I try and stay active, I really do. I’m 61 years old and I think it is important to keep moving no matter what age you are because once you stop it is hard to get going again. Plus being active is fun. I also love gadgets and there are lots of gadgets out there to monitor how active you are in a very detailed way.
I used to have pedometers and they are okay but they are not connected to anything. Later on I tried various fitbits. They are fun and they interconnect with your phone or PC and you can interconnect with other people and comment on each other. I had to take it easy though. Lots of people have more tender feelings than I do and didn’t appreciate being razzed. At first I razzed people who had less steps than I and then didn’t work and then I razzed only people who had more steps than I and people had problems with that too, so I stopped being a drive-by razzer. I started razzing people by cheering them. I’m evil like that and not a very good person. Just so you know.
But still it was a lot of fun except that Fitbits are easy to lose, very easy. The first one that I lost they replaced free, gratis, and that was great, and then I lost it and I went ahead and bought another one. Then I lost it. Then I bought a better one and I loved it. It would measure vertical distance as well as steps and then guess what I lost it. So I asked fitbit for a discount on a new one and they offered up 25% discount on a replacement and that is great except there website prices are 30% higher than what Amazon and other online retailers sell the same devices for. Sorry, a 25% discount on merchandise overpriced by 30% is not much of a deal. So I decided to leave Fitbit. I don’t blame them. after all I’m the one who lost these devices. I feel that I am the Johnny Appleseed of fitbit devices. My lost gadgets are all over the Tulsa area.
So I ended up with a Garmin Vivofit. It is less than half the price of the Fitbit Charge and doesn’t measure vertical distance but it measures steps just fine and it also synchs with Garmin Connect which is Garmin’s online dashboard which is what my Garmin GPS running watch synchs to also. I tell you it warms my heart to be running and both the Vivofit and the watch are both in tune so to speak and are coordinated on the dashboard together when everything is synched up.
The Fitbit charge had one thing that really irritated me. The low battery life. At first I could get through a whole day plus without charging it and toward the last, which was just a few months of use, it would only make it through sixteen to eighteen hours and was getting less all the time. The Vivofit uses batteries but they only need changing once a year supposedly. They do this by requiring a manual synch instead of automatic and the display is not lit. So anyways I’m liking the Vivofit so far, but I haven’t lost it yet.
But I miss the fitbit dashboard and razzing by cheering. Garmin has a great dashboard but I am the only one on it… It is no fun cheering and razzing myself. Nobody shows up when I do the search for others. Most of my running peeps are on Strava which is geared towards the GPS watches and is fun but not the same kind of fun.
So a big plus for Garmin for their more affordable technology and a big plus for Fitbit and their dashboard and social connections.
It’s a tie is what I say.
It seems a bit ironic that something with “Charge” in the name has poor battery life. You are right about staying active, but it does get a little harder with age. At 69, you just have to find the activity that works best for the ailments that your body has.
I am kind of a gadget person, but not in the fitness realm. I’m not sure I know what I would do with the information that Fitbit type devices provide.
Have a blessed day.
So how does one lose all their fitbits? I’ve had two and I still have both of them, I just upgraded to the Blaze a couple months ago. I miss you being on my fitbit dashboard and I never minded your razzing. You were always a good motivator.
Nice review. I own neither. Maybe because I don’t run. And when I hike don’t really want to know how far I went. It’s always far enough.
I got my d-i-l the Garmin Vivofit a year ago. I looked at the Fitbit before I bought and I chose Garmin because it’s waterproof. She has 4 kids, so in summer, waterproof is good. She loves it and subsequently bought one for her Mom. I currently use the Garmin Forerunner 15 both to count steps/mileage and to use as a GPS and Heart Rate monitor when I want that function. If I use it without the GPS, the battery lasts for several days and charges overnight. I find the GPS uses a lot of battery and sometimes if I try to use it on longer hikes, I run out of juice. I’ve learned to just keep it on steps/mileage if the hike is going to take over 6 hours. I’ve had other Forerunners with more bells and whistles when I was running, but this is a simple model that suits me just fine. I could care less about the dashboard – I don’t really look back at my stats. I just like to know far I go on a hike.