So, I normally find myself at ease with most forms of electronic gear, but not when it comes to my Garmin.  I love it and all the minute, super-detailed information it records during every run (elevation gain? total time vs moving time?), but I'm still fumbling around with it most of the time.  This becomes painfully obvious after examining the three weeks' worth of workout data I just uploaded from the watch.

Example 1:  Turn off device when not in use. 

According to Garmin, I did 157.34 miles on September 11th.  It's true I covered that distance….on Continental Flight 1841.  I was heading to Austin, and the Garmin must have gotten turned on inside my bag and recorded the flight.  Ok, maybe this example isn't really about me not being at ease with the Garmin….but it's just one of a collection of weird workout entries Garmin is reporting.  

What doesn't make sense is that it took me 12:12 hours (moving time) to get to Austin at a 4:39 pace.  Huh?  And shouldn't the pace be waaay faster in a plane?  It's also reporting an average heart rate of 94 bpm.  I definitely wasn't wearing my heart rate monitor on the plane, so where did the hr data come from? 

Example 2: Lap vs Start/Stop

I keep mixing up the "Lap" and "Start/Stop" buttons. If I want to mark a lap during a run, I tend to hit "Start/Stop" instead of "Lap" - which means the Garmin stops recording.   I usually turn the Garmin back on, but this on/off creates multiple portions of my runs that get recorded as separate workouts.  Great.

The squiggly lines in the map above illustrates my button confusion.  It's from Sept 22nd, when I ran the Cross Country Relay (race report to come).  The squiggly lines are me wandering around the Strider Tent, starting line and relay hand-off BEFORE I do my relay portion. ha.

Example 3: Start/Stop vs stop vs Reset

Let's take things another step forward (or backwards, I suppose).  This map looks like a single long run, but it's actually half of my Cross Country Relay run combined with half of a SMARTie workout.  Great. 

The green bubble shows where I started my leg of the Relay (yes, I hit "Start" again).  You can see where I followed the trail (red line) to the 1 mile turnaround at Studemont…..then it looks like I made a really sharp turn and ran the 2nd mile in a straight line.  What actually happened was that I wanted to hit "Lap" at the turnaround…..but I hit "Stop" instead and the Garmin stopped recording.  I didn't realize it until just before the 1.5 mile mark, when I glanced down at the Garmin and noticed that the mileage wasn't changing.  Yeah, I know I'm slow but not THAT slow.   That's when I realized I had hit STOP at the turnaround.  I hit START, but the Garmin wouldn't start up again.    So, the straight line back to the green bubble is just the GPS connecting the two points.  

The red line between the green and red bubbles show that turning OFF the unit isn't enough.  You have to reset the timer before the next workout….otherwise, Garmin will think you're continuing the workout 3 days later.  

There were more examples in my Garmin log, but I thought these were the funniest.  What would be really funny is if I wore the Garmin and heart rate monitor for a day to see what kind of mileage I put in over a 24 hour period.  What would be my average pace walking through the office?  Would it show my heart rate dropping as I fall asleep during endless meetings?  Would the maps show me trying to avoid annoying people and Council members?   I'd just have to remember to hit START at the right time.  

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