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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Oakland, CA
    Posts
    276

    Bike Shoe Advice, please

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    Hi all,

    I'm new to this forum, and very happy to have found it! I just started riding with my local club this year with their Light/no drop group, and I am loving it. My longest rides to date have been 40 miles. I figured that since I'm now the only one on my ride who rides w/o clipless pedals (and I'm the only one who rides a Hybrid!), the time had come to start using them. So last weekend, I got a pair of Shimano Sport bike shoes and spd pedals. I chose the recessed cleat shoes because I'm planning to go on one of those guided rides in Italy next year, and I want shoes I can (sorta) walk in. Anyway, I did have one fall, first day I took the new pedals out, but I didn't break anything and have some lovely bruises. I'd been told that everyone falls at least once, so no big deal.

    HOWEVER, as soon as I clip in, the entire bottom of one of my feet starts to ache so bad that I just want to rip the shoes off. I've been putting my orthotics in the bike shoes, figuring that if I need them for my other shoes, I need them for the bike shoes. I'm not sure what's happening, but my guess is that because of the stiffness of the shoe, the bottom of my foot is cramping. Do you think this will go away, or do you think I should try different shoes, or.....? I ALWAYS have problems finding shoes that fit anyway, because my foot is normal width and my heel is narrow, so it feels like my shoes are coming off, plus one foot is almost 1/2 a size bigger than the other.

    Sorry for the length of this post, but I'm a little freaked that riding is now such a painful experience, and I've only done a couple of miles at a time with the pedals since I got them.

    Cheers,
    Ace (aka Amy), from Northern California

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Flagstaff AZ
    Posts
    2,516

    Orthotics for walking/running and cycling are totally different

    You probably should not wear your walking/running orthotics for cycling. Cycling and running/walking orthotics are made different because the needs of your feet are different when walking and cycling. I'm not sure what your issues are, i.e. pronation?, shorter leg? whatever, but if you need orthotics on the bike, you should get specific orthotics for the bike.

    Why not try the shoes without the orthotic for one ride and see what happens. You should have some sort of small insert however. If your shoes did not come with one, you should cut one to size from an old gym shoe or buy one at the store.

    You will soon find out if you need an orthotic for riding but I would try it without. My husband has a short leg and his feet pronate pretty badly. When he was racing in his 30's-40's doing lots of mileages and repetition, he would get knee tendinitis and very, very tight Iliotibial bands (this is common with most cyclists). He went to a special guy who does cycling orthotics, they looked at him on the bike (videoed him) and determined what to do with his orthotic to make him comfortable and it worked!

    Now that he does not ride quite as much nor as hard, he does not wear the orthotics and seems to be fine. I think it is also because he is so used ot cycling now too, but that is my theory.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    467
    Hi Amy and welcome

    Sorry to hear about all the problems you are having with those shoes and your feet - yikes!

    I would imagine there is a combination out there that can work for you.

    My feet differ by a 1/2 size as well - I always fit a shoe according to my bigger foot. So if the smaller foot feels loose I'll wear a thicker sock or maybe 2 socks to compensate. That usually does the trick. Worst case scenario you can always get 2 pairs of shoes, a 1/2 size apart which is usually easy to do with european sizes (ie....40, 41, etc).

    The basic premise (one of them anyway) of a road shoe is for it to be stiff. That way you transfer more power from your body to the pedals vs. a softer tennis shoe that flexes.

    Part of your pain could be the way you are pedalling, or it could be the shoe itself is not a good fit.

    BTW - I also have flat feet and I definitely recommend you wear your orthotics with your biking shoes. Otherwise you'll be overpronating which can create a huge set of problems from your feet on up to your knees and hips.

    I would try your existing shoes with the orthotics, I'd also have someone watch your pedalling technique, check your bike fit, and see what happens - if none of that works then you may need different shoes after all.

    Good luck!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Oakland, CA
    Posts
    276

    more info

    Like you needed to know more about my feet :-)

    In reply to why I have the orthotics, it's because I have flat feet and was getting foot pain many years ago, and am kinda knock-kneed (that's pronation, right?). They were prescribed for everyday use, not for running or sports.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,372

    move cleats?

    Ace,
    I'm a recumbent rider - I've been amazed ever since getting bent on the different advice given for the different types of bikes. So, take this with that in mind (might not apply). But, if you were to post this on a bent forum you would be told 2 things:
    1) move your cleats for or aft - I'm guessing they are toward your toe on your shoe - move them back toward your arch and see if that helps.
    2) loosen the laces over the sore part of your foot to give more "breathing room".

    Also, I have a friend with plantar fascia (also a bent rider), he can only use pedals with a large platform, can't remember what brand of clipless pedals he uses, but he's tried several and the one that works is the one with the biggest clipping area.

    Good luck,

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    467
    lol - tell us all about your feet!

    Let me ask you something. Can you say, put on a pair of running shoes (sans orthotics) and run a 5k w/o pain? More broadly, are you able to exercise w/o pain w/o orthotics?

