Want to Keep Your Feet Happy? Get to Know Them!

When you begin a walking, hiking or running program, what’s the first thing you need to take into consideration, after making sure you’re ready, willing and able to partake in one of those activities?

If you’ve been reading Workout Wednesdays for a while, you’ll probably hit on the right answer.

Your feet.

And if your feet are so important, it’s critical that you know them well, so you’ll be able to take better care of them and reduce your your chance of suffering injuries from the toes all the way up to the ankle, legs, knees, hips and back!

What do I mean by knowing them well?

 

Give them a close examination—

Sit down with your favorite pair of walking or exercise shoes and really take a good look at the shoes and your feet.

  1. Examine how narrow or wide your foot is.
  2. Do you have a high arch when your foot is relaxed? Or is it flat? There are lots of technical names for the kind of arch you might have, like a functional flat foot, a rigid, pes equinus (where the arch doesn’t flatten out when you stand on your feet, so all of the pressure is on your heel and ball of your foot; and you have limited ankle range of motion).
  3. Where do you tend to get calluses on your feet and toes? On the side of your big toe? The heel, or ball of the foot?
  4. Do your calluses get really thick and then crack and bleed? Where does that happen most often on your feet?
  5. Is your second toe longer than your great toe? (Something that may indicate you are prone to having a balance problem.)
  6. Do you have bunions or corns, plantar warts, or any other issues you need to address?
  7. Are you prone to getting ingrown toenails? Blisters anywhere on the foot?
  8. Examine your toenails. Do they run into the toe of the shoe when you’re walking? Have they thickened?
  9. Is the structure (and size) of one foot drastically different from the other, requiring different treatments or support material for each foot?
  10. Stand on a piece of paper and trace outlines of both feet. Do they look identical? What’s the length and width difference?

 

*A good way to determine if you have a compensating arch that drops a little when your foot gets loaded with weight is to get a brown paper bag that’s bigger than your foot. Get the bottom of your foot wet and then rest your foot on the flattened bag for a second. Then stand on the paper bag for a couple of seconds. Look at the foot form left on the bag. Is it flat? Is there an arch? Did it change when you went from non-weight bearing to full weight bearing? Where does it look as though your foot is not making any contact with the ground?

 

Knowing these aspects of your feet will help you when you head to the store to purchase shoes and any supportive insoles you think you need or just want to add for some cushion to your feet.

Now for the shoes—

Take a really good look at your shoes—tops, bottoms, sides, toes and heels. And the insides.

  1. What kind of wear patterns do you see?
  2. When you hold your shoe up and look at it from the back, does the heel look worn down on either side? A wearing down of the inside ankle bone side indicates that your heels tend to pronate (roll in) when your foot strikes the ground? If they lean to the outside ankle bone, then you might have what’s called hind foot supination.
  3. What does the toe box area of the shoe look like on top and underneath the shoe? Does the toe box look as though it leans to the outside or inside, giving you an indication of the pressure your foot exerts on the material or sole when you’re walking? Is there a more pronounced wear pattern on the outside of the toe area, indicating your foot rolls to the outside and you tend to push off the fourth and fifth toes (supinate) during push off?
  4. Does the insole provide sufficient padding for your feet, or did it break down quickly and leave you with little or no arch support?

 

Case study—

In the pictures below, you can see the dramatic wear patterns of my Altra road shoes, with the distinct medial breakdown of the right shoe in the heel area and the outside (fourth and fifth toes) in the toe area.

I have significant rear or hind foot pronation and forefoot supination. For some reason, the right shoe has taken a particularly hard beating and already—after six weeks—needs to be replaced because it’s no longer giving me the support I need.

Two possibilities come to mind:

  1. I wore the shoes on both blacktop and trail, which may have stressed the shoe material too much; or
  2. The shoes simply don’t provide me with the arch support I need in my right foot, which is a problem for me. I suffered a severe fracture (segmental, displaced) of the outside leg bone (fibula), which caused my right leg to be slightly shortened and twisted. I already had foot problems. This may have worsened the condition.

Clearly I need some kind of posting, or support, on the right foot.

What’s frustrating is that when I walk, I can feel the broken down shoe actually shifting my foot more severely to the inside, which creates more problems and causes me to try to reposition my foot in the shoe while I’m walking! Not good or efficient.

