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Showing posts with label Extreme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Extreme. Show all posts

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Socks For The Extreme Barefoot Explorer

The “Swiss Protection Sock” is not the average wool sock you wear under your boots, in fact these socks scoff at shoes entirely. These socks are made from a mix of spandex, cotton, and polyester and 50% kevlar fiber with a PVC laminate reinforced sole. They say they’ll give you more protection from cuts and lacerations than a conventional neoprene water sock, but I don’t see anyone taking a knife to them in the video to prove it to me.

While I do think these socks would be much nicer to wear than cheap rubber water socks, I can only imagine the looks you would get from other people on the beach. Just wait until you tell them they cost almost $80 a pair!

via Gizmodo

March 13, 2012 by Jonathon Marshall

Filed Under: Apparel, Gear, Oddities, Videos
Tagged: barefoot, barefoot explorer, barefoot running, cuts and lacerations, kevlar fiber, neoprene, pvc laminate, swiss protection, wool socks


View the original article here

Thursday, March 1, 2012

South Dakota GFP Urging Anglers To Use Extreme Caution On Ice

PIERRE, S.D. – Due to an unseasonably warm winter and recent rains in many areas of South Dakota, the state Game, Fish and Parks Department is urging sportsmen to use extreme caution when venturing onto the ice of lakes, rivers and ponds.
“We want people to be as safe as possible,” said GFP Assistant Wildlife Director Emmett Keyser. “There was a tragic drowning this week in Pierre, and we are getting reports of vehicles and anglers breaking through the ice across the state. We haven’t had good ice for most of the winter, and it seems to be getting worse every day.”
Keyser said anglers in South Dakota should not take any vehicles – including cars, pickups, all-terrain vehicles or snowmobiles – onto the ice because it is not safe.
Those who are going ice fishing should take precautions, such as not fishing alone, bringing plenty of rope, keeping ice-safety picks in their clothing, wearing life jackets and protecting their cellphones in zip-lock bags.
“Above all else, use common sense,” Keyser said. “If ice looks rotten, it probably is. With the warm winter we have had, there isn’t much safe ice. So if it looks bad, don’t venture onto it.”


View the original article here