For the past month I’ve been out of touch with something highly important to me — my paper backup.
I generally keep track of my mileage on dailymile, but in the past few months I’ve been logging more workouts via my iPhone, which means I haven’t kept track of my shoe mileage on the site. It’s in the paper backup.
Very quietly this year — probably too quiet — I’ve made a major shift in my shoes. At the beginning of the year I talked about my experiment to switch to Saucony Mirage. That worked so well through Shamrock that I dumped the other shoes I was wearing.
In addition to the switch of the main shoe, I also began wearing Saucony Kinvara 2 — initially it was an experiment to see how they felt. Since the price was so awesome on them, I couldn’t resist.
That experience has worked so well that I recently bought a second pair.
That brings me back to my paper backup — how many miles have I put on my shoes? Is the experiment working? During my move, my backup got packed away and forgotten about.
I had been keeping track of what shoes I was wearing in my Notes app and backtracked to add my miles from my dailymile records. (It’s all much more hands on than it needs to be, I know.)
This week, though, I found it and quickly added up my miles on my current shoes.
Saucony Mirage, green - 191.8
Saucony Mirage, black - 187.8
Saucony Kinvara 2 - 72.9
I couldn’t be happier with the way these shoes have performed and held up. My original pair of Mirage have gone through a few races with me — it’s a special shoe that I hate to part ways with later this summer.
In what has become a norm for me, I have no reason to buy anything new — I have another pair of Mirage and a second pair of Kinvara that are in my closet waiting to see some action. I’m sure I’ll soon purchase a pair that will be devoted for the Richmond Marathon.
I often get asked about shoes and my response is the same: find what works for you. This is not an endorsement of these models — I just happen to like them a lot.
They work for me right now, but I know that may not always be the case. For now, though, I’ll continue to enjoy the ride these shoes offer.



{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }
Yes, shoes are a personal decision, but I still like to hear what people use. I took my Saucony ProGrid Mirage on a trip because they are so much lighter than my Mizunos, and I ran the July 4th 8K in them, but I’m still wary about running longer in them.
Nice! Glad the Saucony experiment has worked for you! I made the same transition to the Mirage then added in the Kinvara 2s and couldn’t be happier