I guess I buy my shoes loose or something, but I found just loosening the laces gave enough room for my 3 layer setup. So no special shoes in my case. I'm also in the SF area and usually just let my feet get wet. I bought the waterproof sox for crewing on a boat in the pacific cup several years ago, and have rarely used them since. But when I was going to take my fenderless Bombadil to tour the east bay dirt with Manny the day after xmas the prospect of hours of cold soggy feet had me digging out the waterproof sox. Worked great. Feet stayed comfortable, warm and dry.
On Jan 8, 3:57 pm, René Sterental <[email protected]> wrote: > Now we're talking about buying a pair of shoes a half-size up or more to > accomodate all those socks... :-D At least for me, where tight shoes make > my feet hurt... > > I'm also wondering if you need these to bike if you use shoes with a > waterproof membrane. Even though I'm not experienced biking in the rain, I > do want to overcome that. Living in the SF Bay Area I've learned that most > of the time, biking in the rain is really biking through some fine > drizzles, although every now and then when it rains, it pours. > > To me, in my blissful ignorance, if it's going to pour, I'd probably prefer > the waterproof socks with the liners for warmth and confort as suggested, > but wearing sandals so the water doesn't pool inside my shoes or takes > forever for them to dry as they get wet. For drizzles, shoes with a > waterproof membrane with wool socks would probably work well. Am I > mistaken? > > I once went through a deep puddle of water in an underpass on the Guadalupe > Trail where the water almost reached the bottom of my largest crank. I had > some speed so I was coasting through it when I happened to hit a rock that > was underwater which forced me to dismount and consequently, I got my > waterproof shoes full of water. It took several days for them to be > completely dry... > > So, what I'd like to know is how people who ride in the rain regularly > address the issue of water dripping down your pants or legs when it's > raining, vs. rain actually falling on your shoes and getting them wet. > > I received a Brooks cape (poncho) as a gift, which I've tried twice on > light drizzles and found very nice and vented. It has sorts of arm sleeves > with an elastic band so it doesn't lift up your arms, as well as two > magnetic loops to keep the front hanging from the handlebar; the > combination of both features keep the cape snug around your back so no > waist cinching is needed, as well as allowing water to drip in front of > your feet if it pools on the front when it's raining hard. > > René (waiting for more rain) > > > > > > > > On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 3:36 PM, ted <[email protected]> wrote: > > "So I would need several pairs of $35 sox" > > > You may be able to get by with only one pair of the $$$ waterproof > > sox. > > The gortex sox I have are not very thick and have little to no > > insulation. > > So what I do is put them over fleece sox that are warm, and those I > > put over very thin (might be silk) sox liners. > > Those innermost sox get all the washing. I use just the one pair of > > gortex sox and very rarely wash them. > > I think of them like shoe covers that go inside the shoe. In fact I > > originally bought them instead of getting expensive foul weather boot > > for sailing. Looked at that way they were a real bargain. > > > On Jan 8, 1:17 am, Jay in Tel Aviv <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Thanks for all the replies yesterday. > > > The weather this morning was just as bad as yesterday. The main > > > highway > > > here in Tel Aviv was closed due to flooding, causing huge traffic > > > everywhere. Took me an extra 5 minutes to get to work because I pedal > > > slower in waterproof pants :) > > > > Michael - Yes, I am really in Tel Aviv > > > Ted - Maybe the Nashbar socks are not real neoprene. They are good in > > > light rain but when if it's really wet they get saturated and hold > > > water like a wet suit. Definately not just sweat. > > > Bruce - I have looked at seal skinz but was put off by the price. The > > > issue for me is that it doesn't rain here very often, but when it > > > does > > > can come down in buckets a few days in a row. So I would need several > > > pairs of $35 sox which which I would use only a few times a year. > > > Next > > > time I'm feeling flush. > > > > We don't get real winter weather here, and people really overreact to > > > rain. Some friends started up a Friday afternoon pub/music thing a > > > few > > > weeks ago. More people showed up during the war with Gaza when > > > rockets > > > were falling than the following week when it was raining. Funny > > > world. > > > Or maybe not so funny. > > > > Jay > > > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > > "RBW Owners Bunch" group. > > To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > [email protected]. > > For more options, visit this group at > >http://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch?hl=en. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch?hl=en.
