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Footloose

Jul26
by Greg Cravens on July 26, 2011 at 4:44 am
Posted In: Talk About Toys

Jeff Outdoors –
The man abuses outdoor gear, so you don’t have to

Vibram 5 Finger Shoes

“Those are some stupid looking shoes.”
You could replace the word stupid with creepy, ugly, funky, ridiculous, or any number of adjectives and you would have the general public’s opinion of the 5 Finger shoes.

There are several models of this type of shoe, which mostly consist of the thickness of the sole and tread as well as the material of the uppers. I’ve the hiking type sole. Their claim is that you will strengthen the muscles in your feet by wearing these regularly. Increased foot strength leads to better balance, easier hiking, more fun on the trail, etc.

Most people ask if they are comfortable. That’s like asking if a racecar has a good ride. They feel like wearing thin water shoes (remember Aquasock?) with more articulation in the toes. There are no rub spots, pinch spots, or blister makers. So…. yes, they’re comfortable, unless you want to wear a proper shoe.

Pros
• light
• fast drying
• sole is thick enough for trail running
• good fit (for me, at least)
• they give your toes some earned freedom without exposing them to the elements

Cons
• UGLY
• Your feet will stink even if your feet don’t stink
• They’re $100

Bottom Line
After a brief break in period (for your feet, not the shoes), you can take your feet off the leash (but they’re still fenced in). You’ll enjoy the walk/hike a little more, while you improve your foot strength and balance. I’ll buy another pair when these wear out. Besides, I just got used to the funny looks everybody gives me.

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Outpatient

Jul24
by Greg Cravens on July 24, 2011 at 8:01 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

A friend of mine (who has won TWO pulitzer prizes- I’m so proud.) saw the original Hubris packages back when it was called ‘Because It’s There’, and put me in touch with an editor at the L.A. Times. Said editor was trying out the idea of an outdoor-lifestyle cartoon in his section of the paper. It didn’t pan out, but I submitted some cartoons I still kinda like. Here’s one:
I liked this one because the color was all swiped from scans and random photography. I like the feel it gives. The cotton ticking hospital gown, for instance, was scanned from a couch cushion. Fun.

└ Tags: adventure, cartoon, comic, comic strip, cravens, greg, Greg Cravens, L.A. Times, lifestyle, Michael Ramirez, ocean, outdoor, outdoors, outside, surf, surfer, surfing
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Boy Gorge- Part V

Jul23
by Greg Cravens on July 23, 2011 at 9:31 am
Posted In: Lies Around The Campfire

From the bottom of the tracks again, I started up what I will call the Right Hand Wall. There wasn’t anything you would call a footpath along this wall, but there was uneven rock that had split away in the past, leaving “shelves” or “extended ledges” or some other word that people who hike and climb a lot would know. You can probably picture it- scrambling and inching and climbing and backing up and advancing up and along a rock wall.

Then, every so often, there’s another level-ish place to stand out in the middle of the crack. After all, workers had had to scramble all over this place when they were installing this incline train, dirty broken useless thing that it was. There were pylons holding up I-beams and cables and wheels and stuff making up the track. While all this stuff was being built, I imagine guys were up and down this crack all the time like billy goats, right?

So every few yards, I could step out onto a broader place, catch my breath and look up at the next obstacle.

The next obstacle I now saw was a boulder, just over head height. By grabbing the top and planting my feet on other protrusions, I could belly up and onto this thing. I thought. When I tried it, I found myself going face first into what we in the South call ‘Sticker Bushes’. There is, no doubt, some gratifyingly fancy scientific name that’s in Latin (A dead language, I’d like to point out) for this vicious plant, but I don’t know what it is, and don’t need it. I have said “Sticker Bush” and I bet that whatever that conjures up in your mind is precisely what I needed to conjure. It was a big, rolling, healthy, full, green bush. Full of thorns, or as Southern vernacular so aptly call them, “Stickers”.

Face first, as I say. So I tried some workarounds. The boulder just wasn’t that daunting, and the Right Hand Wall was getting particularly nerve wracking, so it seemed like there had to be a wall to roll sideways onto the boulder or inch up onto it or something that didn’t involve possible eye injury.

But let me tell you, that bush had no courtesy. It used up all the space available to it. I mean, seriously, what if a little bunny rabbit had wanted to burrow at the base of it? That’s a cute environmentally friendly thing, right? No, this bush wanted only blinded bunnies with scars living near it. It didn’t want anything larger than an insect burrowing in its grounds. So there. So no rabbit-sized space for me to aim my face into. Considering my clothes, I could have rammed my helmet into said bunny-sized space, but no.

