For the uninitiated,
Strava is an app used by cyclists (and runners) to log their activity.
Whilst you pedal it creates a map of your route, and compiles data on
distance, time, average speed, altitude gained, etc.
Whether you like it or
not, Strava also takes your time taken to ride “segments”
(specific sections of road or their website, from there
you can, “see where you rank and start moving up the leaderboards.”
A Strava Sucker in Action |
I added Strava to my
phone's apps late last year, mainly too see what all the fuss was
about. A few uses and, although I liked that it generated a
share-able map of my ride, the skeptic in me erred toward seeing it
as little more than a way for show-offs to do a bit more showing off,
the chance to turn every mundane rise in the road into a virtual
race. The pessimist in me also began to worry about my lack of
fitness.
I began to wonder if
the virtual race I'd taken part in might be fixed — some of the
climbs I had battled up at an average speed of around 10mph were
showing Strava “King of the Mountain” highest speeds of around
30mph, a velocity my car would have struggled to achieve on those
same roads.
As a result of that skepticism I only used Strava intermittently and paid little heed to
where I ranked on the leaderboard for segments covered by my regular
Edinburgh-based rides.
However, it was during
a recent trip up to Moray in the north east of Scotland that I slipped from being Strava doubter toward becoming a Strava sucker.
I had used the app to
record a short route that I've ridden on and off for decades, mainly
so that I could get an idea of how much altitude the main climb
gained over its 2 miles (actually, Strava says it's 1.8 miles, so
there). Much to ego's delight, I checked the results post-ride to discover that I'd achieved a King of the Mountains best time.
I had truly grovelled
up the climb, battling a headwind, not a thought to how fast I was
travelling, too much in oxygen debt even to recall that Strava was
recording the slog. Definitely not a glory performance but still,
Strava had reeled me in.
Two days later and I
had time for one last bike ride before heading back to Edinburgh. But
which route should I take? Ego decided: ride the same route, try and
better my previous time on the climb.
So there I was, back to
battling gravity and that headwind, mind now swirling with thoughts
of the glory I'd derive from smashing my old “record”. Each time
my legs politely demanded a lower gear I was up and out the saddle,
forcing the tempo a little higher, turning myself inside out, and all
for the sake of Strava.
Oh dear, what a sucker.
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