Musings of a Marketing Maven

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Back to the Mat: Where’s the Stick?

November 23rd, 2011

I’m one of those unlucky yogi­nis who strug­gles with sweaty hands and feet dur­ing yoga classes. As class pro­gresses, my sta­ble foun­da­tion becomes unsta­ble, espe­cially for strong poses held for a minute or longer — things like a low lunge, down­ward fac­ing dog, or a war­rior pose. I need a yoga mat with bet­ter stick.

As my prac­tice improves, I’m get­ting bet­ter at bring­ing energy up from my hands and feet to my core — but I tire more quickly. Legs start to shake, my poses lose their integrity.

Using the right mat can help, but I haven’t yet found the per­fect solu­tion. These days I’m exper­i­ment­ing with two dif­fer­ent com­bi­na­tions, for dif­fer­ent class styles.

For more in-depth dis­cus­sions of yoga mats, based on per­sonal tri­als, see: the quest for the per­fect yoga mat, the quest (take 2), and still wait­ing for the per­fect yoga mat.

The Yoga Mats Teach­ers Recommend

Obser­vant teach­ers who see me slip­ping will rec­om­mend switch­ing to a dif­fer­ent yoga mat. Although teach­ers have dif­fer­ent pref­er­ences, they tend to rec­om­mend either Jade or Man­duka brand yoga mats.

As a result, I now own and use two dif­fer­ent mats for class. Before head­ing off for class, I’ll choose the one best suited to today’s teacher — her yoga dis­ci­pline and what she tends to empha­size in the way of asanas:

Nei­ther mat fully solves the prob­lem, but for dif­fer­ent reasons.

The Jade Har­mony mat has a longer “mean time before slip­page”; how­ever, it deforms as it warms. So the Jade mat tends to be less suited for Anusara-style asanas with its focus on solid foun­da­tions and oppos­ing actions. The Man­duka never deforms, is always rock solid, but my hands and feet slip much ear­lier in class unless I’ve taken precautions.

Mat Cov­ers Can Help

Because nei­ther mat is sticky enough on its own, I’ve tested dif­fer­ent mat cov­ers, with vary­ing degrees of suc­cess. Here’s my cur­rent “class formula”:

For Vinyasa Flow

Dur­ing classes with lots of sun salu­ta­tions or other flow­ing sequences, I’ve found that Manduka’s micro-fiber hand towel does a good job keep­ing hands or feet sta­ble. I’ve used a sin­gle towel, but am about to try plac­ing two tow­els on the mat, one for hands and one for feet.

Manduka’s longer mat cover is less effec­tive dur­ing vinyasa flow sequences — it wrin­kles too eas­ily. (This may not be an issue for skilled yogi­nis who jump and float eas­ily from one pose to another, with­out grace­less foot dragging.)

When pos­si­ble, I pre­fer to bring the Jade Har­mony mat to class because it weighs a pound or two less than the Man­duka mat, rolls up nicely, and is easy to secure with a vel­cro strap. (That said, it took a cou­ple of months before the rub­ber smell dis­si­pated enough for me to ignore the Jade mat dur­ing class.)

For Anusara

My pre­ferred solu­tion for Anusara classes is the Man­duka Black Mat Pro with Yog­i­toes skid­less mat towel, which almost fully cov­ers my yoga mat.

Even after two years of use and mul­ti­ple wash­ings, the Yog­i­toes towel remains rea­son­ably absorbent, and the rub­ber feet keep it firmly in place — most of the time. It can wrin­kle dur­ing fast-paced sun or moon salu­ta­tions, so it some­times needs adjust­ing dur­ing class.

What I don’t like is the some­what bumpy feel of the rub­ber pro­tru­sions on the reverse side of the Yog­i­toes mat towel. This sort of spoils the zen-like beauty of the Man­duka mat.

The wrinkly mat towel is the rea­son my vinyasa teacher tells me to bring the Jade Har­mony mat to her classes.

I keep hop­ing that some­day I’ll find a yoga mat that doesn’t com­pro­mise on sta­bil­ity while retain­ing its stick­i­ness for the dura­tion of the class. Per­haps this is just a fantasy…

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3 Comments so far ↓

  • Kathy

    Great arti­cle. I’ve enjoyed this con­tri­bu­tion. Its nice to see every ques­tions answered in a blog post like this. I will add this post on my blog and link to it. Thanks for a clear infor­ma­tive post, I’ve learned a lot. I hope to see videos though as I can be A.D.D and read­ing arti­cles is not my favorite thing to do online. So what I do some­times is just print the whole thing and read offline.

  • Neil Warren

    Fan­tas­tic post, I really look for­ward to updates from you.

  • Christine

    Thanks for the com­ments on the theme. This blog uses the Cut­line theme, and is heav­ily cus­tomized. Cut­line is no longer com­mer­cially avail­able, although you may be able to find copies of the theme if you look hard enough.