General lifestyle information only — not medical or health advice. UK company No. 08770057. Refunds & cancellations · Privacy

Your Personal Ride Journal

Log how you feel before and after each ride — a simple notebook-style tool for your own reference. Not a medical or mental health service.

Open Journal

Why Keep a Ride Journal?

Distance and speed tell you about the ride. A short journal entry can help you remember the rest of your day. A 15 km canal loop might feel different from a 30 km hill session — depending on sleep, weather, and pace. Logging three simple ratings before and after each ride builds a personal record over time.

Some riders find it useful to compare morning rides with evening loops, or solo sessions with group rides. This tool is for personal reflection only. It is not a medical device, mental health service, or substitute for professional advice. Individual experiences vary; we make no promises about specific results.

Most riders find five to ten entries enough to spot their own patterns. Use the notes to plan which routes suit your schedule — nothing more.

This ride journal is provided as a free lifestyle tool by Drainingkneesflo (Company No. 08770057). It does not diagnose, treat, or prevent any condition. If you have health concerns, speak to a qualified professional.

Person reflecting on mood after a cycling session outdoors

Interactive Ride Journal

Adjust the sliders before and after your ride. Results are for your personal notes only.

Before Your Ride

After Your Ride

Your Snapshot

Adjust the sliders to see how your ratings compare.

How Different Rides May Feel

General observations from our riders — individual experiences vary.

Morning Rides

Some riders prefer 7 AM canal sessions to start the day outdoors. Keep intensity moderate — a hard climb first thing is not for everyone. This is general guidance, not a recommendation for your personal situation.

Evening Rides

Evening loops tend to be social and slower. They suit riders who want to unwind after work. Bring lights and dress for cooler temperatures after sunset.

Weekend Long Rides

Longer routes can feel tiring during the ride and satisfying afterward — but every rider is different. Plan hydration, food, and rest according to your own needs.

These are informal observations about cycling, not health or wellness advice. Your experience may differ.

Tips for Honest, Useful Tracking

  1. Log within 30 minutes of finishing your ride — memory fades quickly.
  2. Note the ride type (morning canal, evening park, weekend hill) in a notebook alongside your ratings.
  3. Do not judge low scores. A bad day plus a hard ride might mean lower mood — that is data, not failure.
  4. Compare averages over two-week blocks, not single rides. One off day should not define your pattern.
  5. Share trends with your riding group if it helps — many people find social rides consistently lift mood scores.
Cyclist writing in a journal after completing a ride

Health & Safety Guidelines

Keep tracking useful and rides safe.

Ride Safely

If a route consistently feels too hard, try a shorter or flatter alternative. Our journal is for personal notes only — not a fitness or health assessment.

Stop riding and seek appropriate help if you feel unwell during exercise. This tool does not diagnose any condition.

Use the Journal Sensibly

Sleep, nutrition, and daily stress all affect how a ride feels. Low scores on a difficult day are normal. Use your notes to plan rides that fit your schedule — without judging yourself.