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    Best way to add aid stations for a trail running race

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Suunto app - Questions & Feedback
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    • tazidenT Offline
      taziden Gold Members
      last edited by

      I’m running a 21k trail race next saturday and I’m wondering what is the best way to add aid stations to the watch via SA.
      Should I add them as POI or should I add them as waypoints on the route (gpx upload)?

      If I add them as POI and they’re not exactly on the route, will the ETA/ETE to the next POI/Waypoint work anyway ?

      S9PP

      babychaiB isaziI Brad_OlwinB 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • babychaiB Online
        babychai Silver Members @taziden
        last edited by babychai

        @taziden whether POI or waypoint you will received notification when within 100 meter distance range and also next POI/waypoint. ETA and ETE work excellency on Suunto watch

        Suunto Vertical Black Ruby (S/S)
        S̶u̶u̶n̶t̶o̶ ̶V̶e̶r̶t̶i̶c̶a̶l̶ ̶A̶l̶l̶ ̶B̶l̶a̶c̶k̶
        Suunto 9 Peak All Black
        Suunto Spartan Trainer Wrist HR (Black)

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        • isaziI Offline
          isazi Moderator @taziden
          last edited by

          @taziden I would have them as waypoints on the route

          Watch: Suunto Vertical Ti

          Blog: isazi's home

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          • Brad_OlwinB Offline
            Brad_Olwin Moderator @taziden
            last edited by

            @taziden I you add as POI the ETA/ETE will be a straight line, if on the route, it will be route line estimates. I would use a route with waypoints on the route.

            Vector/T6c/Ambit 3 Peak/S5 Copper/S3/S7 Ti/S9 baro Ti/S9P Ti/S9PP Ti/Vertical Ti/Race Ti/RaceS/Ocean/Wing

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            • A Offline
              aligigi Bronze Member
              last edited by

              I always import the race course GPX in SuuntoApp and then add the aid stations as waypoints. Also I set one of the data fields on my watch to show “Distance to next waypoint”. It works great. It also considers the end of the route a waypoint, so after you passed the last aid station it shows the distance to the finish.

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              • tazidenT Offline
                taziden Gold Members
                last edited by

                Awesome, I’m adding waypoints then. Thanks a lot to all of you!

                S9PP

                tazidenT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • tazidenT Offline
                  taziden Gold Members @taziden
                  last edited by

                  @taziden said in Best way to add aid stations for a trail running race:

                  Awesome, I’m adding waypoints then. Thanks a lot to all of you!

                  Worked perfectly, thanks again!

                  S9PP

                  isaziI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • isaziI Offline
                    isazi Moderator @taziden
                    last edited by

                    @taziden we are waiting for a race report 🙂

                    Watch: Suunto Vertical Ti

                    Blog: isazi's home

                    tazidenT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • tazidenT Offline
                      taziden Gold Members @isazi
                      last edited by taziden

                      Here it is.

                      Race: BK21 (21km, 1660D+)
                      Location: Bidarray, French Basque Country
                      Weather: ~20°C, not too cold, not too hot, cloudy, perfect.
                      https://maps.suunto.com/move/julien630171/64bbb33e6b988238e24447ff

                      Goals: finish in good health, enjoy the scenery
                      Outcome: put off course at the last time barrier for 3 minutes

                      This was my third trail running race ever (first one was in february). I chose it because a friend of mine lives nearby and that was a good excuse to visit and spend time outside in Basque Country.
                      Never done such a hard race, with a big ratio of 79m of elevation per km.
                      Didn’t train properly for elevation for the past weeks, because of plantar fasciitis.
                      So it was more of an adventure than a real race for me, with lots of unknown.

                      Great ambiance at the village, start is fast but I’m keeping up. All good. Then comes what will be the pattern for the rest of the race : steep and straight climbs. No switchbacks.
                      Talking with my basque friends afterwards, this seems to be a local characteristic. They don’t mess around when it’s about getting on top of a mountain, the locals go straight towards it, no matter the incline. My opinion: love it and hate it at the same time. No beating around the bush but when it’s your turn to climb up, oh boy.

                      First checkpoint/aid station, I arrived a bit early, all good (legs, nutrition, etc).
                      Then the first big descent, and I think I lost a lot of time there.
                      Second checkpoint/aid station, I arrived “on time”. All good.
                      Then the big climb, 600m of elevation in less than 3km, with a very steep (~60%) portion at the end, up a chimney towards the ridges of Iparla.
                      Another aid station was located half climb, and I spent too much time there as I found out once at the top of the chimney where the final checkpoint was located.
                      Helped a guy with cramps who stopped in the chimney then finished the climb.

                      There, the checkpoint volunteer stopped me on the ridge and put me off course, because I was 3 minutes late. Precious minutes I lost at the previous aid station and because, well, I was slow anyway.

                      I decided to skip the final push to the Iparla peak and descend directly to the arrival following the trail, without my bib.
                      It was hard to enjoy the beautiful scenery in such conditions but I was happy to get there, this chimney was really scaring me before the race, and I didn’t know if I was capable of facing +1500m of elevation in 13km. Turns out I was, just too slow.

                      I finished the race quite fresh and happy to come back to my friends healthy, in one piece.

                      On the Suunto front: gps took a long time to acquire a fix at the beginning, I lost a few hundred meters at the start of the race. I used the Climb S+ app, and my main display was 5 fields : distance, duration, distance to next waypoint, ETE to next waypoint and ETA to next waypoint.
                      I should have checked the ETA more than I did.
                      At first, I thought it was annoying to have the HR zones displayed around the display because I wanted to go by feel but it turned out to be nice to have.

                      The Iparla ridges
                      signal-2023-07-25-111951_004.jpeg
                      The local poneys, Pottok: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottok on the way down
                      signal-2023-07-25-111951_005.jpeg
                      View from Larla, first climb
                      signal-2023-07-25-111951_003.jpeg
                      View from the Iparla ridges
                      signal-2023-07-25-111951_006.jpeg

                      S9PP

                      isaziI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 6
                      • isaziI Offline
                        isazi Moderator @taziden
                        last edited by

                        @taziden too bad you got pulled out for 3 minutes, but you learned more about yourself and the race. Better luck next time!

                        Watch: Suunto Vertical Ti

                        Blog: isazi's home

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