Research by Strava confirms coffee and cake as the UK cyclist’s treats of choice, helping riders clock up a collective 903 million kilometres on the social network in the year to October, with London’s Regent’s Park hosting the most popular segment, followed by Herne Hill Velodrome.
It’s the first time a velodrome has made it into the country’s top three segments – it lies above Richmond Park, which is third – and is proof, Strava says, of the success of the venue’s recent redevelopment.
Some 31 million rides in the UK were logged this year, with men averaging 32 kilometres for each trip, with an average speed of 24 kilometres an hour, and women covering 28 kilometres on a typical outing, ridden at 20 kilometres an hour.
Just over a quarter of a million rides in the UK were recorded as commutes each week, and total commuting distance over the year was 173 million. The average distance of a commute was 13.1 kilometres, ridden at an average speed of 22.1 kilometres an hour.
The fastest cyclists can be found in Ceredigion in Wales, where the average speed was 33.6 kilometres an hour, while the longest rides were undertaken in Ballymena in Northern Ireland, with an average speed of 51.2 kilometres.
The most climbing was done by riders from Merthyr Tydfil, who averaged 585 metres of ascent per ride, while the longest rides, time-wise, were done by riders from Stirling – 1 hour and 38 minutes on average.
A shade under 5 million rides were logged by cyclists in London, almost five times greater than West Yorkshire, which was in second place, just ahead of Manchester.
For the first time, Strava has also analysed people’s posts to find out what Britain’s cyclists are eating and drinking – and it’s not much of a surprise to find coffee and cake topping the list in terms of mentions.
They’re followed by beer, wine, pizza, chocolate, eggs, bacon, sandwich and burgers, which appears to cover all major food groups if oiur understanding is correct.
Gareth Mills, Strava’s UK Country Manager, commented: “The Year in Sport report for 2017 highlights some fascinating global and local trends.
“Each of the 31 million rides recorded this year tells a story, from Mark Beaumont’s epic ride around the globe, to the fact that finally have statistical evidence that UK cyclists are obsessed with coffee and cake!”
Globally, a total of 203 million rides were shared on Strava this year for a total of 7.3 billion kilometres with a collective height gain of 69 billion metres. The most popular day to ride? That was 21 May.
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11 comments
It's probably just Lord Sugar and his hopelessly upturned stem going back and forth all day on his 0.1km training segment..
I don't understand how Regent's Park is the most popular segment? I mean where do you go after you've got bored going round and round in circles? The traffic of the Marylebone Road??
There's a club for that!
http://road.cc/content/news/113897-video-545-rouleur-riding-london-you-s...
If ten people a day ride for an hour and a half around regent park five days a week, that's 6,240 laps a year. How they got to 2,039,575 attempts on this segment is beyond me.
Because thousands of people a day ride round it. Loads of commuters do dawn training rides or a couple of quick laps on the way home. Lunchtime rides are a big thing round there too.
It's easy to knock out 10 laps of the place in under an hour.
Same with Richmond Park, couple of laps on the way to or from work and at weekends it's absolutely rammed with cyclists.
It is a large 'urban' park close to one of the most affluent and densely populated cities in the world. On the recent Strava heat map the UK was one of the hottest countries in the world for activities. Most people can afford Smartphones with GPS, no need for Garmins, makes adoption easier.
https://www.strava.com/segments/8152782
Fast approaching 100,000 riders and gets a boost ever summer when Ride London passes through.
A small step for a business owner to compare with their till data and work out the cyclist revenue share, peak times etc..
Cake! Urgggh, Kwoffy?
Cute unicorn knighted?
Which highlights the only problem with renaming the Cyclists' Touring Club, CTC, as Cycling UK. CTC was popularly known as Coffee, Tea and Cakes. Submissions for acronyms for CUK welcome.
Cake und Kettle.
Err...
"the longest rides were undertaken in Ballymena in Northern Ireland, with an average speed of 51.2 kilometres."
Cut your "speed", not grammatical sense!
And "oiur understanding"...