Using Strava Segments for Club Mini Heads.


With all this automatic timing it means coaches no longer have to stand frozen on the river bank.

Strava not is designed for rowing but does support it as well. It is a multi sport platform so can also support most of your cross training activities. It has is great to use as a training diary and its social functions can help motivate rowing club members.

How did Evesham Rowing Club come across Strava and start using it?

It had almost been two years since our last ‘Club Head’ race, a fun race just to bring different squads together to race within the club for a friendly bit of competition. Evesham Rowing club’s actual head race had also been cancelled for a number of years due to weather and bridge repairs. So in the 4 years I had been rowing I had only done a timed attempt at the head course one time. It always seemed that if we organised a specific day that certain squads could not take part or that the weather would intervene with a rise in the river level. It had become very difficult to make a club head happen.

We wanted a way to record times over our 4 kilometre head course on the River Avon that did not require timers and significant organising. Also it would be great if we could fit these race pace pieces into everyone’s timetable. The only way this could really be done within the club would be to record pieces on different days throughout a month and accumulate the information.

It was in discussion about having a regular monthly club head race to an avid cyclist at my club that ‘Strava Segments’ were mentioned. RowApp and CrewNerd offer GPS recording of rowing courses and were looked at. Strava having user numbers in the millions has developed into a very easy to use system. Strava offered an easy function for recording the timed pieces and with the basic free app having all the functions to do this it made it the most affordable way to automatically record timed pieces.

With the phone app installed all one has to do is start a workout when on dry land and place your phone safely into a dry bag (rock the boat sell these) and then secure the bag within your boat. When you finish your row and are back on dry land you can remove your phone and stop the workout. If you have rowed over the GPS start and finish line of the segment your time for the club head piece is then recorded. You can then name your workout and put details of the type of boat you are in 1x,2x,4x etc. and who was in the crew in the description.

Strava records all the times for each segment in leader boards. (See the one for our head course – https://www.strava.com/segments/10350937) These can be sorted by certain dates so it is very fast to see who has set the fastest time within a set period. I really do like the fact that starting in September 2015 that the club will now have a historical record of how fast crews have gone week in week out along certain parts of the river. Something that perhaps generations can look back at. Currently I am not happy that a crew from Bewdley took the current Strava course record when visiting for our head in November 2016, we will have to make sure that changes soon. Workouts can be made private but can also be shared with friends within the Strava social network. It is great to see, comment and give kudos to other rowers at your club, kudos being a reward for their effort.

A limitation of Strava over the rowing apps is that it is not designed for rowing. It can not record stroke rate simply by using sensors in your phone. There are functions it offers for cycling, running and swimming that it does not for rowing. It is focused on the triathlon community its functions work best for those sports. However workouts from rowing apps and the NK GPS 2.0 can be imported into Strava, then metrics such as stroke rate do show in the analysis information.

The ability to import into Strava is another function that allows for more people within the club to take part in the club head and Strava segments. You do not need to use your phone. A GPS watch or other GPS device such as the NK Speedcoach GPS 2.0 can also produce files which when uploaded to Strava again create the timed segments. Once the upload is complete Strava works out the segment times such as a head race course from the information recorded.

So we had a way of recording times over are head race distance. How accurate was it? With many measurements using different phones we have found that when two are in the same boat times only vary by 1 or 2 seconds. We have not seen any measurements that seem to suggest an injustice may take place for what are ‘fun’ head races to get a bit of inter club competition.

With fairly accurate timing we looked at ways to handicap boats so that a junior single could be compared to a men’s eight. This was found on another club’s website (Tyne Rowing Club’s club head excel document). Based on the results of many years of their own heads an adjustment table was created. It means that as well as having absolute times, we can also adjust times so boats of different sizes and abilities can race in a more competitive way. This is great again for fitting in this racing around training programs.

