I first saw these when the Navy EOD guy I worked with did all of his workouts with them. I was a bit skeptical about the whole concept at the time, but there's growing research suggesting that the shoes do a lot for general fitness.
I just recently started running in Five Fingers and have had a pretty solid experience, though my calves are constantly smoked. The theory is that re-training yourself to run on your toes makes your legs and feet work like humans did for the thousands of years before heavy soled footwear changed our stride to the heel-toe style. For running at least, they seem to be cutting down on foot, knee, and back agitation and strain because the foot naturally absorbs the shock instead of sending it up your leg.
Here's the site: http://www.vibramfivefingers.com/technology/index.cfm. If you put aside the hippy stuff it talks about, it makes sense that this kind of footwear can help people who are really active in high impact sports and careers.
Anyone else using these? Has anyone tried rucking in them yet? I've only used them for running so far. It seems like rucking in them isn't nearly as good of an application as running, lifting, etc.
I just recently started running in Five Fingers and have had a pretty solid experience, though my calves are constantly smoked. The theory is that re-training yourself to run on your toes makes your legs and feet work like humans did for the thousands of years before heavy soled footwear changed our stride to the heel-toe style. For running at least, they seem to be cutting down on foot, knee, and back agitation and strain because the foot naturally absorbs the shock instead of sending it up your leg.
Here's the site: http://www.vibramfivefingers.com/technology/index.cfm. If you put aside the hippy stuff it talks about, it makes sense that this kind of footwear can help people who are really active in high impact sports and careers.
Anyone else using these? Has anyone tried rucking in them yet? I've only used them for running so far. It seems like rucking in them isn't nearly as good of an application as running, lifting, etc.