Thanks, yes as I'm type 2 I only test it every couple of days but I do it as soon as I get up in the morning at roughly the same time. My food intake has gone down massively since finding out and I do track my food intake so I know im ok for that. I've been concerned about my carbs since I joined the forums but my Doctor tells me my diet is great and working so keep at it. its a rest day today so no running I will check it tomorrow and see if its back down again and maybe try cutting more carbs out. thanks all.
I may be misinterpretting things a little, but if yousay the same time, and mean the same time (e.g. 09:00), as opposed to notionally the same time (e.g. as soon as your feet touch the floor from waking), then it could potentially vary quite a bit. My regime has always been wake, get up, go to the loo, wash hands, test, then as appropriate, step on the scales. Get on with my day.
That way, I have a very consistent approach.
You may find you have slightly different readings on the days after you rest, unless you would usually test after exercise, as exercise does impact on blood scores for most folks. As a rough rule of thumb, gentle exercise ( a slow, sustained stroll usually lowers the score, whereas exercise requiring more exertion tends to raise the score a bit, then it drops off), so even considering the impact of exercise can be a bit complex - especially if you have been on an increasing programme of exercise; maybe going from a stroll, to a brisk walk, to jog, to run.
In your shoes, I would commit to testing every day, at the same time, in the same way for a period of two weeks. It's only 14 strips, and could give you a better insight. When you record your scores, please record what exercise you do each day, so that you can look back and not be having to rely on memory.