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How (un)safe is it to ride barefoot?


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1















Sometimes I use bike for a week long trip camping along, doing maybe 200km per day riding on asphalt road. In the end, my feet have bad smell, which is not super strange or concerning, but it does seem a bit unhygienical to do so, especially if I don't have an opportunity to take a shower, I have a feeling I might get some feet fungus.



I tried riding barefoot once for short time and everything went well. I don't have sensitive feet and my pedals are mostly flat, so it's not a pain to pedal.



Now, I've almost never seen anybody else doing it so there must be a downside or danger to it? Does anyone have any experience on this?










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  • Not particularly more or less safe - until you have an accident, when the injuries to unprotected feet are likely much more significant. Have you considered open mesh shoes, and do you wear socks (you should) ? Use Baby wipes when no shower is avalible.

    – mattnz
    6 hours ago











  • When I've ridden barefoot for 50 feet or so the pain in my feet has always made me stop. Of course a lot depends on how smooth and supportive the pedals are.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    6 hours ago
















1















Sometimes I use bike for a week long trip camping along, doing maybe 200km per day riding on asphalt road. In the end, my feet have bad smell, which is not super strange or concerning, but it does seem a bit unhygienical to do so, especially if I don't have an opportunity to take a shower, I have a feeling I might get some feet fungus.



I tried riding barefoot once for short time and everything went well. I don't have sensitive feet and my pedals are mostly flat, so it's not a pain to pedal.



Now, I've almost never seen anybody else doing it so there must be a downside or danger to it? Does anyone have any experience on this?










share|improve this question







New contributor



user43913 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Not particularly more or less safe - until you have an accident, when the injuries to unprotected feet are likely much more significant. Have you considered open mesh shoes, and do you wear socks (you should) ? Use Baby wipes when no shower is avalible.

    – mattnz
    6 hours ago











  • When I've ridden barefoot for 50 feet or so the pain in my feet has always made me stop. Of course a lot depends on how smooth and supportive the pedals are.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    6 hours ago














1












1








1








Sometimes I use bike for a week long trip camping along, doing maybe 200km per day riding on asphalt road. In the end, my feet have bad smell, which is not super strange or concerning, but it does seem a bit unhygienical to do so, especially if I don't have an opportunity to take a shower, I have a feeling I might get some feet fungus.



I tried riding barefoot once for short time and everything went well. I don't have sensitive feet and my pedals are mostly flat, so it's not a pain to pedal.



Now, I've almost never seen anybody else doing it so there must be a downside or danger to it? Does anyone have any experience on this?










share|improve this question







New contributor



user43913 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











Sometimes I use bike for a week long trip camping along, doing maybe 200km per day riding on asphalt road. In the end, my feet have bad smell, which is not super strange or concerning, but it does seem a bit unhygienical to do so, especially if I don't have an opportunity to take a shower, I have a feeling I might get some feet fungus.



I tried riding barefoot once for short time and everything went well. I don't have sensitive feet and my pedals are mostly flat, so it's not a pain to pedal.



Now, I've almost never seen anybody else doing it so there must be a downside or danger to it? Does anyone have any experience on this?







safety






share|improve this question







New contributor



user43913 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question







New contributor



user43913 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question






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user43913 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 9 hours ago









user43913user43913

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user43913 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • Not particularly more or less safe - until you have an accident, when the injuries to unprotected feet are likely much more significant. Have you considered open mesh shoes, and do you wear socks (you should) ? Use Baby wipes when no shower is avalible.

    – mattnz
    6 hours ago











  • When I've ridden barefoot for 50 feet or so the pain in my feet has always made me stop. Of course a lot depends on how smooth and supportive the pedals are.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    6 hours ago



















  • Not particularly more or less safe - until you have an accident, when the injuries to unprotected feet are likely much more significant. Have you considered open mesh shoes, and do you wear socks (you should) ? Use Baby wipes when no shower is avalible.

    – mattnz
    6 hours ago











  • When I've ridden barefoot for 50 feet or so the pain in my feet has always made me stop. Of course a lot depends on how smooth and supportive the pedals are.

    – Daniel R Hicks
    6 hours ago

















Not particularly more or less safe - until you have an accident, when the injuries to unprotected feet are likely much more significant. Have you considered open mesh shoes, and do you wear socks (you should) ? Use Baby wipes when no shower is avalible.

– mattnz
6 hours ago





Not particularly more or less safe - until you have an accident, when the injuries to unprotected feet are likely much more significant. Have you considered open mesh shoes, and do you wear socks (you should) ? Use Baby wipes when no shower is avalible.

– mattnz
6 hours ago













When I've ridden barefoot for 50 feet or so the pain in my feet has always made me stop. Of course a lot depends on how smooth and supportive the pedals are.

