I was reading about trail etiquette and saw the recommendation that if you must walk on muddy trails, walk straight through the mud, not around it. Otherwise, some trail sections will get wider and wider, disturbing more of forest.
People are not always prepared to walk through mud, though. And sometimes a small re-route around a low spot is a stable change and not ever-widening.
Still, the idea got me thinking. Now on trail runs I’m more inclined to plow straight through.
Now on trail runs I’m more inclined to plow straight through.
One of the best runs I can remember, is the only time I got stuck in mud. I was worried about heavy feet and getting wet and cold, but I felt invincible, because of the surprise that it didn’t bother me and had a new PB.
I was reading about trail etiquette and saw the recommendation that if you must walk on muddy trails, walk straight through the mud, not around it. Otherwise, some trail sections will get wider and wider, disturbing more of forest.
People are not always prepared to walk through mud, though. And sometimes a small re-route around a low spot is a stable change and not ever-widening.
Still, the idea got me thinking. Now on trail runs I’m more inclined to plow straight through.
One of the best runs I can remember, is the only time I got stuck in mud. I was worried about heavy feet and getting wet and cold, but I felt invincible, because of the surprise that it didn’t bother me and had a new PB.