Vermont Sports, September 2015

Page 28

GEAR & BEER

MAKE THE BEATS GO ON FOUR WAYS TO TRACK YOUR HEART RATE, WITHOUT WEARING A CHEST STRAP

Garmin Vivofit 2

TomTom Multi-Sport Cardio

Fitbit Charge HR Lazer LifeBeam

I

f you’re an athlete who wants to progress, you have to think of your body as a machine, a system of systems—cardiovascular, muscular, respiratory—and machines need gauges. A heart-rate monitor can tell you how efficiently your body is working and how hard you are pushing yourself. A GPS can tell you where you are, track your route and time your progress. If you really want to improve, you need baselines and goals. That’s where gauges come in. And boy do we have gauges: The heart rate monitor of a decade ago has given way to a battery of miniaturized electronics that can follow your every function and goose your every step. These days both the Fitbit Charge HR ($149, www.fitbit.com) and the Garmin Vivofit 2 ($99, www.garmin.com), can track not ony your every step but also caloric exertion and heart rate. Goodbye chest strap, hello convenience. Both the Garmin and the Fitbit are most precise when you haven’t moved a muscle and are maybe thinking of going for a hike or a run (and less accurate on the go.) The Vivofit benefits from an onboard battery that lasts a year before it needs to be replaced, while the Charge HR turns out to be aptly named since it needs to be plugged in every three or four days. On the other hand, the Charge HR has a more friendly computer interface and mobile app than the Vivofit 2, and a more elegant, low-profile design.

The TomTom Multi-Sport Cardio ($229, www.tomtom.com), by contrast, is in the growing family of super fitness trackers. It is bigger than a simple wristband, yes, but more reliable when tracking heart rates. The TomTom has a builtin GPS that tracks your route and plots the wave form of your heart rate over time. It is waterproof and can be calibrated for a variety of activities including swimming (it is not currently set to track heart rate while swimming, although one reviewer found that by putting it in “Treadmill” mode it can.) The TomTom can also distinguish between running outdoors or on a treadmill, it can pair with your phone and lets you compete against past performances. And it has big, easyto-read, numbers. Cyclists who are not keen on either chest straps or fitness watches can simply slip on the Lazer LifeBeam ($229, www.lazersport.com), the first bike helmet embedded with optical sensors and a 3-axis accelerometer. The helmet transmits your heart rate to a smart phone or a bike computer, like a Garmin. Built into the super-comfortable Genesis helmet, the LifeBeam’s sensors are undetectable once the helmet is on your head, and until you end your ride and have to plug in your lid, you can forget that you’re even being monitored. —Sue Halpern

Selk'bag

BRANDON’S NESHOBE WINERY AND FAIR MAIDEN DOUBLE IPA The fifth hole on the Neshobe Golf Course, one of the best little golf courses in the state, backs right into the lovely vineyards of the Neshobe Winery. Open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday, the tasting room is a great place to stop after a ride over Brandon Gap. There are decent wines, but the real reason to stop is that the folks behind Neshobe are also responsible for Foley Brothers Brewery. And the Foley's Fair Maiden Double IPA is worth stopping for. This double IPA is fairly widely available in bomber bottles (we even found it at Costco in Colchester). In the ever-growing hop sweepstakes, the double IPA is what it takes to give hopheads the fix they once got from first-generation microbrews and, in this case, it comes with some fairly rich malting as well. If you really concentrate, you can get tropical fruit flavors, but it screams pine resin. So if you’ve come off a gap ride from Rochester, with its glorious white pines along the ridge, you’ll be making a day of it. The one other gauge you might want to check is a breathalyzer; this is 8.2% alcohol by volume and it comes in a big bottle, so share. —Bill McKibben

28 VTSPORTS.COM

SEPTEMBER 2015


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