Guest Article: An Open Letter

Dear readers, let us take a break from the almighty Tour for a few minutes. I am the least qualified Velominatus to introduce an open letter concerning Strava as I’m too shame-based to post my rides to Strava. I have a Garmin on the bike for no particular reason, ok, maybe to occasionally see how fast I’m descending or to know the grade of the climb I’m presently suffering on. At some point it will ask me what should it do with all these weak-ass rides taking up Garmin memory. Oye.

@Artie has authored this open letter (our first?) and like the Rules themselves, @Artie is just trying to improve our cycling experience in this digital world. Thanks @Artie

VLVV, Gianni

Dear Keepers of the Cog and Curators of the Rules,

The Tour de France this year has had a few memorable moments. Cavendish moving behind only Merkx in Stage victories, Froome’s new descending style, and of course the bike-less sprint up Ventoux come to mind. But there has also been a subtler addition to my viewing this year. More and more cyclists in the peloton have been sharing their ride data on Strava. For example, scrolling down my Strava feed after a late afternoon ride, I now notice Greg Henderson’s data, and see that yesterday he was in fact descending like a madman, just as Rule #85 and Rule #93 implore him to do. This supplement to my Tour Digest bridges to a theme my friends and I have often discussed and I thought it time to share our thoughts.

Our over-connected world has reached a point, where the dubitability of any cycling accomplishment has become (almost) strictly correlated with that said accomplishment appearing on Strava. Did you climb Sa Calobra during an early spring training camp? Did you reach the summit of Galibier before your best friend? Did your race up Alpe d’Huez with such a murderous intent that locals began to talk about the ghost of Pantani that appeared one late August afternoon? Perhaps… but without a Strava log to prove it, who knows! But, it is not the virtues or vices of using Strava that I wish to comment on; many people use it and some don’t. Instead it is a much more mundane aspect of the app that has been the subject to our diliberations, i.e. the naming of our tours.

The default name Strava gives each activity are more than boring; “Morning Ride,” “Afternoon Ride,” or “Evening Ride.” “Morning Ride” sounds like a Monday morning commute to work. “Afternoon ride” is what I do with my girlfriend, when she wants to go on a picnic in the park across town. “Evening ride” is an excursion with my Holland Bike to the bar down the street and to the left. The blandness of these names do absolutely no justice to a properly ridden tour. If you keep your bike perfectly matched, kit in shape, and tan lines razor sharp, is putting at least a little creativity into your digital cycling life too much to ask?

I say that a proper tour deserves a proper name, and a proper name should – like all things – be casually deliberate. A quick comment about the ride would be a basic but satisfactory name, e.g. “Hard push up to Chamonix”. If you are racing, the name of the event would be fine; “Paris-Roubaix” is far superior to the default.  A more sophisticated name would be that of the song you started to whistle while pushing through the most difficult bits of a climb. Such a title has a lasting effect. Each time those you rode with heard the song, they would be reminded of the pressure their legs felt as you climbed, and doubt would be further seeded into the moral.

I wish to avoid a long digression into the art of naming, although the horizon is large and well worth exploring. But, I do wish to assert that a cyclist who has gone digital should maintain his digital cycling life as he does his real life. Calling an afternoon conquering cobbles on your way back to Liege “Afternoon Ride” is a digital dirty chain; it is unacceptable, but luckily easy to fix.

Yours Kindly,

Arturo

Hamburg, Germany

Artie

View Comments

  • Couldn't agree more.  My Strava rides tend toward alliteration (e.g. "Scorching Sunday Spin", which also allows me to invoke rule #9).  Laurens ten Dam does a particularly good job in the peloton - "Hard day again. But hey, I wanted to be a cyclist" and other such insights.

    So maybe a revision of the Strava requirement is in order.  "Strava, with a good ride name, or it doesn't count" perchance?

  • The only rides that get left with a default name are my round town and commuting rides, which are all tagged Private anyway so it's only me that sees them. The only trace to the outside world is the tick, tick tick of accumulated distance.

    Went touring in Belgium and the Netherlands. Went for naming each day's ride "Stage 1" etc.

  • I'm  such a stud a climb up ventoux or a descent down the Galibier is just an " afternoon ride", nothing special

  • I too agree, although for no good reason I start all of mine with the date. Commuted to work this morning and the main event of the 28km ride made it into the title "2016.07.22 To Work and Saw A Hare!". Boo hiss to the bland, Strava given titles.

  • Yes. Although I think there's a bell curve.

    If you're in the left tail - e.g. a mundane ride flagged as a commute, OK to go with the default.

    And if it's in the right tail - e.g. Stage 19 of the 2016 Tour when you gave your bike to your mate and flogged in 6 minutes later - then the default name is fine - Casually Deliberate indeed.

    But otherwise, yes. Name that ride.

  • I have been known to follow themes now an again say using song titles.  So for a random long ride hunting out the lanes could be "Here, there and everywhere" or maybe "The Long and Winding Road".  A morning ride when the sun is breaking through "Here comes the Sun".  Must get back to those themes as I tend to while away my brain thinking of a suitable link which all helps take the mind of the manic world outside.

  • I don't have a smart phone or do Strava. At some point I'll likely have to get the former, but the latter holds no interest.

    As for that headset cap? "Away tae fuck" as they say in Glasgow. All my rides "happen" because I ride them.

  • Right on cue - Michael Valgren of Tinkoff with a "Lunch Ride", stage 19...

  • I've recorded 439 rides on Strava so far and none of them has those boring captions, not that I'm so original or witty, but my rides are my rides and I love them all.

  • Depends on the spin I suppose. Some are mundane, not worthy of any real though apart from a midpoint destination or local hill.

    But some rides are ripe something more eye-catching."30mph x pothole = double puncture + sore balls" springs to mind from last year...

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