Not silly, I love my piece of plasticGreat information! I did not get a note, and was sad to have missed out. And then felt silly to be disappointed about a piece of plastic.

Not silly, I love my piece of plasticGreat information! I did not get a note, and was sad to have missed out. And then felt silly to be disappointed about a piece of plastic.
ATTQOTD: Do we have to actually race them - like for time? If so, my answer is none of them.QOTD: Lets play a little hypothetical game for todays question. You can only run official races for any combination of two for the following distances: 5k, 10k, 10 Miles, Half Marathon, and Marathon. Which two do you pick and why?
QOTD: Lets play a little hypothetical game for todays question. You can only run official races for any combination of two for the following distances: 5k, 10k, 10 Miles, Half Marathon, and Marathon. Which two do you pick and why?
Hi all, my goal is to run Dopey in 2020 and my plan is to lock in a couple of half marathons throughout the year in 2019. I'd like to train as constructively as possible and perhaps try out the Galloway interval training. I was wondering if anyone has done this interval training and what devices they use for it? I am thinking of getting a GPS running watch and wonder if it will help me with the training? If so, what watch should I get? Anyone has any ideas or suggestions?
That is very helpful, thank you!Jeff Galloway has a GPS/Watches page in his shop so I would assume all the devices sold there have the ability to set intervals but there are a few people here that use his method and can probably confirm.
ETA: Two things, the 230/235 has this feature and a how-to can be found here.
If you go to Garmin's site and look at the watches there is a feature under "Training, Running and Analysis Features" called "Interval training" that is what you most likely need. Select the watches you are interested in, select the compare feature, and look for which watches have that feature.
Yes you should!ATTQOTD: 10k and 10 miler. Only because I've run close to 10 miles in training runs and know I could do it. I'm back and forth with signing up for a half. I want to, I think I can do it if I train for it, but it scares me. Which is probably why I should just sign up for it for W&D next year.
Any issues with the watch performance when you get into higher miles?
I do run/walk intervals but don't use a watch. I use the iSmoothRun app on my iPhone and love it! I can program any intervals I want and it syncs with my music library/playlists, I set up alerts for time/distance/time for nutrition, and it records all the data I'm interested in knowing.Hi all, my goal is to run Dopey in 2020 and my plan is to lock in a couple of half marathons throughout the year in 2019. I'd like to train as constructively as possible and perhaps try out the Galloway interval training. I was wondering if anyone has done this interval training and what devices they use for it? I am thinking of getting a GPS running watch and wonder if it will help me with the training? If so, what watch should I get? Anyone has any ideas or suggestions?
ATTQOTD: Since I have yet to do a marathon, I will say Half Marathon and 10K. Both distances work well for me. 6-8 mile runs are my normal run distance when I am not training for a marathon so I am always ready to do a 10K or Half. The half is bit more challenging which I like.QOTD: Lets play a little hypothetical game for todays question. You can only run official races for any combination of two for the following distances: 5k, 10k, 10 Miles, Half Marathon, and Marathon. Which two do you pick and why?
I did 8 miles Saturday in 37 degree rain. One of the neighbors stopped to see if I needed help. We both ended up laughing because the unspoken, internal conversation was both of us agreeing that no sane person would be willingly doing this.
I am not sure if you can transfer info. I’m thinking not. It does track stats. I’m not sure on show mileage though.@DustyWA @rteetz @tidefan @IamTrike Thanks for replying about the Apple Watch 3. It sounds like it is the Nike Run Club app the issue. Unfortunately, I have everything tracked in NRC. If I switch to the native Workout app, can I transfer info from NRC or vice versa? Does the Workout app track your stats like miles run, average pace/heart rate, shoe mileage, etc?
Would something like RunGap do that?@DustyWA @rteetz @tidefan @IamTrike Thanks for replying about the Apple Watch 3. It sounds like it is the Nike Run Club app the issue. Unfortunately, I have everything tracked in NRC. If I switch to the native Workout app, can I transfer info from NRC or vice versa? Does the Workout app track your stats like miles run, average pace/heart rate, shoe mileage, etc?
ATTQOTD: I try to avoid the issue by limiting fluid intake before and during a race, and a preemptive planned stop so I can pick the venue. Even during a PR attempt, I'm going to make 1 stop during a half, and 2 during a full.
I did 8 miles Saturday in 37 degree rain. One of the neighbors stopped to see if I needed help. We both ended up laughing because the unspoken, internal conversation was both of us agreeing that no sane person would be willingly doing this.
QOTD: Lets play a little hypothetical game for todays question. You can only run official races for any combination of two for the following distances: 5k, 10k, 10 Miles, Half Marathon, and Marathon. Which two do you pick and why?
ATTQOTD: I'm going to go with Half and Marathon distances. My reason is I love the distance! I hate racing a 5k, I think they are one of the most difficult races to run. I like 10k and 10 milers but prefer the other distance. The 10 miler is a tempting choice though because its long enough and short enough all at the same time.
ATTQOTD: 10k and 10 miler. Only because I've run close to 10 miles in training runs and know I could do it. I'm back and forth with signing up for a half. I want to, I think I can do it if I train for it, but it scares me. Which is probably why I should just sign up for it for W&D next year.