The "soccer cleats" I wear are actually suitable for many activities on earthen / grassy ground outdoors. Sleek profile to the body of the shoe, not too different from shoes for track & field, fitted beneath with chunky rubber lugs that sink in enough to allow traction plus flat-footing.
Here is exactly what I own, I recommend them without reservation, they prevent myriad bodily injury from the terrain I deal with.
These shoes let me do everything footwork-wise in longsword and other fencing that I need to do, with no problems:
Spalding Cleats
http://www.payless.com/Catalog/productd ... erformance
I must wear such, as I have no choice but to practice in the wild-grass fields adjacent to nature-walk / horse trails near a county lake. I refuse to hurt myself any more by a sliding misstep for sake of "costuming accuracy". I have almost hurt myself before a few times while doing reasonable moves, due to loss of traction outdoors. And once I did hurt myself significantly while really going for it, slipping forward across dry short grass in back yard no less, when I was doing flourishes involving lunges and springen while wearing modern equivalents to turn-shoes.
So I simply refuse to cheat my health when a simple $20 pair of cleats prevents injury yet allows all needed movements.
