COVID-era route continuity
Repeated routes show physical therapy skating continued as a practical mobility pattern during a disrupted period.
Route and functional mobility evidence
COVID-era and long-term skate routes document repeated real-world skating used as physical therapy, functional mobility, and mobility-aid context.
These maps document repeated real-world skating routes, including distance, route, duration, and practical mobility-aid use. They support the history and feasibility of skating-based mobility and help explain why transportation to and from skating sessions is part of the accommodation context.
Strava maps provide active controlled route and timing context. They show where skating happened, how long activity was tolerated, and how route completion fits the broader wearable record.
These routes show repeated, real-world physical therapy skating over time. They document distance, duration, route consistency, and functional mobility. They are not offered as medical conclusions or pain proof by themselves. They show the lived movement pattern that wearable and targeted sensor evidence can contextualize.
Repeated routes show physical therapy skating continued as a practical mobility pattern during a disrupted period.
Distance, duration, and route consistency help show that the routes are part of a functional mobility pattern, not isolated recreation.
Transportation to and from physical therapy skating is part of the accommodation context, not a separate recreational errand.
The maps show mobility achieved. The data question is how much physiological and mechanical exposure was required to achieve that mobility.
The following route-map pages are the complete HTML map set referenced by the public notebook section. Each map opens as an individual static route page.
Search or filter the route archive, select a route, then preview it in-page or open the full map.
Weather context
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Weather records are used as route-context evidence. Rain is interpreted from both the full-day downtown station record and the 9 PM to midnight local hourly window. This rebuts categorical assumptions by documenting completed skate routes under recorded weather conditions; it does not claim rain is always safe.
Selected route
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The raw list is preserved for audit and for browsers without JavaScript.
These route maps are derived from recorded HandicapSkater physical therapy skating activities and related GPS activity records. They provide route, distance, time, integrated weather, and movement context for documented mobility aid use.
The maps are included to show where skating occurred, how far the activity extended, and how repeated route patterns support review of skating as functional mobility rather than recreation alone.
Source materials include activity records, route map artifacts, timestamps, and related wearable evidence used for public review.