– Daniel R Hicks
6 hours ago





When I've ridden barefoot for 50 feet or so the pain in my feet has always made me stop. Of course a lot depends on how smooth and supportive the pedals are.

– Daniel R Hicks
6 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














It may well become uncomfortable after pedalling for some time, so don't rely on a quick test ride to check.



More importantly though, you need to be able to stop the bike based on the need to stop, and put your foot down without examining the ground for broken glass, thorns etc. It's not completely unknown to strike the sole of your shoe on the ground, like pedal strike, and this would hurt quite badly in bare feet (there's one roundabout I've done this several times, due to a combination of the camber, turning onto a hill, and having to pull away fast because of a poor line of sight). If you ever bump your foot on your front wheel turning at low speed, that could become unpleasant too.



Let's face it, all cyclists get stinky shoes and feet . And a bad smell doesn't mean a fungal infection. Letting your feet and preferably shoes dry out at the end of each day is a big help. That's the time to go barefoot






share|improve this answer


























  • Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

    – Nelson
    1 hour ago














Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














It may well become uncomfortable after pedalling for some time, so don't rely on a quick test ride to check.



More importantly though, you need to be able to stop the bike based on the need to stop, and put your foot down without examining the ground for broken glass, thorns etc. It's not completely unknown to strike the sole of your shoe on the ground, like pedal strike, and this would hurt quite badly in bare feet (there's one roundabout I've done this several times, due to a combination of the camber, turning onto a hill, and having to pull away fast because of a poor line of sight). If you ever bump your foot on your front wheel turning at low speed, that could become unpleasant too.



Let's face it, all cyclists get stinky shoes and feet . And a bad smell doesn't mean a fungal infection. Letting your feet and preferably shoes dry out at the end of each day is a big help. That's the time to go barefoot






share|improve this answer


























  • Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

    – Nelson
    1 hour ago


















3














It may well become uncomfortable after pedalling for some time, so don't rely on a quick test ride to check.



More importantly though, you need to be able to stop the bike based on the need to stop, and put your foot down without examining the ground for broken glass, thorns etc. It's not completely unknown to strike the sole of your shoe on the ground, like pedal strike, and this would hurt quite badly in bare feet (there's one roundabout I've done this several times, due to a combination of the camber, turning onto a hill, and having to pull away fast because of a poor line of sight). If you ever bump your foot on your front wheel turning at low speed, that could become unpleasant too.



Let's face it, all cyclists get stinky shoes and feet . And a bad smell doesn't mean a fungal infection. Letting your feet and preferably shoes dry out at the end of each day is a big help. That's the time to go barefoot






share|improve this answer


























  • Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

    – Nelson
    1 hour ago
















3












3








3







It may well become uncomfortable after pedalling for some time, so don't rely on a quick test ride to check.



More importantly though, you need to be able to stop the bike based on the need to stop, and put your foot down without examining the ground for broken glass, thorns etc. It's not completely unknown to strike the sole of your shoe on the ground, like pedal strike, and this would hurt quite badly in bare feet (there's one roundabout I've done this several times, due to a combination of the camber, turning onto a hill, and having to pull away fast because of a poor line of sight). If you ever bump your foot on your front wheel turning at low speed, that could become unpleasant too.



Let's face it, all cyclists get stinky shoes and feet . And a bad smell doesn't mean a fungal infection. Letting your feet and preferably shoes dry out at the end of each day is a big help. That's the time to go barefoot






share|improve this answer















It may well become uncomfortable after pedalling for some time, so don't rely on a quick test ride to check.



More importantly though, you need to be able to stop the bike based on the need to stop, and put your foot down without examining the ground for broken glass, thorns etc. It's not completely unknown to strike the sole of your shoe on the ground, like pedal strike, and this would hurt quite badly in bare feet (there's one roundabout I've done this several times, due to a combination of the camber, turning onto a hill, and having to pull away fast because of a poor line of sight). If you ever bump your foot on your front wheel turning at low speed, that could become unpleasant too.



Let's face it, all cyclists get stinky shoes and feet . And a bad smell doesn't mean a fungal infection. Letting your feet and preferably shoes dry out at the end of each day is a big help. That's the time to go barefoot







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 6 hours ago

























answered 9 hours ago









Chris HChris H

25.7k140116




25.7k140116













  • Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

    – Nelson
    1 hour ago





















  • Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

    – Nelson
    1 hour ago



















Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

– Nelson
1 hour ago







Spraying those hand sanitizers onto your feet and shoes will get rid of majority of the potential infection. If you injure your foot while riding, that's significantly worse than having whatever that can happen from a fungal infection. Just compare worst case scenarios and decide if going barefoot is worth "preventing" stinky feet.

– Nelson
1 hour ago












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