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Download a Ride. Or Two. Or All.

Download Bike Rides.

You can purchase the rides here: https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/shop/

But first, you need a bit of knowledge.  Let me explain…

As much as I love paper, getting a ride on your phone or bike computer makes loads of sense.  You’re probably carrying it already, it has mapping capabilities, it can tell you where to turn, it doesn’t get destroyed when wet like an old-fashioned map.  (well, at least not if you’re using a bike computer or phone with an IPX rating of 7 or higher)

So, to that end, I’m offering the rides in the Where To Bike New York City book as downloadable singles.  Pay a fee, download a PDF with intelligence you’ll need (turns, advice, etc) and a GPX map file, and you’re good to go.

What you need.

To download bike rides, You’ll need at least a computer or mobile device to do this.  You can download the files straight to your phone, open the files with an app, and you’re golden.  Or you can download it to your phone, tablet, or computer, move it to a GPX-enabled bike computer, and go from there.

If you want to do it with your phone, you’ll need an app that reads a GPX file.  There are so many.  Apps I’ve heard of include: Beeline, MapMyRide, RideWithGPS, Strava, Zeopoxa, and many more.  Depending on your phone plan, battery life, access, and privacy issues, you may or may not want one that allows you to use the app without data (aka offline).  Search for “maps” on your phone and see what comes up.  Google maps doesn’t always work.

Once you have the app installed, you search for the downloaded file in “files,” then touch the gpx file’s icon.  That should pop up a window asking which app you want to use to open the file.  Choose the app. When it opens, you’ll see the route placed on the map.

If you don’t like riding with a phone, a GPS-enabled bike computer is as good or better.

You can also push or transfer the GPX file to many a GPS-enabled bike computer.  If you don’t already have one, this is probably a discussion for another day.  You should know that most bike computers sold these days seem have GPS capabilities, which can be a good thing–don’t have to set up a speedometer on a wheel and the rides can be recorded and saved or shared (if you’re into that sort of thing).  Though you’ll need the computer to also have mapping capabilities.  Some bike computers have a companion app that goes on a phone, others have an app for a computer or can be accessed through a web browser.  The biggest player in this market is currently Garmin, though in the US, Wahoo is making big strides.  Others include: Cateye, LezyneStages, and many others.

Where the rides are.

The rides are in all five boroughs, northern New Jersey, and Westchester–rides NYC people can easily get to. 

The rides are priced individually and in groups.  $2 for a single ride, though I’ve thrown in some free samples.  I’ve also created bundles, mostly by borough.  So you can get all a boro’s rides at once and save a…bundle.

 

You can purchase the Where To Bike New York City rides here: https://jralong.com/wheretobikenyc/shop/

Ride.

 

 

 

JP Partland

Writer and rider.
Or rider and writer.
Author of Where To Bike NYC.
As well as: Tour Fever, The World of BMX, and Mountain Bike Madness.
Also the leader of Just Riding Along, http://www.jralong.com

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