pigskinliquors said:
Peter_Griffin said:
culdeus said:
Peter_Griffin said:
pigskinliquors said:
My update:
I did some speed work this morning, with one mile warm-up, 4 miles of speed, and 1 mile at (hopefully) race pace:
mile 1) 8:55 (HR 146)
mile 2) 7:48 (HR 172)
mile 3) 7:47 (HR 177)
mile 4) 7:45 (HR 181) this was all uphill
mile 5) 7:42 (HR 176) into the wind, but flat
mile 6) 8:28 (HR 164)
I was ecstatic to have my HR go down on the flats after a hill (mile 5), as this is one of my fears, and to have it go down after one mile at my race pace. Legs feel great! This is a rest week, so I will back down to a 10 miler this weekend (I'll do a couple hill repeats during it), and take it easy until a week from this Sunday (first of two 20 milers).
I did the exact same workout this morning (it was mighty cold too).I've never used a HR before so I have no point of reference but is it a good thing or a bad thing that your warmp up and cool down miles are that close to your tempo miles? I would think there would be a larger gap.
Yeah, you'd want a little more spread I would think. He is a little older however than the median age here so keep that in mind.
Does that mean he's running too hard on the warm up and cool down or too easy on the hard part? Also, these numbers are foreign to me but 181 seems really high. How high would it get if he was sprinting? I'll have to take mine as soon as I finish my next run but it's only about 60 sitting on my ### at work right now.
My max HR is approximately 200, so I was barely into anaerobic state, and only for a short period of time. If I would have been doing intervals (or trying to increase my current speed), my warm-up and cool down would have been much slower and other miles faster. My goal this morning was to get an idea of what my HR will do at pace after going up one of the hills for Austin. I was hoping mile 4 would emulate my HR during a climb, and used mile 6 (a pace mile) to see if I'd level off. I would not have done this if this weekend would have included a long run. To put it in perspective, last year, for the same run, I ran the four speed miles at 7:15'ish, and warm-up cool down at 9:15'ish. Culdeus had it right; this was an old man run (though he stated it a bit nicer). I'm solely training to finish, not looking for speed.
Do you try to adjust your pace mid-run based upon your current pace or your HR? Pacing is one thing I've never really tried to master but will definitely be an issue for me once I start training for the marathon. I would think that you'd be able to run a faster first mile than your tenth mile at the same heart rate (i.e. mile 1 @ 8 minute pace = 150 bpm but mile 10 @ 9 minute pace = 150 bpm).
Once I get set in a decent pace, I can typically maintain my HR for long periods of time, until lactic acid starts to build, or I get depleted due to not enough carbs or hydration. My second mile often has a higher HR than my 10th, even when running the same pace. It gets up, then settles in. Having a HR monitor is a great tool for training, and would most likely help you considerably in training. I usually have a pre-determined pace (I'm pretty anal about it), but will adjust according to my HR. For Austin, my pre-determined paces are set according to elevation. For miles with a 30 ft. or greater rise, I'm hoping to run at approximately 8:48; for flat miles 8:30, and for downhills 8:20. I also want my HR to settle in around 174-176 bpm, and will allow it to get higher if needed on a few of the hills. IF my HR gets above this, all bets are off, and I'll slow it down. I won't speed it up if I'm below (which I would have done when younger), as I'm just trying to finish. My marathon will hopefully look something like this:
mile 1) 8:48
2) 8:50
3) 8:45
4) 8:30
5) 8:20
6) 8:30
7) 8:30
8) 8:20
9) 8:30
10) 8:50
11) 8:30
12) 8:50
13) 8:45
14) 8:30
15) 8:45
16) 8:45
17) 8:30
18) 8:50
19) 8:20
20) 8:30
21) 8:30
22) 8:30
23) 8:25
24) 8:25
25) 8:20
26) 8:30
.2) 1:35
I have a pace band already made w/ these on it, and will try to stick to the plan, and end up somewhere around 3:45. I'll still be ecstatic with a finish under 3:55, and happy with a finish of any kind (= Goal #1)
FYI: You can make your own pace band (I write deviations on it by hand)
right HERE.