Strava
OS: iOS, Android
Cost: Free, $6 monthly subscription, $59 annual subscription
If you haven’t heard of Strava before, then… well, I don’t really know what to follow that up with. Strava is the definitive ride tracking and cycling social media network that people either love, or love to hate. Use Strava to just track your rides and your stats, or feel free to obsess over the leaderboards and suffer scores. Just don’t get too obsessed.
Also, if you haven’t heard, you can now connect Strava to Singletracks via Tracker, to easily share your ride maps, check-in at trails automatically, and keep track of which trails you’ve ridden.
Strava is constantly updating their app with new and improved features, and over the years it has only gotten better. The entire Singletracks staff uses Strava on a near-daily basis–it’s just that good.
-Greg Heil
14 Comments
Jul 15, 2014
Mar 29, 2016
Mar 13, 2014
Mar 25, 2018
Mar 31, 2016
May 8, 2014
EveryTrail is a good app for sharing with others. It also has the basic stats and some graphs, but is also web based so you can view a route before you ride it - seeing the speed and altitude at each point, and if you like to take pics while you ride, the photo will show at the appropriate place on the map. I've found the GPS to be not as reliable as MyTracks, but it's still good.
Last, I use a very simple weather radar called Rainy Days to see how the weather is looking. It's very accurate and with the exception of those pop-up storms that you can't predict easily, it's extremely reliable. I always check Rainy Days before I go ride and have completed many great rides when our weather forecasters said it would rain all day.
Jul 19, 2014
Mar 13, 2014
Apr 1, 2016
Mar 28, 2016
Mar 15, 2018
Jun 5, 2016
I find TrailForks uses a lot less battery. In the backcountry, that can be a big factor.
May 8, 2014
Mar 31, 2016