Hi Derek!
I think part of it is my low gearing, shared by all my bikes and started because I began cycling "with intent" many years ago as rehabilitation for injuries received in a car crash -- my knees removed the door-side window crank, bent the shift lever, and cracked the cover under the steering column. I think because I could not pull high gears then, I developed the knack early for spinning and stayed with low gears to prevent unpleasant twinges.
I tend to pedal in very round circles easily and with good flexibility (souplesse), but when I am tired, I pedal in quadrants to give my muscles a rest without stopping. On long (300-400km) day rides, I adjust my water intake, eat while on the bike and rest my muscles in this way to stay in the saddle for up to 17 hours. A good,comfortable saddle is key to all this.
My Nomad is geared 36x17, and it has worked out well for me. The bulk of the gearing (both steps and splits) duplicates that on one of my favorite randonneur bikes. My most-used cruising gears are very close to the rando bike's 58-62 gear-inches, spotting in at 55 gear-inches in the Nomad's direct-drive Gear 11 and 62 gear-inches for Gear 12. Where I live, the town is surrounded on three sides by steep hills, opening out to a long Valley to the north. If I want to leave by west, south, or east, I have to climb, so the low gearing always comes in handy. To reach my beloved deserts of the Great Basin, I must first climb over the summit of the Cascades mountain range 100km away, so more climbing. Same if I wish to go along the Pacific shoreline 100km to the west; I must cross the Coast Range -- usually on logging roads and with lots of carried water (as much as 26l/26kg plus food for extended time away from resupply). At those times, the low of 15 gear-inches followed by 17, 20, and 22 are most welcome *for me*. I realize I may be the exception in my preference for low gears and a fast, light cadence, but it has worked well for me for the last 39 years of Adventure touring. I try not to think about the wear-cycles on my knee and hip joints, but so far so good.
As I often say, if I tried to pull high gears, my knees would explode with the shrapnel likely causing injury to innocent bystanders. No one wants that.
The beauty of cycling is we can all do it differently and still do it right! I think it is important to go with what's familiar and comfortable for *you*. Cycling is very much a repetitive-motion pursuit. Get it wrong and you get it wrong over and over, with risk of injury.
Get it right, and it is almost effortless.
All the best,
Dan.