My trail shoes have not shown such severe wear patterns, so I think the material and lighter support in these road shoes may be the culprit for me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

These are all critical questions to ask yourself when you’re going out to buy new athletic shoes. Take notes with you, or take the shoes with you to show the shoe salesperson. They can better recommend shoes and insoles for your particular needs.

And when you go, take the socks you are most likely to wear with you to try on the shoes. That will help you decide which shoes will fit and be most comfortable.

 

And speaking of socks! We’ll be discussing those next week. They’re a critical component of exercise and can make or break an otherwise enjoyable hike or walking outing. One experienced hiker said he’d lean toward buying a cheaper pair of boots and an expensive pair of socks for his trips.

Yes, they’re that important!

 

So until next week,

Keep those feet happy and moving!

Blessings,

 Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

 

Replacing Those Beloved Hiking, Running and Walking Shoes

Don’t you just hate it when you have to toss a pair of shoes you adore? You know, the ones you worked to break in, mold to your feet, and put some memorable miles on?

That’s what I’m going through right now. Giving up beloved hiking, road and trail shoes that have seen too many miles, too many trails, and too much asphalt and rocks to provide the support and comfort I need.

 

Out with the old—

It started by my having to say goodbye to the KEEN hiking boots I purchased in the summer of 2013 to hike part of the Kalalau trail on Hawaii’s island of Kauai, listed as one of the top 10 most dangerous hikes in the United States. Even though I wasn’t a big hiker at the time, I put this on my bucket list, for several reasons.

 

 

1) I wanted to get an up-close and personal look at the lush, dramatic Na Pali Coast, which is only accessible on foot or from a boat. I got tired of seeing it from Steven Spielberg’s aerial shots in all of the Jurassic Park movies. I wanted to walk where the T-Rex roamed.

2) I wanted to relive my childhood and take my husband and sons back into a Hawaii valley to get up close to some towering cliffs, experience the thrill of diving into a Hawaii waterfall pool, and swim behind a cascading waterfall. (Even though a lot of people paddle around directly under the falls, you really want to avoid doing that. Rocks from above can dislodge and crash into the water. And all of that gushing water can really pound your head.)

3) I really wanted to see if I had what it takes to make that kind of trek. Although we only went in and back 5 miles, (rather than the full 11 miles in and the 11 miles out), the return trip was grueling.

 

My hiking boots did me well on the Kalalau Trail! Crossed streams four times and got me safely (and comfortably) up and back. (At least the feet were comfortable. My knees ended up being an entirely different story on the grueling hike back out.) The boots have since carried me around the White Mountains of Arizona and the 9,000-foot mountain forty-five minutes north of our home here in Tucson, Arizona.

But I’m five years older, and in the last couple of years I’ve gained weight, which has caused my feet to fatten up and widen (a nasty side-effect of both gaining weight and growing old). Plus I have a left big toe injury that now makes those shoes too tight and miserable. Darn. I really love those shoes! (I love them and the memories I had wearing them so much that I’m going to use them as nostalgia décor in our mountain cabin!)

 

Bring on the New Hiking Shoes—

So, last summer I went hunting for some new hiking boots and bought a new pair of KEEN’s. More flexible, wider toe box and a half-size larger, so my feet can spread out and swell without being bound up in the boot, and screaming at me by day’s end.

And now those are eking to the end of their life too. Hiking the hard trails around here, the Cascades, and the Olympic Peninsula has worn them out. (In the last year I’ve become an enthusiastic hiker.) I need some boots that’ll go the distance for me on my upcoming pilgrimage.

 

Darn! So I went down to REI again and bought yet another new pair of KEEN boots. (I wanted another pair of last year’s model, but REI no longer carried them. The nice sales guy did some research and directed me to KEEN’s website to purchase the old model, if I want.) But I picked up a pair of the new model from him and am about to break those in. (They’re still lounging in the box.)

 

The same thing happened to my hot pink Altra trail shoes. My avid hiker son warned me the special nubby soles would get torn down tramping around on asphalt with them, but they were SO comfortable I couldn’t help myself. They got replaced by a brand new pair of Altra hot pinkies several months ago, and I’ve worn those once. (The old ones are now garden shoes.)

 

And the Altra road shoes I bought last month have already taken a beating. Daily road or treadmill mileage to prepare for the pilgrimage have worn down the toe treads so much I think I might need to replace those earlier than expected. It probably hasn’t helped those shoes that I’ve walked on both blacktop and gravel with them. Different surfaces require different treads.