So how can Strava timing possibly work in other areas of rowing. It was a late in the day idea but we thought we would give it a go at our recent regatta. Timing systems are expensive and rarely used at provincial regattas where the start and finish are not permanent. We set up a segment that matched the regatta course for the 1k on the Saturday and the 500m on the Sunday. Unfortunately only crews from Evesham appear to have used Strava. But it was great being able to see how different boats compared and how times varied between rounds of the events.

It would be great to see Strava used as unofficial timing at Regattas as it does give good feedback to how fast your row actually was. River flows and conditions change but to have a comparison to other crews is always good. I have found what feels like a bad row might not actually have been that slow. I have set up Strava segments at a number of regattas such as Hereford, Ross on Wye, and also used it at head races at Gloucester. The use of Strava is growing, rowers that are also keen runners and cyclists or use these sports for cross training are posting a lot of their workouts to Strava.

The social functions of Strava mean you come across other rowers once you have rowed on the same waterways. You can then follow them and their training.

Looking to the future and how Strava can help rowers. Lower cost power meters such as the new Empower oarlock from NK and soon to be released OarZpot from SweetSpot will mean that platforms such as Strava can display this data in a way that it can be analysed and useful for your training. Being able to see how much power you were rowing with and how this affected your heart rate and where you were on the river all at the same time.

Strava also has developer add-ons, one such one that is great for organising club data is the Run Sync Swim, add more sport specific functions to Strava dashboard for further more in depth anaylsis – https://runsyncswim.com/


For in depth data analysis another developer add-on is “StravistiX for Strava“. Again this Google chrome add on can make Strava less running and cycling specific.

A recent safety feature that Strava has included is the ability to send a link via text/imessage to anyone so that they can track you during your on the water row. This has many practical applications for rowing, a coach being able to see where crews are when they are out of sight. Parents supporting at a head race can keep track of where they need to be to see the crews coming past that they wish to watch. Free for the viewer but Strava premium is needed to activate the service.


Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

What you need to start Rowing with Strava

STRAVA PHONE APP

You can record GPS workouts on the Strava phone app, most GPS sports watches, and even a GPS enabled stroke meters. Most brands of sports watches now offer automatic sync to Strava.

The Strava Phone Apps a free so a great way to track your workouts. The app offer in app purchases to go premium. The premium features are very much focused towards running and cycling. Strava premium does offer a tracking beacon that can be handy for parents or supporters to know where crews are during races.
Strava Running and Cycling iOS app on Apple iTunes store
Strava Running and Cycling Android app on Google Play store
Windows Phone – Not supported with official app, there are some unofficial apps that can upload to Strava.
(Make sure your phone is GPS enabled and running an OS that supports the Strava app)

Worried about using your phone for workouts, maybe have a look at some of the cheaper Android phones on Pay as You Go. They can be less than £30 and you do not need to top them up to use the GPS and Strava app, a WiFi connection will upload any activities.
Vodafone Smart First 7 Pay As You Go Smartphone (Locked to Vodafone Network) – Black – £20.00
Alcatel Pixi 4 (4) Android Smartphone on EE pay as you go – £39.99

A waterproof case or dry bag is normally great protection to keep your phone dry and secure whilst you row. One of the simplest waterproof cases I have found is this –
Malloom® Waterproof Pouch Case Cover For iPhone 6/6 Plus Cell Phones (White)

The Velcro strap wraps around a wing rigger quite nicely keeping the phone very secure in the boat.

As secondary protection you can first place your phone in a grip seal bag leave a bit of air in then it should stay dry and adds some buoyancy to it as well.

To record your heart rate information on the Strava app during your rows the following heart rate monitor is bluetooth enabled and so will transmit your heart rate information to your phone and the Strava app –
Polar H7 Bluetooth 4.0 Heart Rate Sensor Set for iPhone 4S/5 – Size M-XXL, Black

The Polar H7 heart rate sensor and strap is currently starts from £42.60

GPS WATCHES

There are a huge number of GPS watches, the wrist based optical HR sensors generally do not work well with rowing. Some such as the Garmin Vivoactive HR can measure your stroke rate via the watch. Below is a selection of watches.

