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Only my second hike in wet conditions and the minor dampness i felt the first time ( i put down to sweat)
i can now confirm is from water. both feet soaked by the time i got back to the car after 3 hrs in steady drizzel.
with only 4 weeks and three days to go this is very worrying as i now feel i need new bots with limited time to break them in and a uk size 15 makes it limited choices
but it does rain in spain...... and wet feet are a great cause of blistering ???
so i want dry feet with breathability do i not ?
Let me just say that when it rains torrentially on the Camino there are NO waterproof shoes. I wore Merrell high tops, waterproof. A torrential rainstorm caught me at Villatuerta and my boots were soaked in & out. That said, that night a powerful hair dryer actually helped me dry them really well, so no biggie at the end. Take another pair of walking shoes, even if just for sporadic use. BTW, waterproof does not necessarily mean your feet won't breath-- love my Merrell and feet were fine!
I bought my Merrells on early 2011. I have walked long sections of the Camino on May 2011, May 2012, May 2013, October 2013, and I am getting ready to walk in June 2014. Same boots; same Merrells. I have never stepped on the Camino with any other pair of shoes. I walked under the rain for about 10 minutes by the time the torrential rain has slipped down my legs to my shoes. That said, I walked days under misty rain and my waterproof Merell boots served me well; feet remained dry as a bone. Just calibrate your expectations. I hear this Summer will be another scorcher; expect the best but prepare for the worst.Olivares, for how many time, did you had your Merrell's whe that happened?
We are leaving SJ next Wed and we had a whole debate on line about what to wear and we had thought about Keen sandals I had my doubts, but about a month ago we bought them and honestly they are marvellous They are light I have not had one stone inside and I could walk forever in them. On our last Frances three years ago we wore boots and Kanga, as is usual, is quite right our one problem was that our boots took four days to dry out shorts boots and rain do not work your boots fill up from the inside. Weather at this time varies from too warm to too wet so nothing is perfect If anyone is interested I will report in six weeks time how the Keens worked out.What kind of footwear would you use for Coamino on June ?
Links pls. !
Dude, you're talking about June, not May!
June in the Iberian Peninsula marks the beginning of high summer temperatures. No need for waterproof boots.
NIKWAX it's good to rehabilitate the waterproof membrane, and I advise people to use on their boots, shoes, waterproof jackets and pants, etc, before they go for the Camiño. This, considering that they are going in Spring, Autumn or Winter.
Take some good breathable boots; they are the best thing that you can take for a Summer Camiño.
I'd be taking lightweight breathable joggers or shoes.
I bought my Merrells on early 2011. I have walked long sections of the Camino on May 2011, May 2012, May 2013, October 2013, and I am getting ready to walk in June 2014. Same boots; same Merrells. I have never stepped on the Camino with any other pair of shoes. I walked under the rain for about 10 minutes by the time the torrential rain has slipped down my legs to my shoes. That said, I walked days under misty rain and my waterproof Merell boots served me well; feet remained dry as a bone. Just calibrate your expectations. I hear this Summer will be another scorcher; expect the best but prepare for the worst.
Besides your mental attitude, shoes are the most important component of the your pilgrimage. Be very clear that there are NOT one type, NOT one brand that works for everybody. You need to gage what works for you and the only way to know for sure is trying out.
Buen Camino!
boots are breathable type just thought that they should be waterproof too!
I've bought many, many "waterproof" boots, only to be disappointed once again to discover such a thing does not exist. So why I continue to buy them is a question to be pondered on the psychiatrist's couch. Most so-called boots will resist mist-like rain, but none remains waterproof under an extended heavy rain. The myth of the waterproof boot extends up into the upper echelons -- I had an REI salesperson telling me recently that my feet get wet from heavy perspiration, not from rain. If that were the case, why would my feet decide to start sweating only when the rain comes down? On the Camino, where my lack of faith in my waterproof boots was once again confirmed, I found that I could get them fairly dry over night by stuffing newspaper in them and changing the newspaper three or four times. I am somewhat leery of drying a boot out by a radiator -- I've also had problems with delamination. There is always the possibility that I simply have an extremely literalist case of the famous Samuel Beckett quote, "There's man all over for you, blaming on his boots the fault of his feet!"
As the exterior humidity rises, or as water accumulates on the outer wall of the membrane, the vapor transport plummets, which results in a sudden rise in retained sweat. As soon as you have liquid instead of vapor inside the shoe, the transport also stops.I had an REI salesperson telling me recently that my feet get wet from heavy perspiration, not from rain. If that were the case, why would my feet decide to start sweating only when the rain comes down?
Diogo-- I know exactly why my boots got wet and it is very simple; water seeped in the boots from my legsIf it was always the same pair, you have your answer in there. With all the movement, and sweat, and impropriate maintenance, the boots lose their waterproof capability fast.
Diogo-- I know exactly why my boots got wet and it is very simple; water seeped in the boots from my legs. The boots had NEVER been wet prior and they are made of breatahble GORE-TEX material. Again, when it rains TORRENTIALLY on the Camino, there are no waterproof shoes because the water seeps in from all angles. On days of misty rain, not an issue whatsoever.
I've bought many, many "waterproof" boots, only to be disappointed once again to discover such a thing does not exist. So why I continue to buy them is a question to be pondered on the psychiatrist's couch. "
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