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Tano, nok cream, sweaty feet...

camster

Active Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Francés 2023
I have recently bought Nok cream.
People have said the cream dries and leaves no oily residue like vaseline, but I found my feet stayed moist and the region between my thighs where I applied some stayed sticky. Is this normal with Nok?

Also, I wanted to try Tano (to harden the skin under my feet) but a person at the store told me it wasn't a good idea if I had sweaty feet, which I do. Anyone knows why? I figured it would help prevent my skin from becoming too moist/tender and susceptible to blisters, but it seems like if you have sweaty feet, Tano is not a good idea.

If any of you have any answer to my questions, please feel free to enlighten me :) thanks!
 
Train for your next Camino on California's Santa Catalina Island March 16-19
Right now, I am preparing my feet for hiking the Camino (only two weeks left!)
I have had a lot of problems with blisters in the past, so I've been trying a lot of different things. The best solution for me seems to be Wrightsocks (built-in Coolmax liners), plus HikeGoo. I tried Foot Glide, but the HikeGoo keeps me blister free! I haven't heard of Nok or Tano, but I understand that hardening your feet might not be a good idea. Sometimes, blisters can even form under calluses....
Also, staying well hydrated is said to help prevent blisters. Don't know quite how that works, though. :)
HikeGoo: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008RCIPH8/?tag=casaivar02-20
Wrightsocks: https://www.wrightsock.com/products/coolmesh-ii-crew-sock
 
My preference for anti-chaffing (anywhere), and to prevent blisters on my feet, is anti-perspirant.

I've found it worth researching the active ingredients of specialist products; particularly to avoid the weight of having multiple tubes or containers. Often it turns out that one product will server many uses. There is a lot of marketing hype to convince us to buy more stuff.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Re: Vaseline. In my experience it has never left a sticky residue. I am always amazed at how totally it is absorbed.
 
My preference for anti-chaffing (anywhere), and to prevent blisters on my feet, is anti-perspirant.

I've found it worth researching the active ingredients of specialist products; particularly to avoid the weight of having multiple tubes or containers. Often it turns out that one product will server many uses. There is a lot of marketing hype to convince us to buy more stuff.
So you don't have sweaty feet with that? Do you rub it everywhere, like between toes and all?

Wow, I didn't know many of the tips. Especially vaseline-- I thought it would gum my socks!
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
In my experience you should keep your feet supple to avoid blisters - not harden them. Vaseline does the job - messy putting it on but it does absorb well. I use that with 1,000 Mile socks that have an inner liner and that does the trick for me - four Caminos completed with no blisters.

Buen Camino
 
Alright it seems to be a consensus :) will look into products that keep my feet supple, then.
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
My preference for anti-chaffing (anywhere), and to prevent blisters on my feet, is anti-perspirant.

I've found it worth researching the active ingredients of specialist products; particularly to avoid the weight of having multiple tubes or containers. Often it turns out that one product will server many uses. There is a lot of marketing hype to convince us to buy more stuff.
I assume you mean a deodorant stick?. If the stick is meant to glide freely over ones skin then what's the difference between a cheap roll on deodorant stick and outrageously priced (in oz) Bodyglide and Compeed.
Good idea.
 
Yes, its a deodorant, but it contains anti-perspirant and it is quite different to Bodyglide or Compeed. I don't use it to provide a slippery surface (it doesn't) but to stop my feet from sweating. Which is a different thing altogether.
 
Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-
Yes, its a deodorant, but it contains anti-perspirant and it is quite different to Bodyglide or Compeed. I don't use it to provide a slippery surface (it doesn't) but to stop my feet from sweating. Which is a different thing altogether.
It's brilliant, though. I will try this for my next walk.
 

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