any info? anyone go to Outdoor Retailer 18 and see them? thanks guys
any info? anyone go to Outdoor Retailer 18 and see them? thanks guys
You may have already seen this... but...
thanks theJeff. I did see that site. They look kind of gross, but wondering if anyone can give definitive specs on any updates.
Really wish they would have updated the outsole on the Wildhorse. I love that shoe but the outsole sucks on anything wet.
theJeff wrote:
https://www.roadtrailrun.com/2018/07/nike-trail-running-spring-2019-previews.htmlYou may have already seen this... but...
Thanks for the link. Love the look of the update. Definitely going to have to pick them up in April. Ran through my Kiger 3s and switched to the On Cloudventure. Love the Ons, but these look sweet enough to make me switch back.
I run trails quite often and just use regular trainers and never have a problem.
I for sure never run in muddy conditions and muddy conditions don't occur very often where I live.
What are other's thoughts on trail running shoes which provide increased levels of traction. Do you feel it is necessary? How so? If there are ever times where I slip around a bit it's on large rocks with loose gravel on top. Not sure trail shoes with their extra lugs on the bottom would help in that specific scenario, but maybe I'm totally wrong.
John Utah wrote:
I run trails quite often and just use regular trainers and never have a problem.
I for sure never run in muddy conditions and muddy conditions don't occur very often where I live.
What are other's thoughts on trail running shoes which provide increased levels of traction. Do you feel it is necessary? How so? If there are ever times where I slip around a bit it's on large rocks with loose gravel on top. Not sure trail shoes with their extra lugs on the bottom would help in that specific scenario, but maybe I'm totally wrong.
I live in Oregon, so more rain, mud and dirt mountains. I have always run in either Kigers or Salomon Sense Rides. I would say it all depends on terrain because I definitely use every bit of traction on my Sense Rides and then use the kigers as more of a road shoe.
the only time you might need a real trail shoe is if your running ultras on super rocky terrain other than that their pointless
If it's just a dirt or grass trail and It hasn't rained in the past week then there's really no need for specific trail shoes. If the ground is soggy then they help a lot. And for any rocky terrain it's a must, only if the shoe has a rock plate in it tho, if it doesn't you're better off in trainers. Just my opinion.
pnwjeff wrote:
I live in Oregon, so more rain, mud and dirt mountains. I have always run in either Kigers or Salomon Sense Rides. I would say it all depends on terrain because I definitely use every bit of traction on my Sense Rides and then use the kigers as more of a road shoe.
I live in the middle of a state park in Ohio and run the trails all the time. Definitely need trail shoes as it's an oddly hilly section of an otherwise flat state. And the weather in Ohio unpredicable. It was 60 and sunny three days ago. Now it's 20 and snowing.
RIP: D3 All-American Frank Csorba - who ran 13:56 in March - dead
RENATO can you talk about the preparation of Emile Cairess 2:06
Running for Bowerman Track Club used to be cool now its embarrassing
Great interview with Steve Cram - says Jakob has no chance of WRs this year
Hats off to my dad. He just ran a 1:42 Half Marathon and turns 75 in 2 months!
2017 World 800 champ Pierre-Ambroise Bosse banned 1 year for whereabouts failures