 

Needing to make a decision—

The pilgrimage has a combination of surfaces, so I need to plan accordingly. But it’s going to be a tough call. I want to take two pairs of shoes—one hiking and one trail—but that means a lot of extra bulk and weight in my backpack that I can’t afford.

 

Breaking them in properly (and saving your feet)—

When breaking new shoes in, tread carefully (pun intended). You shouldn’t just thrust your foot in, lace them up and put in the same kind of daily mileage you did on your broken-in pair. It’s like getting used to contacts. The first day you have them in your eyeballs a couple of hours and then the next day work up one hour more. You continue doing that until you’ve reached your eight hours a day or more limit.

 

Same with shoes.

 

Insole savvy—

And one of the REI sales guys gave me a good tip. When breaking in your new shoes, he said to remove your insoles from your old pair and put them in the new shoes. Evidently it helps your foot accommodate better. I’m going to give it a go with the new Keens and let you know how it works.

 

And by the way, another way to breathe new life into your old shoes is by buying new, cushier insoles to put in them. That could give your shoes some additional mileage and your feet the relief they need until you can swing for (or find) that new pair!

 

Share your story!

Have any good hiking or walking shoes stories? I’d love to hear them! Just drop a comment on the “Leave a comment” page to share them with us.

 

More on the Kalalau Trail—

The Kalalau Trail is currently closed due to flood damage, with reports that it will be closed for at least a year, but you can read more about the famous, breathtaking trail here.

 

Find some great Kalalau Trail maps and trail info here.

 

NEXT WEEK: Keeping your precious feet in shape for going the extra mile on that trail or path!

 

Until then,

Have fun breaking in those shoes!

Blessings,

Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

Kalalau Trail picture by kalalautrail.com

Post-surgery Recovery Exercise

I recoiled at the doctor’s post-surgery prescription: no strenuous activity for a couple of weeks.

Just how was I, with the hard-charging brain of a competitive athlete, supposed to follow that? But I knew I had to in order to give myself—and my gums and mouth—the best chance at healing. (You wouldn’t think that area of your body would care too much about how fast your blood was flowing, but it does.)

And I was concerned about how all of this down time would affect our training to walk a pilgrimage at the end of this year. At my age the exponential exercise curve takes a pretty steep, speedy drop after even one or two days without exercise.

So I did a lot of lying around and sleeping the first couple of days, which wasn’t too difficult because of the pain meds I was on. They make you sleepy, and that’s a good thing for healing. And I meandered out to the couch once-in-a-while to watch television (my beloved had himself set up at a standing work table in the living room to work with one eye and watch the World Cup Soccer games with the other. (He a former All-American level player.)

I colored in my coloring book and read a lot. The coloring was so relaxing and appealing to my artsy side that I colored for hours. I read several books—paperback, hardcover, Kindle books and magazines. (I whittled down my magazine pile significantly!) For the most part, exercise meant padding from my bedroom to the living room, kitchen and family room. I wasn’t to bend over or exert myself. (It was pretty nice not having to clean the house or do the dishes for a couple of weeks!)

Then I ventured outside to sit in the sun one morning. (You don’t want to be sitting in the June sun in Tucson past 9:00 or 10:00 AM.) The sun warming up my bones as I rocked back and forth in my patio rocking chair felt glorious. I knew it would help the healing.

When I felt a little stronger and was done with my heavy pain meds (three to four days post-surgery), I padded down the driveway (we have a longish driveway) to the mailbox and back. Then I started joining my husband for a stroll—a very slow stroll because our geriatric black lab requires S-L-O-W)—down to the cul de sac corner and back home. Since there’s a hill on the way back, I needed to pay attention to how much my heart rate elevated. I creeped up the short hill.

Then the cul de sac progressed to down to the corner, and then up another hill and around a different cul de sac with my bundle-of-energy Shetland sheepdog. She didn’t like my S-L-O-W pace, but she tolerated me. I think she knew I was sick because she’d been banished from our bedroom and from napping on our bed with me. I just couldn’t take a chance of her pouncing on my chest and plastering her signature kisses on my face. The sad look in her eyes at the banishment was hard to take.

I added a dip in the pool after my short, s-l-o-w walks and then progressed to doing light “running” and sliding (like side skipping) in the pool, being careful not to raise my heart rate too much.

