Sweet EVOlution

Evo

Overview When Terra Plana asked if I would be will­ing to test and review a pair of their new EVO run­ning shoes I was thrilled. I had been enjoy­ing wear­ing the Aqua shoes they gave me almost every day since I received them last year. Now, with a shoe designed specif­i­cally for run­ning, I couldn’t […]

10 More Things I Learned From Barefoot Ted

Barefoot Ted Class2

This is a follow-up to the post, 10 Things I Learned from Bare­foot Ted, that I wrote after tak­ing his first Advanced Bare­foot Run­ning class. This post cov­ers what I learned from assist­ing him in Begin­ner Bare­foot Run­ning classes. I recently had the plea­sure of assist­ing Bare­foot Ted put on two run­ning clin­ics at ZombieRunner […]

The New Guide to Running Shoes

The New Shoe Guide

Up until recently, run­ning shoes have mainly been clas­si­fied in terms of motion con­trol, sta­bil­ity, and arch sup­port. Such clas­si­fi­ca­tion requires a whole vocab­u­lary of words, such as neu­tral, prona­tion, and advanced. When Min­i­mal shoes are included in the mix, though, a new clas­si­fi­ca­tion is called for. With­out more than one cat­e­gory for any­thing less than the reg­u­lar, large run­ning shoes out there, most peo­ple will remain con­fused and even mis­guided when it comes to “bare­foot” run­ning shoes.

Viva la Vivo! Barefoot form meets high style.

Viva la Vivo Header

This is a story of a guy who loves shoes. How­ever, this guy has writ­ten a num­ber of posts about the virtues of going bare­foot – how it strength­ens the feet, mak­ing you a bet­ter run­ner. So, how can he encour­age peo­ple to try going bare­foot yet wear styl­ish shoes him­self? Well, a solu­tion that mar­ries bare­foot min­i­mal­ist form with fash­ion­able design now makes this possible.

Barefoot Running: Not just for bums and hippies.

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A grow­ing body of sci­en­tific research shows that run­ners expe­ri­ence less injuries and faster times when they run bare­foot or with min­i­mal padding. In fact, research pub­lished in Sports Sci­ence in 2001 by Michael War­burtin points out that, “Lab­o­ra­tory stud­ies show that the energy cost of run­ning is reduced by about 4% when the feet are not shod.” Trans­late the energy saved into time over a run and you are going to expe­ri­ence a per­sonal record. Add the reduced chance you’ll suf­fer an injury and it’s a big win for us runners.

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