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Last year in July, I'm always barefoot but this summer has been horrible. We've only had a few days of mid-80's F, that's not enough to heat up the road yet. Especially since half the time it was muggy and overcast instead of sunny! I wish I had to worry about hot pavement, I hate this climate.

2007-07-23 02:49:04 · answer #1 · answered by Sheriam 7 · 0 0

I've been doing it this entire heat wave weekend! The only way to get used to it is to keep burning the feet without getting blisters, and this is what I did: Burn the feet--park at the end of a hot parking lot, get out of the car, hold onto it for balance, then stand bothfeet fully on the ground. Burn the feet--too hot to stand full foot then keep standing but moving the feet in different positions to relieve some heat. Burn the feet--too hot to stand using heat relief motions of the feet, then start walking. Burn the feet--too hot then start walking through shade as little as possible just to cool off the most urgent burning. Burn the feet--still too hot walking though shade then stand in shade, preferably hot enough to need to do heat relief motions of the feet when standing in the shade. Burn the feet--hotter air temperatures even up to triple digits, higher humidity for a higher heat index, close to and then during afternoon peak heat hours as the feet get more used to the heat. Burn the feet--longer standing before longer walks, pushing past just painful until the feet tingle enough to have to close eyes and grit teeth from the heat both when standing and walking. Burn the feet--getting used to it on darker and smoother extra hot blacktop asphalt. Burn the feet--every chance to stand while crossing a hot parking lot before resuming walking again. Burn the feet--shorter hotter walks are sometimes better than longer walks not as hot. Feet properly burned--red, stinging, dirty from asphalt dirt even burned into the sole, any calluses showing through the dirt, and feet may even feel hot overnight.

2014-09-17 01:30:48 · answer #2 · answered by AsphaltToughenedSoles 5 · 0 0

i walked barefoot on a hot street

2007-07-22 23:14:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yesterday. It was about 90, and I walked on our hot driveway back and forth to the mail box. Does that count?

2007-07-30 11:53:45 · answer #4 · answered by soupkitty 7 · 1 0

Two days ago. I don't mind it, I walk barefoot almost everywhere anyway.

2007-07-30 18:32:09 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

over twenty years go, way back when I was a kid, and I even remember it was the middle of August, and I was going to the corner store with friends so we could all pick up some of those old 16 fl. oz. coke bottles and then go swimming

2007-07-22 23:19:38 · answer #6 · answered by Lazrus 6 · 0 0

Last week when it was hot out here.

2007-07-29 11:26:32 · answer #7 · answered by Angie 3 · 0 0

It's been YEARS. You learn not to do it after the first time.

2007-07-30 09:29:13 · answer #8 · answered by Ice Queen 4 · 0 1

if you did that over here in sheffield england luv..you would get lead poisioning.

spain about 4 years ago

2007-07-22 23:10:42 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Never

2007-07-30 22:59:48 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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