![]() Plus one or two guys isn’t stuck up front bc they are they are the only one that knows where we are going. There’s no way I could memorize these rides beforehand. It’s a really nice thing to have in group rides, every club I ride with sends one out so everyone is in sync, even if you just look at it before the ride. Strava is easy to download on the garmin but I’ve never created one in strava Ride with gps doesn’t always download for some people with garmins from their iphones to connect. I mostly use garmin connect but it has its issues. I live in a very spread out very large city and weekend rides are often to other cities and in town rides can have a lot of turns I supposed they've all changed several times over by now.It’s a really nice thing to have in group rides, every club I ride with sends one out so everyone is in sync, even if you just look at it before the ride. Strava and other places just never quite were easy to use or I more easily wound up with a botched route on my device. It wastes my time to make them.īut when I've made them, I used RWGPS. Never really understood the need for routes. Learn more at RideWithGPS.I know were I'm going. Bikepacking Colletive Members can save 20% off an annual Ride With GPS Basic or Premium account find that under Member Benefits in the member login area. For more information on plans and features, visit The heatmap is viewable for the general public with no account necessary and available as an overlay in the mobile and web route planners for Basic and Premium members. User Availability: The heatmap is viewable to the general public, accessible to all Ride with GPS members in the mobile app recording screen, and available as an overlay in the mobile route planner for Basic members and in the web route planner for Premium members.A Ride with GPS account is not needed to view the heatmap. Publicly Viewable: The Ride with GPS Heatmap is publicly viewable at /heatmap.Weekly Updates: Updates to the heatmap will be made weekly so that the data included is continually growing and accurate.Data-Driven: The heatmap was developed using the two most recent years of data from the publicly-logged trips of our users.Users may opt-out at any time through their privacy settings. All user-created privacy zones are respected and not included in the ride data, and start & end points of trips are also automatically designated as privacy zones. User Privacy Considerations: Only publicly-logged rides from public users are included.Recording Screen Overlay: The heatmap is viewable as an overlay in the ride recording screen of our iOS and Android mobile apps for all Ride with GPS members.It overlays in the web and mobile route planners for uninterrupted ease of use. Route Planner Integration: The heatmap was designed with route planning in mind.Mobile Access: The heatmap is fully integrated into the Ride with GPS iOS and Android mobile apps, so that it is accessible in the palm of your hand.Here are the full specs from RideWithGPS: ![]() Technically, you can view the heatmap alongside the elevation profile, while splitting and combining segments, color-coding segments, and performing most other functions. The heatmap overlay is available on both the web and mobile route planner maps with no need to toggle back and forth between maps as users create routes. Essentially, it adds another helpful resource when identifying and choosing tracks prior to on-the-ground recon. This alternative view provides yet another way of checking which trails and gravel roads are preferred by cyclists, or verifying if questionable tracks are in fact bike-accessible. In the past, I’ve regularly flipped over to Strava’s heatmap when planning bikepacking routes. For those unaware, heatmaps use synced ride data from cyclists’ GPS devices to highlight which trails are more ridden and used, so “hot” routes are highlighted with thicker and darker lines. Today, the Portland, Oregon-based company added a heatmap to the app’s arsenal. ![]() But, there’s always room for improvement-particularly through the addition of new map types that add to its suite of useful layers. In my opinion, Ride with GPS is the best software in its class for planning bikepacking routes. RideWithGPS just announced its all new mobile and web-compatible heatmap layer, offering yet another helpful map for planning new routes… ![]()
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