Hey im new to the forums been looking at them for a while and finally a topic comes up which i have some experience in!
I love walking barefoot in fact when i came down from tibet into nepal at the beginning of march this year I ditched my furry hiking boots for cheap hemp sandals which were destroyed by the time i got to india (at this time I had scorned the western hippies who walked barefoot through cowdung and dirty streets).
I had settled down for a while near rishikesh and they broke and I was too cheap and lazy to leave the village i was in to buy new ones so I just didn't and things stayed like that for 2 months! Its really nice not to have to put shoes on and its always fun to freak out indians who on the most part think every westerner is completely mental. even in india being barefoot was suprisingly easy apart from the terrible fear of crossing red hot metal bridges ,and having to walk in the shade on sunny days.
The highlight of my time without shoes (apart from the stares in heathrow on the way home) was hiking up to kheer ganga a hot spring 3000m above sea level up in parvati valley which was 6 hours walk from the nearest road and the whole way was over soft close cropped grass and smooth stone and was pure dead brilliant. I still ditch my shoes when i get to my parents farm for the weekend but wouldnt risk it on the streets of edinburgh.
I do find that going barefoot makes you more aware of your surroundings and you feel like a real creature of the earth when you stand on the ground its very anachronistic and primitive!
I love walking barefoot in fact when i came down from tibet into nepal at the beginning of march this year I ditched my furry hiking boots for cheap hemp sandals which were destroyed by the time i got to india (at this time I had scorned the western hippies who walked barefoot through cowdung and dirty streets).
I had settled down for a while near rishikesh and they broke and I was too cheap and lazy to leave the village i was in to buy new ones so I just didn't and things stayed like that for 2 months! Its really nice not to have to put shoes on and its always fun to freak out indians who on the most part think every westerner is completely mental. even in india being barefoot was suprisingly easy apart from the terrible fear of crossing red hot metal bridges ,and having to walk in the shade on sunny days.
The highlight of my time without shoes (apart from the stares in heathrow on the way home) was hiking up to kheer ganga a hot spring 3000m above sea level up in parvati valley which was 6 hours walk from the nearest road and the whole way was over soft close cropped grass and smooth stone and was pure dead brilliant. I still ditch my shoes when i get to my parents farm for the weekend but wouldnt risk it on the streets of edinburgh.
I do find that going barefoot makes you more aware of your surroundings and you feel like a real creature of the earth when you stand on the ground its very anachronistic and primitive!