You Should Be 'Stacking' Your Peloton Classes ...Middle East

News by : (Live Hacker) -

Because I am an iPad baby in an adult's body, I can get bored pretty easily when I do any one thing for too long, so I rely on the 10- and 15-minute classes to spice up my life and keep me engaged. On days when I have enough time, I like to take these back-to-back—especially because Peloton offers warm-up and cool-down rides in the 10-minute length—but it's always thrown me off my rhythm to stop one class, spend time looking for another, and then start that one up. This week, I discovered a feature I've somehow overlooked and it solves this problem handily: stacked classes.

The goal here is to create the full workout upfront so you avoid the decision paralysis that accompanies having to choose each class right before it starts. When you've just finished a 15-minute ride and are looking for one of Peloton's "extra 10" rides or post-ride stretches, it can pull you out of the zone to have to sort through the hundreds of options available. If you add them to your stack, however, they're queued up and ready to go. They just play one after the other.

You can stack any combination of cycling, running, strength, yoga, meditation, and stretching classes as well as Lanebreak game levels and scenic rides or runs. That means you can stretch, warm up, complete a run, cool down, and then finish with some yoga, if you'd like.

Live classes can't be stacked, but once they hit the archive and become on-demand, they can be.

How to create and modify your Peloton class stack

Creating the stack is really easy. Under the Start button for any class, you'll see an icon with two stacked rectangles and a plus sign that pretty clearly represents Stack. Tap that to add the class to your stack. Once you add all the classes that you want, find the Stack icon on the Home screen. You'll start the first class as normal and, when it finishes, will see a pop-up prompting you to enter the second one you've lined up.

When you tap that icon, you can then hit a big orange play button to start your queue from the beginning or tap the Modify button, which will allow you to edit the order of the stack or remove a class you added by accident, for example. Once you complete a class, it's removed from the stack automatically, so keep that in mind. If you want to take it again, you have to go back and re-add it.

Why I like this feature

I also appreciated that this worked so seamlessly. You can go from a ride to a stretch easily, which is pretty important for your safety and cooldown, but most Peloton cycling classes only feature a small stretch at the end with the expectation you'll load up a more involved stretching class after. I also appreciated that each class still counts individually toward the amount of workouts I've completed; I was worried that if I took classes back-to-back-to-back in a stack, they'd show up as one megaworkout in my Peloton account history or in my Apple Health data. I'm very particular about keeping my health data granular and accurate (and am trying to complete 28 cycling classes this month because that's the "May Challenge" my Apple Health app set for me) so this was important to me.

Finally, this keeps you motivated to complete a more well-rounded workout. It's easy to hop on the bike, sort by class length, and call it a day after taking a 10-minute ride. I won't lie: I do that sometimes! But even on days I only want to do 10 minutes, I know I should do more. The stacking feature makes it very easy to do that and gives you fewer opportunities to quit just because your class is over.

Read More Details
Finally We wish PressBee provided you with enough information of ( You Should Be 'Stacking' Your Peloton Classes )

Also on site :

Most Viewed News
جديد الاخبار