- Joined
- Dec 6, 2022
Hi! I bought a pair of Risport Royal Pros in July, and while they are still pretty new, they are quite broken in now from consistently skating 5-8 hours a week (with a month break in August due to a non-skating injury lol). However, from the beginning, the laces have always gotten loose very quickly, and it has only gotten marginally better with time. When I bend my ankles, it pushes the laces down on the tongue, and they don't come back up when I straighten my legs again and it feels really unstable. I've started wrapping clear hockey tape right under the knot when I tie them, and this helps sometimes, but I still usually have to retie once or twice per hour (as opposed to 2-3x per hour with no tape). And this is expensive!! I kind of wish they had those hook/stud things some Jackson boots have on the tongue to keep the laces in place. I did start with the top hook unlaced for proper break in, and I did recently get new laces which helped a little. But is there anything I'm missing or could be doing? I'd love to stop wasting as much money having to retie during freestyle sessions and even during lessons sometimes. And the calluses on my fingers from pulling on laces all the time freaking hurt. But if the answer is that I just have to deal with it, I'll survive.
Also, my right boot often comes loose before my left, and that makes sense because I jump CCW, but sometimes it happens before I even jump. That boot was on a display shelf in the shop for a couple months before I bought them. The glue was slightly sun-yellowed, but it seemed fine and there were no other boots in my size/at my level in stock or available from the importer so I was kind of stuck. But could this have degraded the boot itself? I don't know. It's not like there's anything I could do about it, but I'm interested to hear if anyone knows anything.
Also, my right boot often comes loose before my left, and that makes sense because I jump CCW, but sometimes it happens before I even jump. That boot was on a display shelf in the shop for a couple months before I bought them. The glue was slightly sun-yellowed, but it seemed fine and there were no other boots in my size/at my level in stock or available from the importer so I was kind of stuck. But could this have degraded the boot itself? I don't know. It's not like there's anything I could do about it, but I'm interested to hear if anyone knows anything.
. I never had to do it with my skates, but apparently it does work for men who need their spiked boots to stay tight and can't stop mid-climb to retie them!
! My grandfather had taught the method to his sons, none of whom needed high safety boots, but my father passed on the method to my husband who was into rockclimbing and hiking in steep terrain. His climbing boot-lacing never failed him -- admittedly he fell off a small cliff and had to be lifted in a basket stretcher off a ledge by a US Coast Guard helicopter, but that was from his cleats skidding on a patch of ice hiding under loose snow. (And gave me a comeback every time he expressed nervousness about me pairs skating, since I'd never had to be winched off the ice by a rescue helicopter.
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, but I finally have and it's gone great! I only had to retie the boots once during my hour-long session. I'll be skating for two hours tomorrow and don't expect to have to retie more than twice! And while this definitely is a way to "get around" the looser design of the Royal Pro, I feel like I'm still benefiting from the range of motion the Royal collar style allows for, and I do still love the boot overall.
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