Sunday, June 12, 2011

Shoe Review: Total Trail Domination!

My evolution as a runner over the last few years has come in many forms.  Evolution of my body, mind, and spirit.  At 41, ultrarunning and trail running have put me in the best shape of my life.  But, this is not a post about all the Zen and peace running has brought to my life.  This one is all about one badass trail shoe!

.
Picture of the Grand dominating the horizon I took from my balcony.

Back in April I was presented an opportunity to move to Idaho to work and play in the Teton Mountains with my friend and world-class ultrarunner and human condition warrior, Lisa Smith-Batchen.  The universe conspired to give me what I wanted yet again.  So within 4 days, I condensed everything I needed for the next 5 months plus into 2 duffel bags, a back pack, and shipped my bike to Idaho

Lisa and Sister Mary Beth.  Talk about dominating dedication to a cause.

This is where my fellow anti-perimeter thinker Patton Gleason at NaturalRunningStore.com comes in.  I could extol on the greatness that is Patton for the next several thousand words.  If you have had the good fortune to meet Patton you know what I am talking about.  If not, check out all the joy and goodness about running and life he shares on his website and HERE as well.  Patton just gets it.

(caption left blank intentionally-no words for this type of domination.)

Allow me to introduce to you the Inov8 Bare-Grip 200.  This shoe had me at hello.  Everything about it screams trail and domination.  This shoe came into my consciousness at the most fortuitous moment as I was packing for this Grand Teton adventure.  I wanted, no desperately NEEDED, a trail shoe that was up to the test that I was going to take on in the mountains.



Let’s start with the lugging.  The pattern and depth remind me of a baseball shoe at first glance.  It may be 102 in Texas right now, but at 6,200 ft in the Teton Valley we had snow on the ground just a few days ago.  Most of the trails at 9,000-10,000 feet elevation are still packed with feet and feet of snow.  Lower sections are muddy and running streams of snow melt coming down the mountain.  Most trail shoes do not sport the aggressive lugging of this bad boy AND they tend to retain mud to the point that you feel as if you are running in moon boots minus the zero gravity(quite the opposite actually).

Snowshoes?  Psshaw!  Who needs 'em!

From my first steps on the snow-pack, I had complete confidence in every step going up the trail.  Who needs crampons with these strapped on?  Fast descents on packed snow were a blast in this shoe.  I could take all the speed the mountain would allow me.  The real fun began when I hit the muddy sections and mountain streams.  This shoe shreds and sheds mud almost simultaneously.  Not once did I end up with clumpy chunks of mushy mud mired in the crevices of this shoe. 



This shoe is a complete and total ZERO.  As in zero-drop platform that is.  My inner-Sasquatch loves how in touch with the ground my feet feel in this shoe.  Rocky trail.  Muddy trail.  Snow-packed trail.  Rushing stream trail.  On all these surface conditions I always felt like the shoe was giving me just enough protection, but allowing me to take in all the sensory feedback of every nuance of the ground (and water!) below me.

This shoe makes you want to seek out water and mud!

Let’s talk uppers for a moment.  The overall fit and feel of this shoe is delicious.  Yes, I used the word delicious to describe how a trail shoe fits.  Try it and tell me I am wrong.  With very few inner seams, I have taken to running in this shoe completely naked.  Barefoot to be more specific, not bare-ass.  Although I have done that a time or two as well.  (Google “supernatural” running.  Try it you’ll like it.)  This shoe also evacuates water extremely well.  Within a step or so after a water crossing all the H2O is adios!

Bam!

As Inov8’s most minimal trail shoe to-date, this baby has no midsole whatsoever.  This puts your foot right on top of the outsole and gives you that gnarly, flexible feel.  This performs well in drier conditions as well.  Loose and/or soft terrain is its sweet spot.  This shoe would be bit of overkill in hard-packed, sun-baked dirt though.  

9 out of 10 feet surveyed at Grumpy's Goat Shack gave this shoe a thumbs up!

The final verdict:  If you are looking for a no-holds-barred trail shoe that will allow you to let it all hang out and take dominance to a new level, look no further.  Stay thirsty my friends. 

8 comments:

Rachael said...

Bravo!!!! You are the most interesting man in the world.

Lynette said...

I ran the Pocatello 50 in Inov-8 s Roclites. I have run in these for a year but have never been so impressed by their traction in mud and snow and their ability to get wet. I floated past many Hoka runners who were stumbling and fumbling on the up and downhills:)

Patton Gleason said...

Absolutely brilliant post Dave. Wonderful pictures. I hope you are having the time of your life. Thanks for the work on this. I am so glad this shoe has lived up to the challenge.

Roger said...

Great write-up, makes me want to try them even though I'd really prefer these lugs on a shoe with a sole, a heel, and a 4-8mm drop.

What shoes were you running in before you got your stormtrooper white compression boots on?

Il Dolce Far Niente said...

Interesting! I think I'm gonna go shopping soon

Anonymous said...

great put up, very informative. I ponder why the other experts of this sector
don't understand this. You should proceed your writing. I am confident, you've a
great readers' base already!

My weblog - "selah"

Anonymous said...

I simply couldn't leave your site prior to suggesting that I extremely loved the usual information an individual provide to your visitors? Is going to be again ceaselessly to check out new posts

my blog post :: 65802
Also see my web page - Boucicault

Anonymous said...

I create a leave a response when I like a article on a website
or if I have something to add to the discussion.

Usually it's triggered by the passion displayed in the post I browsed. And on this article "Shoe Review: Total Trail Domination!". I was moved enough to drop a comment :-) I do have 2 questions for you if you don't mind.
Is it simply me or does it look as if like some of these responses look like they
are coming from brain dead visitors? :-P And, if you are posting
at additional social sites, I'd like to follow you. Could you make a list every one of all your shared pages like your twitter feed, Facebook page or linkedin profile?

Look at my web site termómetro