Aella (
aella_irene) wrote in
disobey_gravity2012-03-01 05:53 pm
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So, I am having some problems with shoes: I bought a pair at Christmas, and since then my climbing has become rather worse: despite the fact that I bought the same model as I had been renting, in the same size, I end up with swiftly cramping feet, occasional agonising pain, and an inability to balance on anything smaller than a mouse.
I am at my wit's end: when I went to my local climbing shop, they generally concluded that I have weird feet, and suggested a) new shoes and b) a course on footwork. The new shoes would be financially impractical, and the course in footwork seems unlikely to help, as I can no longer do footwork that I could do before. Climbing has stopped being fun, and started being painful.
Does anyone have any advice? Recs of possible solutions?
I am at my wit's end: when I went to my local climbing shop, they generally concluded that I have weird feet, and suggested a) new shoes and b) a course on footwork. The new shoes would be financially impractical, and the course in footwork seems unlikely to help, as I can no longer do footwork that I could do before. Climbing has stopped being fun, and started being painful.
Does anyone have any advice? Recs of possible solutions?
no subject
As I understand it, climbing shoe manufacture is often done partly by hand, so small variations are common.
Shoes can take time to break in, but any breaking-in would have happened by now. Basically, it sounds like these are really really bad shoes for you, and AFAIK there's not a way around that.
But you should be able to re-sell them fairly easy, especially if there's minimal wear -- there's a fairly big market in "rock shoes that haven't been used a lot because they were disastrous". *g*
If your gym has a noticeboard, you could try putting a note there, or using an online climbing forum. That would let you recoup part of the cost, which might make new shoes viable.
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