30boat
N/A
Never barefoot.Not even down below.I've broken a toe against a bit of joinery once.
Since hearing several stories of broken and snubbed toes on sailing yachts, I have always applied the rule that, "You can go barefoot on board, so long as you normally walk barefoot in much of the rest of your life." In other words, I strongly encourage crew to wear something on their feet. From the comments on the other thread, I am left wondering whether I am alone in this?
What's your attitude to going barefoot?
Never barefoot. Not even down below. I've broken a toe against a bit of joinery once.
Presumably you never go barefoot at home either, then? Can't see much difference between joinery in a cabin and in a house.
Pete
I don't understand your aversion to shoes no socks?Often barefoot and I am then concious where I put my feet, my worst foot injury was when I was wearing shoes because I didn't think so much about where I stepped.
The two things I don't like on deck are flip flops and socks with no shoes, both of which I consider far more dangerous than bare feet.
The two things I don't like on deck are flip flops and socks with no shoes, both of which I consider far more dangerous than bare feet.
I don't understand your aversion to shoes no socks?
Ah apologies - brain interpreting what I thought he had written rather than what he had actually written!That's because you've misread it. He said socks, no shoes - which is pretty slippy on almost any smooth surface.
Pete
That seems an unnecessarily pejorative way to express your distaste of other customs - I personally don't "think its [sic] clever to go bearfoot [sic]", I think it's comfortable. Especially where I sail in a warm climate where it seems perfectly natural.I have seen too many people with injured feet who think its clever to go bearfoot, and I am surprised that so many people think that its ok to walk about the deck of their boat with no shoes on.
That seems an unnecessarily pejorative way to express your distaste of other customs
I hope that those who know me well on here will also know that being pejorative and prescriptive (and in any way intentionally obnoxious) is not as far as I am aware in my character. I didn't mean it to read that way at all - but I did intend to start a gentle discussion on the merits and demerits of bare feet on decks - or my preferred option of wearing some sort of deck shoe.Must admit I didn't really like the phrasing either, but refrained from saying so as possibly not intended the way I read it.
After all, the obvious inverse of "many people think that its ok to walk about the deck of their boat with no shoes on" is "It is not ok to walk about....". My gut reaction to such wording is "well how dare you dictate what is and is not ok for other people to do".
But as I say, could just be a case of unfortunate phrasing rather than intent
Pete
Must admit I didn't really like the phrasing either, but refrained from saying so as possibly not intended the way I read it.
I hope that those who know me well on here will also know that being pejorative and prescriptive (and in any way intentionally obnoxious) is not as far as I am aware in my character.
Good point - but if you read my original post you will see that I agree that people who live FOR YEARS AT A TIME on their boats can probably manage to go barefoot much of the time without problems.In the Caribbean cruising community it is considered good manners to remove footware if coming aboard as a guest.
I go barefoot but appreciate the risks as I have a lump on my little toe as a result of a collision with an eyebolt before I had my mental deck map fully established.
I did 7 years barefoot liveaboard cruising in my 40s and the hardest thing about going back to work was putting my feet back into prison at work.