Just supporting thank goodness. Still a fair old jog out for me, but nothing bonkers.
I feel weak just at the thought of the whole thing.
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Just supporting thank goodness. Still a fair old jog out for me, but nothing bonkers.
I feel weak just at the thought of the whole thing.
Very strange trip...snow, blizzards...gales..severe windchill and sunburn all in 3 days. did you check the pictures
I'm not one of the 135, just spotted the thread.
When things are going well absolutely anything seems to be possible, and it can go on for 6 months or more like that. A training diary is always good as you'll notice the moment training times start worsening. Last year, if my legs ever started feeling very fatigued, just one day off would be sufficient to be back on pace. This year is a different story...
I think that depends.. At the moment I'm back at around 90-100 miles a week for the next month, I ran a marathon at the weekend but just as a hard training run so want to keep the miles highish, Sunday I was sore so just did a steady 6.5, Monday I was still sore so did 10 on trails.. but my IT bands were sore.. previously I'd have backed off but I went to the gym and did a 30 minute session of stretching and rolling with the foam roller and today its OK again.. when you up the mileage I think you have to be more responsive. You can't always just run through issues, but you can sort them if you feel them early enough.. by just backing off you often don't solve the problem you just alleviate the symptoms until they happen again the next time you step up the mileage.
Fair comment Iain. I guess what I meant was that if Shaunaneto has built up his mileage over a relatively short period of time he could be susceptible to overuse injuries whereas I think you're coming from the position where you can run a high monthly mileage consistently if you look after body by stretching, massage, core work etc - which I completely agree with. I also think if you keep a record of how you feel as part of your training log, and any little niggles suffered, you can see problems emerging and tackle them (eg by stretching) before they become serious. I don't run significant numbers of miles in training but on the basis of past experience I emphasise eg eccentric calf/achilles work if my achilles is at all tender and ITB stretches if my knee gives me any niggly pain.
Shaunaneto - who are you supporting in mid June?
And this is my concern. 40mpw, 8-11000ft, fairly normal. But I do need easy weeks normally to give the joints and muscles a chance to recover. But having what is normally a sold week as a rest week (I ended up doing 42m 8000ft, with two days off). And this off the back of a 70 mile week with 16500ft.Quote:
I guess what I meant was that if Shaunaneto has built up his mileage over a relatively short period of time he could be susceptible to overuse injuries
Last year I overcooked it and blew up. And it took a while to recover, too long. So far what I'm doing feels right, the one key difference this year is I've avoided giving in to "the fear of missing out". This is in relation to friends heading out for hard days and joining them despite being tired and needing and easy run.
Club mate from a Fife based club, I think he's keeping it relatively low key. So I won't publicise his escapades too much.Quote:
Shaunaneto - who are you supporting in mid June?
Yeah my two chronic issues are ITBS and PF... both I can feel very early now and know how to respond... sometimes just running on softer trails for a week is enough to ease it off.. but you ceratinly get far more attuned to what the early symptoms are and cut them off at the beginning.