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12 answers

Hot gravel is actually very therapeutic, but as a fellow Texan you should know how hot the pavement gets ... the asphalt melts, and I can think of few things less pleasant than hot tar stuck to my feet.

2006-07-13 05:59:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

I go barefoot a lot in the summer so I get pretty good at doing both. I went to the nursery he other day barefoot and they were showing me some plants where i had to walk on gravel.Did just fine. I don't like to hot foot it tho if I can avoid it.Will wear flip flops.

2006-07-12 01:37:00 · answer #2 · answered by Judy L 4 · 0 0

Why are you so obsessed with bare feet and tickling women..

You've mostly asked what is the most sensitive and the most torturous place to be tickled.

Here's what I think:
You have a fetish that you are fantasizing about all the time. You hate women. You really wish to hurt women really really badly and in time you will.

Please seek help asap to put those thoughts out of your head pronto before you soon become a danger to the females you have access to and to society.

2006-07-13 01:45:25 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Gravel, yes. Hot pavement....not so easily.

2006-07-12 01:17:25 · answer #4 · answered by i luv teh fishes 7 · 0 0

I'm not a woman but since women generally have higher arches and thicker pads on the balls of their feet, they can burn their feet more without getting blisters sooner. That said, if they are going to consistently go barefoot on extra hot asphalt in desert area heat, as close to or during the hottest hours, they already know they need to heat train their soles by toughening by progressive burning, and they probably even know about blistering. Chances are good a desert area woman also considers blistering normal, as long as they aren't getting too large blisters or they are at risk of a 3rd degree burn on the soles.

Me, I try to keep the blisters as small as possible, preferably no larger than pencil eraser size, but with an abosolute maximum of a US quarter coin size. My own recommendation for extended foot burning enough to get blisters is that you *want*—don't avoid getting—as many pencil eraser size blisters on the less heat tolerable parts of the soles as possible. Feel smaller unfilled white burn spots and *gently* pull outside the edges of them. If they visibly stretch, they are blisters. Good! Now take a pencil and put the eraser side on the blister just to confirm they are only pencil eraser size. If they are? Pencil eraser size blisters don't fill up enough if at all, so there is no need to drain them and in fact *don't* pierce a hole to drain them. Pencil eraser size blisters are still walkable the same day, as long as they are not subjected scraping on rougher surfaces. Pencil eraser size blisters can easily be peeled off the soles but *don't* peel them, just let leave them alone until they peel away or reattach. Also leave them on the sole so that any blistered spots become used to the heat just as used to the heat as the rest of the sole. Pencil eraser size blister spots are just as burnable the next day—no need to take any days off from barefooting or stay off the heat. Any additional pencil eraser size blisters just means that part of the sole still isn't as heat tolerant as the rest of the sole just yet.

Only the larger blisters need draining, but they are still healable as long as they are ideally no larger than a US nickel coin or definitely no larger than a US quarter coin. For the tough soles look, permanently reattached blisters show very white on the sole when they become additional burnable calluses, or even if they are still blisterable but without becoming any larger and filling up.

Whether heat training or checking the soles for how well the did walking on the hot asphalt for extended distances—a properly burned sole that even got blisters will also show calluses burned so white that they actually got less dirty than the rest of the sole. They should sting for tens of minutes after the redness goes away. The balls of the soles should feel stiffer for almost an hour. Even better if they were burned enough to feel a pulse in the soles. Extra burned more than that and they remain pulsing and feeling hot overnight.

2015-06-16 15:08:46 · answer #5 · answered by AsphaltToughenedSoles 5 · 0 0

If I walk carefully, then yes. My driveway is blacktop, and alot of times I forget about wearing my sandals so I have to "hot foot" it to my car and back.

2006-07-12 01:18:37 · answer #6 · answered by skooter 3 · 0 0

yes i dont like hot pavement maybe warm pavement....

2006-07-12 01:18:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i walk barefoot around my house all the time it doesn't bother me

2006-07-12 01:19:55 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Are you looking to make some hot-footed progeny?

2006-07-12 01:23:07 · answer #9 · answered by frid 5 · 1 0

yeah, most of the time. If you walk for too long you will get blisters tho.

2006-07-12 01:20:20 · answer #10 · answered by BOOTS! 6 · 0 0

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