    I have rather flat feet - I leave a nice, full footprint on the beach :P

    If I don't wear them, my feet roll excessively inward because of the virtual non-arch, which then throws my entire lower body out of alignment. Hello knee-hip-back pain

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Oakland, CA
    Posts
    276

    More about my feet and the rest of me, too!

    Yes, I can do pretty much anything without foot pain (besides wear the damn bike shoes) as long as I have my orthotics in. I can't answer the 5k question, though- I don't run at all and haven't for years, I'm quite overweight and have back issues plus no ACL in one knee, so if I ran, that would probably be the end of me. My other challenge with club riding is that I have super strong legs, so I'm usually out in front on flats/slight inclines, but the hills (and I live in the Bay Area) are very challenging for me, because I'm about 60 pound overweight and have a very heavy hybrid (not that I think that makes a bit of difference- my bike is maybe about 5 lbs heavier than everyone else's, but the real issue is the surplus 60 lbs on my body. I'm working on that....

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    467
    Hmmm, well that's the basic idea behind orthotics - is for you to be able to do things w/o pain. I can go w/o mine say, to sit in the office all day, but anything remotely active or involving lots of walking, and I need my inserts. I don't even really wear heels as it tends to give me knee pain.


    So you do good in the flats but not as well in the hills? I'd say you are a budding time trialist

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Oakland, CA
    Posts
    276

    Red face

    Well, I'm not THAT speedy. Being in the front of that pack means smoking a bunch of riders who are going 9 miles an hour. But I'll tell you, I've learned so much about technique by riding with a led club ride (the leader screams at me if I don't shift down before stopping. He's incredibly bossy, but I've learned a ton.).

    I'd say I'm more of an endurance rider than anything else at this point :-)

    As long as I'm well-hydrated, electrolyted and fed, I feel like I can go forever (I had a couple of rides earlier in the season, those that involved 1500ft or more of climbing, where at about mile 15 I'd start getting a horrible headache which ended up lasting for about 24 hours. I resolved this by buying a 100 oz camelbak, filling it with GU2O, and making sure I drink that plus more). However, me and my granny gear have become well-acquainted on the hills. I'm learning that no amount of technique can overcome those extra pounds riding uphill.

    However, given those extra pounds, I am like a bat out of hell on the downhills.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Bay Area, CA
    Posts
    1,351
    However, given those extra pounds, I am like a bat out of hell on the downhills.
    Me too!

    I had some pretty bad hot-foot with my Shiman SPD cleats and a couple of things have helped - one was getting some inserts from REI - that have some that are designed for cycling - I think they are color-coded - maybe the blue ones are for cycling. The other thing was to keep my shoes pretty loose. The spd shoes were like yours - mountain shoses with recessed cleats.

    But what really helped was switching to full-on road shoes with Looks, which have a large platform. Good luck!
    Keep calm and carry on...

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Oakland, CA
    Posts
    276
    Can you explain hot-foot, please?

    Yeah, I was offered those inserts when I bought the shoes (got 'em at rei), but I didn't think I needed them because of my orthotics.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Chandler, AZ
    Posts
    281
    I always recommend to buy godd stuff even if it is expensive. I wear Specialized shoes for 2 years now. No issues, no pain, they are great. They have very good arch support too. My DH wears size 15 and has flat feet. He loves his Specialized shoes. But you cenrtainly need to check in with a fitter. It is possible that your feet are in the wrong position.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Albuquerque, NM
    Posts
    3,099
    hot-foot is a couple of things but basically it's when your foot feels hot or tingly or hurts or numb, has hot spots, pain in the toes, numbness in the toes....you get the picture.

    It's caused by several things: shoes are too small, shoes are too tight, the cleat is pressing on an area of your foot that is troublesome, even the cleat surface could be too small, stagnation in your foot.....so on.

    I used to ride SPDs and no matter where I put the cleat I had problems, I switched to Looks and Love them. Course I haven't done a century in them yet but my last century on the SPDs I was almost crippled with the pain in my feet by the end of the ride.

    My suggestions would be along with every one else: try cycling inserts in your shoes, try moving your cleats backwards or forwards, try loosening your shoes, trying moving your feet inside your shoes (flex and splay the toes while you're riding)

    Hopefully some/all of this will help.
    Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, champagne in one hand, strawberries in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming: "Yeah Baby! What a Ride!"

  14. #14
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Tustin, CA
    Posts
    1,308
    You didn't mention the shoes you are currently wearing. If you have not tried them - look at Sidi's (Genius 4 or 5). You also didn't mention your pedal and cleat system. Some systems don't always work with some feet type. I know I need a larger platform pedal. In addition, are you sure your cleat is positioned properly. Just alittle to far forward or back will cause problems.

    I definitely would not use an orthodic or insert not made specifically for cycling. If your shoes are old, they most likely have broken down and need replacement.
    BCIpam - Nature Girl

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    325
    I have a great Shimano mtn. bike shoe that has a three strap closure. When I first started using them, I had a fair amount of foot pain. What helped me greatly was to have the top two straps somewhat snug and the arch strap a little looser. Maybe you have already thried this and I apologize if I'm pointing out the obvious.
    Yes, SHE can.

    "Angels fly because they take themselves lightly"
    Gilbert K. Chesterton

 

 

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