The Running Thread --2025

Is anyone else having issues with Garmin treadmill runs not syncing with Strava? I'm considering not bothering with Strava anymore, but all my shoes are currently tracked through Strava. I tried adding them to Garmin, but short of going back and editing every run, I can't add existing milage to the shoes. Does anyone know of a workaround for that?
 
Is anyone else having issues with Garmin treadmill runs not syncing with Strava? I'm considering not bothering with Strava anymore, but all my shoes are currently tracked through Strava. I tried adding them to Garmin, but short of going back and editing every run, I can't add existing milage to the shoes. Does anyone know of a workaround for that?
If you're tracking the shoes so that when you hit X mileage, you know to retire the shoes: when you put the shoe in Garmin, just change the "max distance" for the shoe to be X - whatever mileage the shoe had on Strava. Then you'll have your "retirement distance" for that shoe in Garmin.

Then when you get new shoes, just start them out in Garmin, and eventually they'll all be there.
 

Is anyone else having issues with Garmin treadmill runs not syncing with Strava? I'm considering not bothering with Strava anymore, but all my shoes are currently tracked through Strava. I tried adding them to Garmin, but short of going back and editing every run, I can't add existing milage to the shoes. Does anyone know of a workaround for that?

If you're tracking the shoes so that when you hit X mileage, you know to retire the shoes: when you put the shoe in Garmin, just change the "max distance" for the shoe to be X - whatever mileage the shoe had on Strava. Then you'll have your "retirement distance" for that shoe in Garmin.

Then when you get new shoes, just start them out in Garmin, and eventually they'll all be there.

@avondale is right on the mark here. The easiest way to do it is to edit the max distance for each pair of shoes. When I run longer ultras, I'll sometimes use 3 or 4 pairs of shoes in a single race, but if you add them to the run in Garmin, it adds the total mileage to each pair. To accommodate for that, I'll just add one pair to the run and edit its maximum mileage up by the amount run in the other shoes. For the other shoes, I'll subtract the mileage run in each pair from their maximum mileage, so everything nets out correctly.
 
Is anyone else having issues with Garmin treadmill runs not syncing with Strava? I'm considering not bothering with Strava anymore, but all my shoes are currently tracked through Strava. I tried adding them to Garmin, but short of going back and editing every run, I can't add existing milage to the shoes. Does anyone know of a workaround for that?
I don’t use strava so if it’s ongoing I don’t know, but if you mean just today there was a pretty big outage affecting them that should be fixed. I use a simple app to manually track my shoes and put in miles every run myself because I don’t trust any app to sync properly every time.
 
Is anyone else having issues with Garmin treadmill runs not syncing with Strava? I'm considering not bothering with Strava anymore, but all my shoes are currently tracked through Strava. I tried adding them to Garmin, but short of going back and editing every run, I can't add existing milage to the shoes. Does anyone know of a workaround for that?

Strava is currently suing Garmin for patent infringement, and is demanding that Garmin cease selling all of their fitness/outdoor watches, as well as cycling computers, and to remove a bunch of feature on Garmin Connect. Your issues could be related.
 
If you're tracking the shoes so that when you hit X mileage, you know to retire the shoes: when you put the shoe in Garmin, just change the "max distance" for the shoe to be X - whatever mileage the shoe had on Strava. Then you'll have your "retirement distance" for that shoe in Garmin.

Then when you get new shoes, just start them out in Garmin, and eventually they'll all be there.

@avondale is right on the mark here. The easiest way to do it is to edit the max distance for each pair of shoes. When I run longer ultras, I'll sometimes use 3 or 4 pairs of shoes in a single race, but if you add them to the run in Garmin, it adds the total mileage to each pair. To accommodate for that, I'll just add one pair to the run and edit its maximum mileage up by the amount run in the other shoes. For the other shoes, I'll subtract the mileage run in each pair from their maximum mileage, so everything nets out correctly.
It's not so much to track it so I know when I retire, since I retire my shoes by feel rather than a set number of miles. It's more so that I know once I retire a shoe, how many miles it has. I could just start using Garmin and then when it comes time to retire the shoes, manually add the milage from Garmin and Strava.

Strava is currently suing Garmin for patent infringement, and is demanding that Garmin cease selling all of their fitness/outdoor watches, as well as cycling computers, and to remove a bunch of feature on Garmin Connect. Your issues could be related.
I had heard about that but honestly don't know much about it. My outdoor runs have so far been syncing properly, it was just the treadmill ones, so I wonder if you're right.
 
Strava is currently suing Garmin for patent infringement, and is demanding that Garmin cease selling all of their fitness/outdoor watches, as well as cycling computers, and to remove a bunch of feature on Garmin Connect. Your issues could be related.
Suit was voluntarily dismissed by Strava so guessing that wasn’t part of it.
 
Random question, but has anyone ever re-trained their running striking type from going to a heel striker to more fore-foot? I am a heel striker and yesterday on my run I tried to play around with striking more towards the ball of my foot. I am convinced that a lot of my hamstring cramps has to come from my heel striking. If you have gone from heel striker to fore foot, any tips or drills you did to change?
 
Random question, but has anyone ever re-trained their running striking type from going to a heel striker to more fore-foot? I am a heel striker and yesterday on my run I tried to play around with striking more towards the ball of my foot. I am convinced that a lot of my hamstring cramps has to come from my heel striking. If you have gone from heel striker to fore foot, any tips or drills you did to change?
I did.

Barefoot running made all of the difference in the world. I might suggest trying it on grass, if you have some available, and start slowly (your calves will feel it).

I run in shoes now, typically something with a very low drop, but I'e had few to no issues in the last 10 years or so since making the change.

There are a number of books and websites that mention the feelings, like "falling forward" as opposed to really lunging out there, but in reality, the running barefoot is what made the difference. I just wasn't going to be heel striking once I took my shoes off.
 
Random question, but has anyone ever re-trained their running striking type from going to a heel striker to more fore-foot? I am a heel striker and yesterday on my run I tried to play around with striking more towards the ball of my foot. I am convinced that a lot of my hamstring cramps has to come from my heel striking. If you have gone from heel striker to fore foot, any tips or drills you did to change?
I did! I used to get extremely painful stabbing calf cramps at anything over maybe 18 miles. I decided it was from heel striking and somehow trained myself not to. One tip is to kind of lean forward when you're running... It's important not to just bend at the waist but lean from the ankles if that makes sense. Kind of imagine you are pushing a heavy shopping cart up a hill? There are a lot of YouTube videos showing what I mean:
Sage Canaday talks about this a lot.

I also lost a lot of weight over that time I shifted my strike, so I don't really know whether it was the weight loss or the strike change or some combination, but I have never had those calf cramps again, and I had had them for years prior.
 





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