Indy on 11/8 doesn’t appear to be sold out @xulf
Half marathon 2016 - started in sleet, hail during, followed by a blinding down pour, and finished with a thunder snow storm.So speaking of the weather, what’s the worst conditions anyone here has had to race in? I can’t remember if anyone did 2018 Boston but that comes to mind as being up there and way worse than anything I’ve been subjected to.
I’ve been pretty fortunate with my races over the years but can think of two pretty unpleasant ones that stand out. There was a New Year’s 5K that was 15F with 30mph winds as well as a 5 mile trail race in May where a thunderstorm rolled through 30 minutes prior and then the sun came out and the whole forest felt like a steam sauna.
I remember you describing that one on here. Sounded insane.And that's still runner up to the 2021 trail half marathon I did on a sheet of ice in steeply elevated woods.
If I tried doing that race now I'd be in a perpetual loop trying to climb up one of those 150' 20+% grades of thick ice and sliding back down to the bottom. Queue the Benny Hill musicI remember you describing that one on here. Sounded insane.And that's still runner up to the 2021 trail half marathon I did on a sheet of ice in steeply elevated woods.
Being fat, lazy, slow with motivation efforts has always helped my ability to be slow and put in miles in the past. I've successfully transitioned this ability from running to riding so now I can go twice or three times as far and take even more time than when I was runningSo what do you guys do these days to improve those long distance efforts?
So you're saying stick to zone 2 and it'll work itself out. Pretty much what I've been doing, but i hate it so muchBeing fat, lazy, slow with motivation efforts has always helped my ability to be slow and put in miles in the past. I've successfully transitioned this ability from running to riding so now I can go twice or three times as far and take even more time than when I was runningSo what do you guys do these days to improve those long distance efforts?
Think of a work horse vs a race horse, just go light on the work part of that.
1...2...tomato...tomatoeSo you're saying stick to zone 2 and it'll work itself out. Pretty much what I've been doing, but i hate it so muchBeing fat, lazy, slow with motivation efforts has always helped my ability to be slow and put in miles in the past. I've successfully transitioned this ability from running to riding so now I can go twice or three times as far and take even more time than when I was runningSo what do you guys do these days to improve those long distance efforts?
Think of a work horse vs a race horse, just go light on the work part of that..
My anecdotal experience continues to run counter to general advice. There's been one constant as I've ridden the injury roller coaster- whenever I try to go over an hour, I get injured. First one to 75 minutes this season, bam, knee injury.So you're saying stick to zone 2 and it'll work itself out. Pretty much what I've been doing, but i hate it so muchBeing fat, lazy, slow with motivation efforts has always helped my ability to be slow and put in miles in the past. I've successfully transitioned this ability from running to riding so now I can go twice or three times as far and take even more time than when I was runningSo what do you guys do these days to improve those long distance efforts?
Think of a work horse vs a race horse, just go light on the work part of that..
Fattening season - need to trade mark thatMy anecdotal experience continues to run counter to general advice. There's been one constant as I've ridden the injury roller coaster- whenever I try to go over an hour, I get injured. First one to 75 minutes this season, bam, knee injury.So you're saying stick to zone 2 and it'll work itself out. Pretty much what I've been doing, but i hate it so muchBeing fat, lazy, slow with motivation efforts has always helped my ability to be slow and put in miles in the past. I've successfully transitioned this ability from running to riding so now I can go twice or three times as far and take even more time than when I was runningSo what do you guys do these days to improve those long distance efforts?
Think of a work horse vs a race horse, just go light on the work part of that..
Sort of navigating around it, but it's clear I'm going to need a couple weeks off for it to get right again. As we're approaching fattening season, I'm trying to hold off until mother nature and the schedule sync up to short-term diet while I heal. When I do and start again I'm bagging anything over 45-60 minutes indefinitely.
Very short answer- yes.Fattening season - need to trade mark thatMy anecdotal experience continues to run counter to general advice. There's been one constant as I've ridden the injury roller coaster- whenever I try to go over an hour, I get injured. First one to 75 minutes this season, bam, knee injury.So you're saying stick to zone 2 and it'll work itself out. Pretty much what I've been doing, but i hate it so muchBeing fat, lazy, slow with motivation efforts has always helped my ability to be slow and put in miles in the past. I've successfully transitioned this ability from running to riding so now I can go twice or three times as far and take even more time than when I was runningSo what do you guys do these days to improve those long distance efforts?
Think of a work horse vs a race horse, just go light on the work part of that..
Sort of navigating around it, but it's clear I'm going to need a couple weeks off for it to get right again. As we're approaching fattening season, I'm trying to hold off until mother nature and the schedule sync up to short-term diet while I heal. When I do and start again I'm bagging anything over 45-60 minutes indefinitely.
You every think about a bike? I feel like you've discussed this before and it isn't your bag but you can get some serious cardio in riding. Not me of course but you could.
I can add my anecdote to yours. I've tried a couple of times to go the all zone 2 route and it's mostly led to injury and if not that I just stagnate. I've had much better luck pushing on the intensity side. Whether that's physiological or due to temperament issues is a chicken/egg argument at this point, as it just seems to hold true for me personally. Of course I'd presumably have better results if I had more time to devote or was willing to be more disciplined in my approach, but like everyone else I'm balancing a lot of stuff and running's just never going to be priority #1 for me at this point in my life.My anecdotal experience continues to run counter to general advice. There's been one constant as I've ridden the injury roller coaster- whenever I try to go over an hour, I get injured. First one to 75 minutes this season, bam, knee injury.