My wife came down the stairs to:
a. make sure I wasn’t seriously injured and
b. once that was determined, start laughing and tell me that she wished she could have seen it. Then
c. clean up the coffee that was covering the stairs, floor and couch.
I really don’t blame her, that would have been my order of business too. Cut from the same cloth we are. After about a minute I determined that I could actually put weight on that leg but not for long. After a few minutes of sitting on the stool I decided I could probably still ride to work, after all, I was already dressed for it and it promised to be a beautiful trail ride. The ride in was OK but a little sore. When I changed for work I noticed that I have a nice blue bruise forming over the road rash I got last year. That hip gets hit hard.
Note to self: Wear the helmet when walking down the slippery stairs with the slippery shoes.
On a related note:
Review of Louis Garneau Ergo Grip Cycling Shoes.
Most notably, the hard plastic soles are very slippery on oak stairs. Since writing the review below that is published on Backcountry I have had more cold weather experience with them and they are definitely lacking when the temps drop into the single digits (F) and below. For the $80 I paid for them I'll live with it. Duct (Gorilla actually) taping some toe covers over the hard plastic toes seems to help.After commuting through the winter and struggling with toe covers that slip off and *iss me off I decided to get some winter specific shoes. These are basically some cheap road shoes with built in shoe covers. The tongue is kind of flimsy and you have to fiddle with it every time you put your feet in to make it lay flat. They aren’t extremely warm but not bad. So far I’ve only worn them down to 32 degrees and my toes still get chilly by the end of my 12 mile commute. When the temps start getting down closer to 0 I’ll slip a hand warmer inside the zippered cover.
The ergo grip sole does a great job outdoors but is hard plastic so it can be slippery on things like hardwood, especially if it is wet. I wore them for a cyclocross race and they were perfect for keeping the mud out of my feet and had great traction on the course. I think they will be similar in snow.
I bought about a size up to make sure I could wear extra socks and that was the right choice for me. I’d say they run mostly true to size, but maybe a hair small.
I got them at a great sale price. I wouldn’t pay the retail price for these. The styling isn’t really what I was looking for but with the thin tops I can zip my thermal tights on the outside of the boot so if it is raining the water wicks out, not in. Very Important.
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