Garmin Vivoactive HR GPS Smart Watch with Wrist Based Heart Rate – Regular WW, Black

The Garmin Vivoactive HR currently £182.08 it can measure your stroke rate. You would need a chest strap for accurate heart rate whilst rowing. Tom at Rowingmusings has done a great review of the watch and how it works for rowers.

Polar M400 GPS Watch – With Heart Rate Monitor, Blue

The Polar M400 currently £119.00 including a Bluetooth H7 heart rate strap.

Tom Tom Runner 3 GPS Running Watch – Large Strap, Black/Green

The Tom Tom Runner 3 GPS currently £102.35, there are a few options such as optical heart rate and built in MP3 player on this watch so make sure you have chosen the right spec.

All the watches record a workout, when finished they then sync with a phone or computer to upload your workout firstly to their own fitness platforms then it is quite simple to set it up so that the workouts automatically sync across to Strava.

SPEEDCOACH GPS

NK Speedcoach GPS 2.0 – getting information from this into Stava is a little more technical so a full write up will follow in the next week or so.


Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

Quintin Head 2017, 26 rowers recorded their race with Strava.

Quintin head Saturday 28th January 2017 with 250 eights registered to race, 235 crews finished that is 2115 rowers and coxes. Of all the people racing it seems so far 26 rowers have recorded their race with Strava. If anyone has recorded their race with a GPS device simply upload it to Strava and the segment times will be calculated.

A new 2017 segment has also been created – https://www.strava.com/segments/14065183
This may have been made after the event so anyone that saved their workouts quickly are currently not showing on this. To refresh your workout edit it and change it to a run, then save. Then edit it again and change it back to rowing and save. This should recalculate all the segments.

The ‘Quintin Head’ segment – https://www.strava.com/segments/8853377 doesn’t seem to have recorded anyone for the day. I wonder why?!

The ‘Quinton Head’ segment – https://www.strava.com/segments/11255934 which appears to have been around since 2014 has recorded 23 rowers on Saturday. The segment is just slightly short as comparing known times from the information I have it has for example recorded 13:02 where as the crew got 13:31.8 in official timing.

The previously mentioned recently added ‘Quintin Head 2017‘ segment looks to be a great segment. It has been set up very well, having been set up after the event the person has probably looked at their time and then tweaked the segment until it recorded a time that was the same. Looking again at the know crew the Strava segment has recorded 13:32 with the official time being 13:31.8. The ‘Quintin Head 2017‘ segment was showing up on  workouts as hidden, you won’t be able to see this hidden segment in the phone app but you can when you view your workout on the PC. If you then ‘Unhide’ it, it will then also show in the app.

quintin-head-results

If my guess of the above 13:32SS to 13:31.8official is confirmed this does show that Strava can be fairly accurate. I am assuming Dave Bell (13:20) was in the Molesey Elite 8+ that recorded 13:22.2. Having a Strava segment set up for an official race such as Quintin Head just adds an little bit of fun as it lets people compare aspects of their row against others. The heart rate’s are an interesting quirk to look at, this is the average heart rate recorded over the length of the segment.

In mini club heads and some seat racing Strava segments can give enough accuracy to be very useful.

It was great seeing Quintin Head workouts popping up on the ‘Recent Activity feed‘ of the ‘StravaRow‘ Strava club. I am sure there is a way of using the social side of Strava in a very positive way for the rowing community.

Polar H7 Bluetooth 4.0 Heart Rate Sensor Set for iPhone 4S/5 – Size M-XXL, Black – £42.60
Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

Naming a Rowing Head/Regatta Strava segment, event organisers listen up!!

quiton-course-small

So after seeing the spelling of ‘Quintin Head’ Strava segment as ‘Quinton Course’ an idea has sprung into my head. It actually comes from how Hamish Bond from the Kiwi Pair has named himself on Strava, ‘Hamish Bond – Velo Ronny’s Bicycle Store‘ a great shout out to his equipment/team sponsor. You can even see him stop off there on some of his rides.
(edit – I have now found a ‘Quintin Head‘ strava segment as well.)