So after trying a few options (there are always options… ever-narrowing, worse and worse, options) I was stuck with what my best choice could be. The left wall looked impossible, the boulder was getting frustratingly out of bounds, and the Right Hand Wall was looking better. All things being relative “Better” still wasn’t “Good”, but meant, “Better than standing here starving and dying of thirst.”

I peeked up over the boulder. I hadn’t covered nearly as much ground as I’d hoped. Frankly I was still very much in the bottom third, if not the bottom fourth of the slot. And day was getting on. I didn’t know how much of the run on the river was left for my friends, but if I kept getting delayed, they might come to the parking lot above before I did. If they didn’t find me there, would they assume I’d gotten a ride out an hour ago and head themselves for the campground?

Flustered, hot, thirsty, baffled, losing time, and now starting to see scenarios in which I don’t get out of here before nightfall, I start looking at the other option which has always been there, but I’ve been avoiding.

I could wrangle my way up one of the pylons I mentioned earlier, do a tightrope walk out along an I-beam to the train tracks that were fifteen or twenty feet above my head, and start climbing the ladder up the tracks themselves.

Oh, man. When I tell you that THAT was starting to look like the best option… what does that say?

└ Tags: accident, adventure, climb, climbing, cravens, greg, Greg Cravens, handholds, hike, incline train, kayak, mountain, outdoor, outdoors, outside, park, River, rock, Royal Gorge, whitewater
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If the Glove fits, discontinue it

Jul21
by Greg Cravens on July 21, 2011 at 9:55 am
Posted In: Talk About Toys

Man, I hate it when my stuff gets hard to replace. That seems to be a common theme in my gear reviews, but damn. I’ve been like that since I was a kid. I like MY stuff. When you get older and you see your stuff wearing out, it seems like it’ll be fun to get a NEW one.

In this instance, I need new wristguards. Skating and Riding Unicycles (think about it, if you don’t already ride unicycles- you wanna bust a wrist? Easily done, riding a one-wheeler down some dirt trail somewhere.) I’ve been wearing some old Harbinger wrist guards.

Harbinger wrist guards are really, really nice. They have this long, faux-leather wristwrap strap that secures the glove and the plastic splint (curved very neatly to fit your slightly bowed wrist) The gloves are solidly made, and look, feel and work well after they’re broken in.

When I say “broken in”, I mean you’ve stained them with those creepy white streaks that form when you’ve sweated them through dozens of times, and you’ve fallen enough that the gloves look slightly chewed.

Mine are no longer slightly chewed. They’re actually chewed. My new dog, who now chews on NOTHING he hasn’t been specifically given to chew on, chewed on these. The gloves never had fingers in them, but now they don’t even have all the nubby little sleeves that you’re fingers stick out of.

Y’know what? They’re still really good, and I still ride with them, but I looked on their desecration as a good excuse to get NEW ones. Yay for me, right?

Except, of course, they quit making them. I went to http://www.harbingerfitness.com/ looking for the wristguards in amongst their fine looking workout gloves and they weren’t there. After a couple of searches, I started to think the worst. The worst being the Truth.

I returned to the site where I bought my wristguards in the first place. Here’s what they have now. http://www.unicycle.com/safety-gear/hillbilly-half-finger-gloves-3.html/

This product review SHOULD be about these ‘HillBilly’ gloves, but I haven’t ordered them yet. The price is better than I remember the Harbingers being (which worries me a little) but the design seems to be pretty darned similar.

So this product review is about yet another bit of gear I miss. Harbinger wristguards. Another product I wish I’d laid in a lifetime supply of when I first realized how much I liked them.

If I need workout gloves, and I have the extra buck to put into something I know I’m going to like, I’ll go to Harbinger. Except I don’t work out THAT hard. Those gloves look like they’re for guys who start conversations with “Whattaya Bench?” Guess maybe I’ll become a Hillbilly and see if those gloves are something that, ten years from now, I wish they still made.

└ Tags: cravens, greg, Greg Cravens, guard, Harbinger, Hillbilly, outdoor, outdoor retail, outdoors, outside, skate, skateboard, unicycle, wrist, wristguard
1 Comment

Old batch

Jul19
by Greg Cravens on July 19, 2011 at 8:04 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

When I was just a little cartoonist, drooling over the notion that I could someday be a star, Charles Marshall and I did this thing with Caliber Press-

It had a whole bunch of cartoons about Batch (anyone notice a family resemblance to Hubris?) and ‘The Adventures of Lord Lionel’, which I was also trying to get the syndicates’ attention with. It also had Jim Palmer’s ‘Li’l E’ cartoons- his were the best drawn of the bunch. I’ll post some of Batch later.

└ Tags: Batch, Caliber Press, cartoon, Charles Marshall, Comic Book, comic strip, greg, Greg Cravens, Jim Palmer, Li'l E, Lord Lionel
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