I'm barefoot a lot.
Tonite I surprised myself though. We got approx 16" of snow. I shoveled off the deck and sidewalk and snow blowed the driveway in gym shorts and barefoot, took about 2 hours. Walking thru snow up to my knees barefoot was a new experience. I wore a wool hat and fleece neck warmer and 4 torso layers. I was surprised that I was completely comfortable. The feet were too. When I was done, I went inside and they did get a bit itchy so I went back out to garage and walked around on the cold cement floor to lessen the temp change.
That long, barefoot in the snow I wouldn't have thought possible.
Tonite I surprised myself though. We got approx 16" of snow. I shoveled off the deck and sidewalk and snow blowed the driveway in gym shorts and barefoot, took about 2 hours. Walking thru snow up to my knees barefoot was a new experience. I wore a wool hat and fleece neck warmer and 4 torso layers. I was surprised that I was completely comfortable. The feet were too. When I was done, I went inside and they did get a bit itchy so I went back out to garage and walked around on the cold cement floor to lessen the temp change.
That long, barefoot in the snow I wouldn't have thought possible.

). But the part that scares me, or at least that I'm wary of, is when the foot is swinging forward from it's last step to planting for the next one, there is a surprising amount of energy in that forward swing and if your toes hit something, I think you could easily break a bone. And if running BF, that forward swing would contain even far more energy. So my point is, even though I'm a big fan of BF'g, there's still lots to learn.