Estimating Distances for Walking/Jogging?
#1
FitDay Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Alexandria, Virginia
Posts: 146
Estimating Distances for Walking/Jogging?
How do you figure out how many miles you've walked or ran in order to log your progress?
I'm having difficulty with this and I always have to guess, or at least estimate time, but then I can never tell how fast the pace is which I'm going. I don't have access to any sweet gadgets to help me, so anyone know any tricks? I try to carry a watch with me to at least log time, but I'm never sure of distance in order to know which pace to put.
Any tips would be much appreciated. I just don't want to over or under log.
Thanks!
I'm having difficulty with this and I always have to guess, or at least estimate time, but then I can never tell how fast the pace is which I'm going. I don't have access to any sweet gadgets to help me, so anyone know any tricks? I try to carry a watch with me to at least log time, but I'm never sure of distance in order to know which pace to put.
Any tips would be much appreciated. I just don't want to over or under log.
Thanks!
#2
I see that you're locared in Turkey, so this may not work, but I usually use Google Maps to map out my route and calculate the mileage. You can easily manipulate the route and start/end points once you enter two addresses. Just divide the total mileage by the time you were out and about and voila -- you have a tracking method. For instance, if I biked to the local University campus and back along Summit Ave, I'll enter in my own address as the start point, the University as the end point (don't even need an address), drag the route off of Grand (the automatic map output) and onto Summit and then double the mileage listed in Google Maps (to reflect the "there" and "back").
There are also a variety of websites out there that allow you to create and share custom walking/running/biking/blading routes and fill in the details at certain points throughout (i.e. "overly friendly dog at such and such a corner -- make sure to cross the street if you want to keep your pace"). Some sites even allow you to upload photos of landmarks, views, etc. If you're tired of your own beaten path, you can check out routes that other folks in your area have uploaded or if you are visiting another city, you can find out where the "scenic route" is.
Hopefully that helps! Happy Trails!!
There are also a variety of websites out there that allow you to create and share custom walking/running/biking/blading routes and fill in the details at certain points throughout (i.e. "overly friendly dog at such and such a corner -- make sure to cross the street if you want to keep your pace"). Some sites even allow you to upload photos of landmarks, views, etc. If you're tired of your own beaten path, you can check out routes that other folks in your area have uploaded or if you are visiting another city, you can find out where the "scenic route" is.
Hopefully that helps! Happy Trails!!
#4
FitDay Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Alexandria, Virginia
Posts: 146
Wow I didn't realize that there were sites which allowed people to actually comment on the path. That's pretty cool ^_^ Thank you both for the pointers! All I need to do now is figure out the addresses in Turkish lol
#5
FitDay Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 67
I've got your answer!
How do you figure out how many miles you've walked or ran in order to log your progress?
I'm having difficulty with this and I always have to guess, or at least estimate time, but then I can never tell how fast the pace is which I'm going. I don't have access to any sweet gadgets to help me, so anyone know any tricks? I try to carry a watch with me to at least log time, but I'm never sure of distance in order to know which pace to put.
Any tips would be much appreciated. I just don't want to over or under log.
Thanks!
I'm having difficulty with this and I always have to guess, or at least estimate time, but then I can never tell how fast the pace is which I'm going. I don't have access to any sweet gadgets to help me, so anyone know any tricks? I try to carry a watch with me to at least log time, but I'm never sure of distance in order to know which pace to put.
Any tips would be much appreciated. I just don't want to over or under log.
Thanks!
Ok. You need a watch with a second hand. For sixty seconds you are going to count your steps. Pace along quickly. 110 steps per minute is 2.5 miles per hour. Get the rhythm going and keep the pace, which is not overly fast. If you can find a pedometer, getting 10,000 steps a day would insure that you're walking enough for sure.
#7
FitDay Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 1
Math
Crimpet-
Easy.
1 Just map out your walk or Run...solve for distance.
2 Wear a watch (any will do) and time your walk.
3 Check the time you start walking
4 Walk/Run
5 Check the time you finish walking/running
6 Math
If your run/walk is 5k. and you have completed in it 30 minutes...well then you walked/ran a 6 minute kilometer.
30minutes/5k=6minutes per kilometer
there you have it
try Runstoppable Running Log for mapping your run if google does not work as suggested.
Cheers!
Easy.
1 Just map out your walk or Run...solve for distance.
2 Wear a watch (any will do) and time your walk.
3 Check the time you start walking
4 Walk/Run
5 Check the time you finish walking/running
6 Math
If your run/walk is 5k. and you have completed in it 30 minutes...well then you walked/ran a 6 minute kilometer.
30minutes/5k=6minutes per kilometer
there you have it
try Runstoppable Running Log for mapping your run if google does not work as suggested.
Cheers!
Last edited by rchrdhzl; 03-27-2011 at 02:22 AM. Reason: typo
#10
Regards,
Michael
PS I assume you set your "stride" correctly in the pedometer? That can make a hugh difference in the distance it calculates.