This may or may not work with a Segment Name?!
‘HoRR 2017 – ‘Insert Sponsor Here’ – Official Strava Segment

segment-sponsorship
Example from me playing with the Evesham Senior Head Strava Segment.

So the question is what will an event sponsor pay for the official Strava Segment name? Maybe for now it could be a company that helps an event run. I am sure the London Heads can drum up some real cash for the privilege of the Strava Segment sponsorship. Maybe a local pub that is great for a post race pint / meal.

Rowing is quite an honest sport and so you would not expect the name of official Strava segments to be abused too much  with rogue duplicate segments (fingers crossed). I do not know how Strava manage this with segments from the Tour de France. It is however something that rowing could ask Strava for in the future if we ever reach enough users and uploads. Possibly event organisers may be able to get full control with extra sponsorship features for head race and regatta courses.

If events let me know on Twitter @StravaRow what their official Strava Segment is and its sponsor I will happily promote it.

How to set up a rowing head/regatta course Strava Segment.


Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

When will we get the first ‘pro’ Strava rower?

Expanding the number of rowers recording and uploading rows to Strava to get the  platform developed to be more rowing friendly. This will also build a user base, it is a future media for athletes to engage with their fans, so there will need to be fans using it. Yes Twitter, Facebook and Instagram are great but to share workouts and so to give your fans an insight into how a professional athlete trains there is no better place than Strava!

A great example of this is Strava’s most followed athlete of 2016 – Laurens ten Dam, a dutch Professional Cyclist that rides for Giant-Alpecin

laurens-ten-dam
As you can see he currently has over 95000 followers on Strava. A great number I am sure his listed sponsors are very happy! Strava lists equipment being used and lets users upload photo’s to each workout so it is becoming a great advertising medium.

So coming to rowing and I believe (correct me if I am wrong) the most followed rower is New Zealand pair legend Hamish Bond it is easy to see how he has managed to clock up so many followers with his fantastic performances on a bike recently.

This is where I come to the blog title the difference between these two athletes in their Strava URL’s –
Hamish Bond – https://www.strava.com/athletes/4065286
Laurens ten Dam – https://www.strava.com/pros/186522
Laurens seems to have got an upgrade from ‘athletes’ to ‘pros’ could Hamish Bond be the first rower (although currently cycling) to become a Strava Pro athlete?  How many Olympic golds do you need for Strava to upgrade your URL?

It seems some of the GB rowing lot have dipped their toes in the water with Strava, a South African training camp it seems, I believe they were sent out into the bush on mountain bikes. Now the GB rowers have contracts that stop them from disclosing their training programs. Wouldn’t it be great for them and fans if we could see just one of their work outs each day, preferably a row shared to their followers on Strava, never going to happen?!

So if current GB rowers are out of the question how about some that have just retired, would there be interest from fans to follow their workouts or will their once incredibly intense lifesytles be far more sedate? Alex Gregory’s 8hour that one could follow on twitter would have got a large number of Kudos on Strava I am sure.

Well lets wait and see who will be the first Strava Pro Rower?

Ben Smith from the 401 Challenge recorded a lot of his 401 marathons on Strava what he achieved and did was out right awesome. I believe he almost topped the most distance run on Strava in 2016. Somehow someone beat him to the number one slot. His 2500+ Strava followers will have helped him raise the incredible amount of money that was in excess of £310,000.


Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

How to create a Strava segment for Rowing.

Creating a segment is quite simple. Firstly you must record a GPS track of where your segment will be. So if you row up and down the river on the correct side you will then have a track of this recorded in the workout. Make sure you save your workout in Strava as  ‘Rowing’, cycling and running on water is very difficult.

Below is a video of how to set up segments on a road with cycling. It is exactly the same process to set up an on the water segment for rowing.

There are plenty more YouTube videos of the process and there is further support on the Strava website here

If your segment needs adapting you can edit it and move the start or finish points forward or back and then save. This comes in handy for regattas that do not have stake boats. I have sometimes needed to move the start position forward a few strokes so that timing starts in the same place for all crews.

