Isn’t “Shoes on or off inside the house?” one of those hot-button issues that once threatened to tear the entire message board asunder a few years ago?
Just don’t introduce the topic of how to install a toilet paper roll – a question to which there is only one right answer, but so many are misguided on this – or this entire message board is lost if we should get into this grim topic again!
But in all seriousness, I see no need to be tracking the great outdoors all over my house. Maybe I’m particularly casual about kicking off my shoes when I come inside the house because I always tend to wear the kind that are very easy to take off and put on.
Down in the basement I have a pair of snow boots that I used to wear when shoveling the driveway. They have laces about ten miles long and a bazillion lace holes to thread them through. Nowadays the snow is removed from my driveway by a snowplow service while I watch through the window. Not that I can afford it, but my doctor tells me that shoveling snow is not conducive to my continued existence.
I always had the impression this is a Canadian / American cultural thing. In a Canada shoes typically come off and get left in the foyer or mudroom.
And yes, footwear is going to tend to carry in mud and debris, especially with Canadian winters Even in good weather there are pebbles and dust etc that get tracked in. Shoes are hell on hardwood floors. One little pebble caught in the sole of a shoe will do a lot of damage.
That sort of thing is what a mudroom is for. At the very least, it’s helpful to have a bench on which to sit and remove one’s shoes or boots after entering.
I think this may be good safety practice. I am not a sailor myself but I have friends who own a boat, and I have sailed with them from time to time. They said something like “that rope lying around on deck will kill you faster than the snake it looks like”. I was led to understand that any excess length of rope should be coiled.
I once sailed with them from Norway to Scotland - a 3-day crossing in difficult sea conditions. The idea of going barefoot on that trip was not in any way tempting!
A spiral is different than coiling. A spiral is where every inch of the line touches the surface of the dock creating a perfect circle. Most sailors would consider this pretentious (annd unnecessarily time consuming) and are content to coil their lines between their hand and elbow like you would an extension cord and hang it or place the wad next to the cleat.
Enipla doesn’t have to modify their lifestyle to placate you. You are in Canada. It’s much less of an issue in the US and how enipla runs their house is totally normal.
Why? In what part of the world do you live? I realize there are places where it’s understood that you take off your shoes when you enter someone’s home, and it would be offensive not to. Here in the U.S., it’s definitely not the norm, although I have friends that request that you take your shoes off when entering their home.
I am happy to do this, but if you want people to behave in a way that isn’t the norm where you live, then you shouldn’t be insulted if they behave in the normal manner unless you’ve requested in advance that they do otherwise.
I take off shoes in my house, but I would never ask a guest to. They might not have presentable socks on, or otherwise not feel comfortable with it. If they want to remove them, they’ll either just do it or they’ll ask if I want them to.
Exactly. We were certainly aware that our lines shouldn’t be a tripping hazard and dealt with them accordingly, but these guys I’m talking about literally spiralled them like they were creating a work of art. IIRC, they also wore pristine white sailor suits. We wore grungy jeans and T-shirts.
I was being slightly facetious, but if you have to go in and out more than a dozen times a day, you have a lifestyle quite different from mine, but you do you – doesn’t bother me. My only point is that the floors of my house are cleaner than the streets and sidewalks outside.
Again, do whatever you like. Back when I mowed my own lawn, I wore an old pare of sneakers for that purpose, not my regular ones. Eventually the topsides started turning green from grass clippings; Lord only knows what the soles looked like. I kept the filthy things in the basement and would never even think of wearing them in the house.
As someone who has done some yachting in my earlier days (of the “chartering a small one with a group for weekend cruising around the Chesapeake” type, not “hanging out with rich people sipping cocktails”), this is the basic answer:
However, boat shoes are fine too, especially for this reason:
Personally I preferred bare feet as I felt more surefooted on deck than in boat shoes, but you can bet I kept a close eye on where I was stepping.
The other main hazard, of course, is the swinging boom. I did manage to avoid being concussed but there were a few close calls.
Well, it’s not as if it swings around randomly. When tacking, the captain or helmsman should announce that we’re coming about, which should be a warning to everyone to either get out of way or duck if necessary and as the situation warrants.
It may sound funny but it’s no laughing matter – people have been injured or swept overboard by a swinging boom. On even a medium-size boat those things can be massive. Just like the mast, those things have to sustain an enormous amount of stress, able to rapidly move through the water a typical recreational sailboat that might have a displacement of 8 or 9 tons. Fortunately I never saw or experienced a boom accident..
Agreed (and generally observed), but you do occasionally get a sudden shift in wind direction and that sucker comes flying across without warning (or not much - the sail will obviously move before the boom does). Those are the dangerous ones.