Yes; “boat shoes” (like Sperry Top-Siders) have a sole that’s built to be less likely to scuff a wooden boat deck. But, apparently not everyone (especially people who aren’t “boat people”) shows up at a friend’s boat wearing boat shoes. Also, apparently, some yacht people just prefer being barefoot; it may be part of the boat culture.
A major attraction of a yacht is that it is essentially surrounded on all sides by a swimming pool. Bare feet are part of the expected casual dress code poolside or at the beach.
Boat shoes are good for deckhands or anyone working the foredeck on a sailing boat but the absorb water and eventually the soles pick up grit that can scratch fiberglass and woodwork, and get tracked into the cabin. Bare feet are better overall because they have a good grip, and feet dry quickly.
Most boat decks aren’t like the floors in a home. They can be easily damaged by many shoes. Pebbles lodged in the sole can cause scratches, and high heels can create dimples.
A yacht (as opposed to a mere boat) is also one of those hyper-perfect hyper-styled environments that should always, every second, look factory fresh, totally clean, and utterly unblemished. The spoiled people who regularly inhabit such spaces demand the perfection their egos tell them they are entitled to.
Yes. I’ve never owned “boat shoes”, but have owned a sailboat, and frequently sailed on the boats of others.
Not every boat owner necessarily feels that way to such an extent, but I agree that most do. Many years ago, when a friend joined me on a week-long voyage to sail my newly purchased boat to its home port, we noticed this sense of perfection among most boats in the harbours where we docked.
We were amused by one boat beside us once which was not only incredibly pristine, but the sailors insisted on coiling the loose ends of the mooring lines in a perfect spiral! We just left ours in a heap on the dock, and that pretty much reflected our approach to everything. We did make a necessary effort to keep the boat organized and shipshape, though. A sailboat isn’t large and if you don’t keep the deck and galley organized you soon have ungodly chaos.
Pretty much this. I live in a horrid rocky place with indigenous plants that routinely puncture tires. Go bootless at your Peril. And once the snow falls, my tootsies are in plastic ski boot for a long time.
When on the boat or Cruising (even to Alaska) I go barefoot as often as possible. Nothing like well worn Teak under foot to ease you into a state of relaxation. Besides, my feets are sexy as hell and I wanna show them off!
Very easy to answer that - Because we are much more comfortable with shoes on. When someone takes their shoes off in my home I find it very presumptuous. “You planning on spending the night, or what?”
If someone doesn’t take their shoes off in my home, I find it very insulting. “You think my house is just like a public street, except with a roof? Why don’t you bring your car in, too – you can drive it in through the front window.”
Is the side walk to your home filthy? That’s a serious question. Mines just clean concrete. The floor in my garage is epoxy coated concrete, very clean. My back porch and patio is clean concrete. We take care of our grass. I have no problem sitting down in it, or walking on it and into my home.
I’m very uncomfortable without shoes on, it’s rude to ask me to take them off.