Aotus
Contributor
What kind of booties are you using? Something with a thicker sole might help. When I am diving in a wetsuit or less I use Chuck Taylor Converse. When I am in my drysuit I just use regular neoprene dive booties but in a size 15 to fit over my drysuit. This way I do not have to change fins when I go from wet to dry.
Neoprene booties. I wonder what my pool would think of me wearing chucks into the pool...
---------- Post added January 24th, 2014 at 09:08 PM ----------
You're doing something wrong. It's not the fins.
But, if you are convinced. Try the Hollis F1's
I'm not convinced that I'm not doing something wrong...glad some others are willing to expand on the point to help me figure out what I should do differently.
---------- Post added January 24th, 2014 at 09:09 PM ----------
I love my Diverite fins. They are my drysuit fins. Sounds like you are using your feet muscles too much when doing the flutter kick. e.g. pushing with the balls of your feet and pulling with the top of your toes. Try to be more "flat footed" and use the bigger muscles instead. Leverage your feet muscles only for manoeuvring. I don't have the strongest legs and given they are stiff fins I found you have to take slower, longer more deliberates moves. After I got used to them, no problem.
I thought I was doing that, but I'll try again...I didn't have this trouble with the rented fins at the dive shop where I was certified, but they surely weren't stiff. I'll try again to focus on my foot position. thanks.
---------- Post added January 24th, 2014 at 09:11 PM ----------
Sounds like your foot is fully into the fin. I too have a very high instep and some fins feel like they are just hanging off the front of my feet. Fins that do fit a high instep well are the Hollis F-1 and any Force Fin. I comfortably use both. You need to borrow some fins to tryout.
thanks. If these don't work out I'll look at those first...though not sure the force fins are in my budget, or well regarded for cave maneuvers, so more likely the F1s.