Thread: Travel Socks
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Old August 4th, 2004, 06:04 PM
tslugmo
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Default Travel Socks

I understand what you're saying, Miguel, but I prefer cotton socks when
I'm at home, because I have unlimited access to a washer and dryer. On
the road, however, I don't have that luxury. So I need to use socks made
of quick drying material that won't turn hard and crusty from air drying
like cotton gym socks. If you've ever tried to air dry Foot Locker socks,
you know that they take well over a day to dry, which doesn't work when
you're hopping from place to place in Europe. I also spend much more of
my day on my feet when I'm traveling, versus my normal daily routine which
involves quite a bit more sitting in front of a computer. Some of the
clearanced socks at REI are $3/pair, which I consider a small investment
to help make sure my trip is a good one. Wet or uncomfortable socks can
definitely ruin your day. This is the voice of experience.

-tslug

On Wed, 04 Aug 2004 14:48:49 GMT, Miguel Cruz wrote:

tslugmo wrote:
I was wondering if anybody had recommendations for travel socks. Might
sound silly, but there are about 10,000 different socks out there to
choose from, and I figured some must be better than others. I've heard
good things about Wigwam and Smartwool, but these brands offer about a
thousand models to choose from, with very little to differentiate them
in
their descriptions.

First of all, they can't be cotton, because they must be quick drying.
I'm assuming that thicker is better for travel during colder weather, as
this would provide more insulation. I'm assuming thinner is better for
hot weather. I'm assuming thicker is better for padding during long
days
of walking around Europe with a backpack on. Besides that, I'm pretty
lost. I see some people using liners to cut down on blisters, but I've
never had much of a problem with that.


Travel socks? Unless you have a specific problem that causes you to
require
special socks, why not just use the same socks that serve you well when
performing similar activities (walking, sitting, talking) in the rest of
your life? Feet work the same everywhere.

What's next? Travel dental floss ("specially coated to get out those
pesky
European food particles")? Travel deodorant ("when in Rome, smell like a
Roman!")?

It's amazing how consumers have been trained to think they need a new
product every time they turn around.

miguel
--
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