But, sure enough, as soon as I started feeling a lot better and more energetic, I ramped it all up too much, crashed the day after. (I don’t always take my own advice.) I rested the next day and then struggled back. Then the day I got my stitches removed, I was so happy with the good news the doctor gave me, that I went to the gym and worked out for a couple of hours. That included about 3 miles on the treadmill and some light machine weights. Then I tooled around town to do some errands. I wasn’t in a rush, but it was a hot day, and I was out and about for almost seven hours.

 

And guess what happened? Yup. Crashed again.

 

So I’m easing back into it once more. Everyday has become a “wait and see how I feel and what I can do” kind of day. My husband and I are walking what’s known as The Loop here in Tucson, a beautiful pathway along a seasonal river. We walk just part of it and have increased our round-trip mileage to 5.2 miles. We even tested our new Gore-Tex rain jackets in the monsoon rain.

But I’m not back to doing that kind of mileage everyday, which I need to be doing to train properly for our pilgrimage. And 5.2 miles is far below what we’ll have to walk on a daily basis when we get there, even though we’re planning to take once-a-week Sabbath days.

I can’t worry about that, though. God knows where I need to be, and He’ll direct me. (I just need to pay attention.) And if we have to cut down on our daily mileage while on pilgrimage, then that’s what we need to do. And be joyful in the cutting back! There will be something to learn in long days and short.

Until then, I need to continue to pace myself, and pay attention to how I’m feeling from one day to next. Then decide if I can push myself a little more one day, or lighten the load.

For now I need to continually remind myself that I’m still in recovery, and plan accordingly.

The bonus is that in the process, I’m also learning much about pacing life so I can enjoy it more.

I think that’s a pretty good tradeoff!

 

 QuestionHow have you had to change your exercise program due to surgery or injury? And how did it go for you?

 

NEXT WEEK: The most important part of anyone’s walking training—your feet!

 

Until then,

pay attention to your pace!

Blessings,

 Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

Mind and Body Walking

Have you been able to start your walking program, do some re-arranging in your walking schedule to optimize weather and traffic and reduce injury risk?

Have you been able to set up a program and stay with the plan, or does it need some adjusting or a different time allotment?

As for me, I’ve taken my walking program “on the road” as I’ve been trying to attend to my walking program while I’ve been out of town and vacationing.

I’ve been enjoying the weather in the Northwest since last Wednesday, and the walking has been glorious! I’ve strolled in sunshine and rain, padded through a college campus and zoo, and enjoyed late sunset walks around the lake just a block from our vacation house.

 

Total engagement!

All of my senses have been engaged as I’ve encountered Canada geese of all sizes, night-prowling raccoons, nut-hunting squirrels, neighborhood dogs taking their owners for a walk and friendly residents. The vibrant spring flowers and verdant trees are a feast for my eyes. The aroma of fragrant flowers, trees and freshly cut grass lift my spirits.

I wish everyday could be like this. I’m determined to somehow make that dream a reality when I return home. My brain and body will thank me as I see to their health!

We’ll be leaving this gorgeous part of the country next this week, but I’ll be on hiatus for at least two weeks as I undergo extensive oral surgery next week. Although full recovery is six weeks, I hope to be up and writing again within two, so check in again the second week of July. (I may be back earlier.)

Until then, happy walking and exercising in fresh, healthful air!

Blessings,

Andrea

When Walking is Bad for You

Walking is one of the most rewarding forms of exercise, physically, mentally and spiritually. You can walk and pray, you can walk and socialize with a walking buddy. You can strengthen the body, heart and mind. It’s inexpensive and handy—just lace up those walking shoes, step outside and hit the road.

So, with all of these phenomenal benefits, why would I say that there might be a reason for when you shouldn’t walk?

Today I’m going to cover one big one.

You need to rethink walking for exercise if you are an urban dweller.

 

A 2016 University of Cambridge study published in Preventive Magazine indicated that the benefits of walking in polluted city air far outweighed the negatives. But they used a computerized health model, not real people for their research.

Now a new study published in The Lancet, one of the world’s oldest and best-known, peer-reviewed medical journals, suggests that where you choose to walk does matter.

 

What happens when you walk those city streets—

Researchers found that walking along heavily polluted streets does cancel out many of walking’s benefits.

The researchers gathered 119 people, all over the age of 60. Of this group, 40 of them were considered healthy, 40 had diagnosed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which is a chronic inflammatory lung disease, and 39 had ischemic heart disease, a condition caused by artery narrowing that reduces blood flow and oxygenation to the tissues.

