Friday, February 10, 2023

Adjusting the blade

So I finally bit the bullet and hired a bootfiter to adjust the blade. He is not located at a rink, but comes to the rink for an hour for a fee of $90.

On my old, collapsed boots, after I rebuilt them I adjusted the blade myself. I tried on these new boots, only I felt the temporary screws that allow adjustments had to be moved. 

Here comes an extremely long story...  My right foot is size 5, the left is 5.5. I've chosen to buy boots size 5 because I figured trough trying different boots, plus the custom that felt too big, that Riedell changed the toe box on the current models and I've felt that added a 1/4 size. Also the size 5.5 I tried felt too large in volume. This size 5 fells just a tiny long for my right foot, and a tiny small for my left foot, and that was stretched out. The volume feels a little bit larger at the ankle than my old boots. I have hypermobile ligaments, that means I need a small volume boots, otherwise I don't feel supported. To add to the difficulty, I pronate, on both feet, more on my right foot.

The blade on both my boots felt unsupported under the inside of the heels, the left foot more. The left foot felt also too forward on the blade and also crooked between the front of the blade and back.

I've met the bootfitter, I asked if I should tell him what I think or to let him come to it himself. He said to tell him, and then he will observe himself. We started with the right foot, and he asked me to glide forward on it while balancing on the sweet spot on the blade that is at the back side of the foot's arch. I was slowly sliding towards left, so falling towards inside. He played with the placement of the boot several times. He also added a wedge inside the boots, under my insole, and outside the boots, between the blade and the boot. I was doing some exercises after all these adjustments, going straight forward, sustained long outside edge (like in dance), the outside forward entry in bracket and power pulls. We came to exactly what I was feeling and that was to move the back of the blade towards inside, by moving the screws. He drilled a hole a little more from the previous hole, so the screw can catch and not collapse into the old hole. We came into something that held the elusive outside edge... I hope everything else is balanced too, we were running out of time I haven't got the chance to try turns, but power pulls weren't perfectly stable.

As almost an hour had passed, he said let's look at the left. And through same "judgment"  he agreed that I needed the heel of the blade moved in by moving the screw, only there was not enough space. It could be mounted more towards the edge using the permanent screws... only we weren't sure exactly how much the blade towards inside. That is what the temporary screws are for, adjusting. To complicate the matter, the sole of this left boot is fabricated slightly smaller than the right, plus that boot was stretched forward, I felt I was forward on the blade... so we came to the "crazy" solution, that he never tried before, to mount the blade sticking out on the front of the boot. That will give space in the back for the blade to be moved "in" and also will put me more "back" on the blade, as I was feeling off balance, too forward.  In order to do this, he needed to take the boots to his shop, plug in the holes, let them dry and the mount the blade catching half of this plugged old hole, half on untouched sole.

I picked the boots up the next day and went skating. I again didn't have time to go through every edge and turn, but... Big relief that the left blade seems to be in the right spot, I may still have to play with adjustment but there is true hope. The right boot was hurting a little, I think because there are so many insoles in, it lifted my foot. It also felt crocked?

Well, I woke up next night with intense foot, ankle and knee pain. I knew immediately that the culprit must be the wedge inside the boot... and yes it was. This was not a simple wedge,  it continued with an arch that it seems interfered with my regular insoles arch. The next day I hurt all day, thankfully the second day it calmed down. 

So at this point, hopefully I have the screws in the right spot so I can continue with the blade adjustment.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Monthly skating review: progress and goals adjustment

Last month's skating was... hard. I guess the main reason is that my life is busy and it is hard to carve time for skating. It doesn'...