Has anybody used any of the popular fitness wearables, either for training purposes prior to doing their camino, or during their camino ? If so any recommendations?
It seems I'm a luddite. My idea of walking a Caminos is to be as 'unplugged' as possible.
I have completed 5 "Oxfam trailwalks", (an event based on Gurkha training missions) which are 100km all terrain walks over 24-36 hour period. They are done in a team of 4, and because they are all-terrain, through day and night, dealing with portaloos in the dark, extreme weather, mud, and bush-whacking, and tides , I could never see the point.
However my 3 teammates who were way more obsessed (and much younger) did wear them.
I was always intrigued by the inaccuracy. 3 people wearing different devices, had 3 different sets of data. They flattened in the worst possible places, and we constantly walked in and out of data reach. (that part freaked out our supporters team, who got concerned over radio silence).
I kept out of their constant tech conversations, and just concentrated on walking. We got there regardless of technology.
We dealt with plenty of medical issues over the 5 events, falls, scrapes, vertigo, vomiting and diarrhea, injuries, etc - none of which were helped in the slightest by technology. As all 4 people have to walk together as a whole team, when one team member has a health issue, the others have to pick up the slack, carry 2 packs etc, and help them through.
None of them had any underlying health issues, and the training for an Oxfam walk is quite intensive, you dont train in km's or steps, you train in hours. I remember us laughing hysterically on a training walk about 1.30am on a Saturday morning as an alarm told us we'd walked our 10,000 steps for the day - and we still had 5 hours to go.
The rest of the team spent $thousands upgrading their wearable technology each time, so they were obviously satisfied they got their money's worth.