Then the researchers gave them their walking assignments. Some were instructed to walk two hours a day along London’s Oxford Street, a downtown road heavily traversed by buses and cars. The other group spent two hours strolling through a quiet part of London’s Hyde Park.

After each workout, the researchers measured the pollution concentration in each location and then measured the following health markers in the participants:

  • lung capacity
  • breathlessness
  • wheezing
  • coughing
  • arterial stiffness (related to high blood pressure).

 

What do you think the researchers discovered?

If you think that walking in Hyde Park allowed the walkers to experience better health, you’d be partially right. Actually, they experienced big improvements in lung capacity and arterial stiffness.

After the participants walked along Oxford Street, inhaling its air pollutants, they experienced modest improvements in their lung capacity, but they experienced a worsening of arterial stiffness. Those findings led the researchers to suggest that the poor air quality negated many of walking’s benefits.

 

What about the COPD walkers? While they did experience some lung capacity improvements during their walks in both locations, the researchers considered the improvement to be negligible.

But the walkers with COPD demonstrated more respiratory issues, like coughing, wheezing, and shortness of breath, after walking Oxford Street. They also ended up with more arterial stiffness.

The walkers with heart disease also suffered in the polluted urban environment. Unless they were taking cardiovascular drugs, which appeared to offer some protection against the bad air, they suffered more severe arterial stiffness.

Kian Fan Chung, lead researcher and professor of respiratory medicine at Imperial College London’s National Heart and Lung Institute, said, “You should avoid polluted areas for doing any form of exercise, specifically walking.” He added that if an outdoor, less-polluted green space is not available, then you should probably exercise indoors.

And I think even suburban dwellers need to think carefully about when and where they walk around their neighborhoods.

 

 

Case Study—

Within the last thirteen months, I’ve suffered and recovered from a decent bout of pneumonia and been diagnosed with lung nodules. Not large enough yet to be considered cancerous, but still there, and disconcerting. My once clean lungs have caused me to rethink, re-plan, and re-execute my neighborhood-walking program.

After trying both late afternoon and morning walking programs, I’ve discovered the times people are usually leaving for work, which means I get to inhale a lot of carbon monoxide fumes and burned gasoline byproducts if I walk when they drive. I usually end up feeling worse when I arrive home. And I cough a lot.

So when the weather was cooler, I’d wait until after 9:00 AM to walk, or walk around 3:00, before the coming-home rush. That worked well for several months.

But now it’s HOT, and I can’t handle walking in the blazing inferno here in Tucson. (I’m a beach babe by design, not a desert rat.) So I needed to alter my walking times again.

On the weekend, the engineer and I roll out of bed at 4:30 AM, get dressed and drive to a local mountain to walk while the sun’s rising and for about an hour after it starts warming up the desert floor. At a 2.25 mph pace (this mountain’s grade is STEEP!), we can do the 2.9 miles up and back in about an hour and twenty minutes. But now we’re walking up, back, up halfway and then back down to increase our mileage and stamina for our hike over the Pyrenees for our Camino pilgrimage.

On weekdays, we’ve switched to strapping on our headlamps and walking at night around our neighborhood. We’ve discovered that garden spiders are nocturnal and have the most glorious, prism-like eyeballs that reflect our light beams! Sometimes we even catch cottontail bunnies or a pack rat enjoying the cooler night air. And we can also see the airborne dust particles floating across the light beams. We’re stunned at how much dust floats around us that we never see! But it’s a truly lovely time of day to walk.

But when it’s windy here and the dust is really flying, I head to the gym to walk on a treadmill. I’m allergic to dust (really), and it’s one of the environmental issues that will clog up my respiratory track and flatten me within hours. This year, thank the Lord, is the first time in three or four springs that I have NOT succumbed to dust-triggered bronchitis or pneumonia!

I think my new training plan is reaping benefits!

 

 

How about you?

Where and when do you usually walk (run or bike), and is it a potential health hazard for you?

Would it be possible for you to drive to a green belt location or park to walk instead of walking vehicle-clogged city streets?

Start monitoring your breathing after walking in different environments, and maybe measuring your blood pressure.

 

NEXT WEEK: More on walking, and finding green space to enjoy it!

Until then,

Happy walking, wherever it may be!

Andrea

May you prosper in all things and be in health, just as your soul prospers (3 John 2).

Photos courtesy of Google Images