Ross-On-Wye regatta last year I set up a segment for the course . I found an eight from another club also recording Strava workouts on the day which meant the difference in the length of the boats needed the start moving a little.

When setting the segment up rowing down the very middle of two lanes means that the segment will time for both lanes. I have found that segments are quite wide, probably at least 3 lanes of racing if not more. If anyone has tested it on multi lane it would be interesting to know if one segment can do six lanes or more?

You just have to be careful not to row over the start line in the direction you will eventually travel otherwise you can trigger the start of the segment prematurely. If this does happen you can then crop your Strava workout to get rid of the false start.

The segment is normally just a little shorter than the actual course because of having to have the start line far enough away from the where boats are starting to avoid false starts.

I shall add any further tips here at a later date.


Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

What is a Strava Segment and how can it be used in rowing?

A Strava segment is basically a GPS course with a start and finish line that then automatically times you every time you pass over it. The great thing with this and rowing is that you can start and stop the Strava app on your phone on dry land. Start the app, make sure it is recording and then stowaway your phone in a dry bag somewhere safe in the boat. Complete your row and then stop the recording and save your workout as ‘ROWING’ it then automatically works out all the timing for any segments you have rowed through. If you have a GPS enabled watch most can record your outing then can automatically sync your row to Strava, again segment times are then calculated by Strava.

The Big London Heads seem to be the most popular rowing specific Strava segments. There is the shorter ‘Pairs Head‘ Strava Segment and also a ‘HORR‘ Strava Segment. Some of the recordings are amongst the oldest on Strava for rowing, so people have been using these for some time.

The great thing with the segments is that they create leader boards these can be searched by all different parameters. You can also compare how you had previously done so can see differences in speed.

horr-leader-board

Chris Boddy is currently the fastest along the 6.7km ‘HORR‘ Strava Segment will anyone go faster this year at @EightsHead or @WEHORR?

Dry Bags for phone protection from Rock the Boat

Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black – £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00

StravaRow has launched, what is it all about?

untitled-drawing
StravaRow has been set up to try and get Strava.com to focus development towards rowing services. If we can increase the number of rowing workouts recorded or uploaded it will help shine a light on rowing and hopefully get some rowing specific functions on Strava.

With the release of the NK Empower Oarlock and with other rowing power meters to follow, there will be a ever growing presence of rowers on Strava processing the ever increasing amount of data they get.

Strava is a fast growing sport social media platform. It has focused on the triathlon sports of running, cycling and swimming, but it is a multi sport platform and does let you save workouts as ‘rowing’ and even has an option for indoor rowing. When on the water rows are saved as ‘rowing’ it allows you to then make use of Strava segments for timing pieces, head race and regatta courses.

How it might work in the future it could encourage rowers to tour rowing clubs to complete head/regatta course Strava segments. Strava segments could offer an informal form of head racing. A bit like how Park runners like to travel around the different park runs. If clubs are willing to allow day visitors to row their Strava segments it would offer rowers a chance to travel at their convenience to experience other waterways.

Strava segments are great for ‘unofficial’ timing at river regattas in the UK. They cost nothing to set up and run, they can give a fairly accurate time to any crew taking part in a regatta race. If most racers used Strava at a regatta you could then have a fastest crew of the day prize.

Tweet us @StravaRow any of your Strava workouts with rowing course segments. We also have a Strava Club set up where people can share workouts and there is a great discussion page – https://www.strava.com/clubs/StravaRow

The @StravaRow twitter account and this blog is unofficial and not part of, or run by Strava in any way. We are just rowers that are enthusiastic about how the rowing community could use Strava to the benefit of the sport.

You may notice links from this blog to Amazon, this will with reader support hopefully help create @StravaRow prizes. Fastest Strava men and womens time at events, Highest/Lowest average heart rate. Hopefully with enough people clicking from this site prizes may become a reality.

Concept2 Model D Indoor Rower with PM5 – Black
– £860.00
Concept2 Model E Indoor Rower with PM5 – Grey – £1060.00