'm not only amazed at everybody's stories of socks lasting for 5 years without holes, I'm amazed that anybody can go 5 years without losing at least one of a pair of socks in the laundry!
I'm not only amazed at everybody's stories of socks lasting for 5 years without holes, I'm amazed that anybody can go 5 years without losing at least one of a pair of socks in the laundry!
The solution seems simple to me. The socks aren’t the issue. Time to chop off the end of your toe.It does seem that running is a lot more abusive on socks in my case.My two running issues on toes in the past four years cannot be blamed on socks.
Please allow to demonstrate
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Yes, I thought about that. And also about kevlar socks. We all have own own dreams/nightmare!The solution seems simple to me. The socks aren’t the issue. Time to chop off the end of your toe.
- It is recommended to create courses that are loops by avoiding out and back sections and with as few laps as possible.
My guess is that once you start to thin the field on a loop, the average distance between each runner increases throughout the race. On an out and back, you get the increased average distance only until runners reach the turnaround point. At that point the average distance would begin shrinking again as the faster runners came back through the slower portion of the field.
I'd love to know the reasoning behind this one - how is a loop safer than an out and back, I wonder??
My guess is that once you start to thin the field on a loop, the average distance between each runner increases throughout the race. On an out and back, you get the increased average distance only until runners reach the turnaround point. At that point the average distance would begin shrinking again as the faster runners came back through the slower portion of the field.
in addition, a loop course has all runners facing the same direction, minimizing the risk of coughing or sneezing directly onto another, at least not into another’s face. On an out and back, you’ve got runners facing each other for a significant portion of the course, increasing the risk.
At least, that’s my take on the difference. I’d be interested to hear if there were official, published rationale.
I am just glad they are at least trying to get these races to happen.I got a survey from the Akron Marathon organizers today asking how safe I'd feel doing a large event and then listing a set of options asking whether each would factor into my willingness to race. Some of the options included only sealed bottles at water stops, staggered start times, cancelling the after party, mandating masks, and a few others.
I suspect we are going to start to see more of these emails from organizers in the near future as they prepare for their summer and fall race calendars.
QOTD:
Has anyone else noticed the activity slowing down on this thread this year? Normally we would have a couple hundred pages by now. Any thoughts as to why?