avondale
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2017
- Messages
- 1,974
Week of Jan. 15 - 21, 2023
This is my second of two weeks off from running after the Harbison 50k. I was so much more wiped out after this race than I think I have ever been from any previous race. I'm sure the cold that I had contributed to that. I have been sleeping a lot and trying not to let myself get to anxious about not exercising. That's actually been a lot easier than in the past.
I usually play some tennis during these sorts of recovery weeks, but I've had a lot of bad luck with that. One time one of the foursome had to drop out at the last minute, so we had to cancel. We had bad weather that canceled a match. Then I hurt my knee (see below in Health) and had to get a sub. So I haven't played any tennis for a month!
I've also been setting my next race plans. Now that I've done a trail 50k, and it took a LOT of training time, I'm aiming for shorter distances for my primary races in 2024. But, I want to have more elevation gain in the races because I need to improve my abilities on hills if I really want to have more trail race options.
Consequently, I've decided that I'm going to do the 27k Tour de Dodge in Dodgeville, WI on April 20. This race has about 2300 ft of elevation gain in the 27k, compared to my 50k race which had a bit over 3000 ft. So this 27k will be more challenging in terms of the vert.
To train for that, I'm going to be alternating weeks with a day of high incline treadmill walking and with what I call "tempo ramps". Tempo ramps are tempo effort on inclines of a few percent. I will continue the hill repeat HIIT workous that I've been doing, because those should help. In addition, my Saturday trail runs will be on hilly trails in particular.
What's difficult to train for is the technicality of the trails. I'm not sure how technical the Dodge course will be, but I'll have to try to find out. There's a big difference between power hiking up a pretty smooth trail versus climbing up bigger rocks and roots.
Monday before dinner: walk on treadmill
Health
I'm over my cold, but the cough is still hanging on very annoyingly.
Knee: last Sunday night (after I wrote last week's training log entry), I was kneeling in the shower to clean the grout between the tiles, and I somehow really hurt something below and inside my left kneecap - probably a medial tendon or something. I thought I was just feeling the pressure of kneeling on it, but when I stood up, it really hurt. It hurt all night and made finding a position to sleep in nearly impossible.
The next day (Monday), it still hurt like the blazes. I wore my knee sleeve and took ibuprofen, but it really worried me. But then fortunately on Tuesday it was significantly better and by Wednesday I could hardly tell it had happened. As I write this now, that particular sore spot is fine. Go figure - so strange!
At any rate, as I've said before in this log, I know that I have patellofemoral syndrome (kneecap alignment problems) in both knees. Now that I'm done with my big race and we're between semesters at work, I have more time to get started on some PT that will hopefully help this. Now that that weird incident has passed, I have the typical pain in the tendon that goes over the top/front of the kneecap - pretty classic. I can also see that my right kneecap definitely moves to the outside quite a bit more than my left kneecap. I'm hoping that the VMO-focused PT will be helpful.
This is my second of two weeks off from running after the Harbison 50k. I was so much more wiped out after this race than I think I have ever been from any previous race. I'm sure the cold that I had contributed to that. I have been sleeping a lot and trying not to let myself get to anxious about not exercising. That's actually been a lot easier than in the past.
I usually play some tennis during these sorts of recovery weeks, but I've had a lot of bad luck with that. One time one of the foursome had to drop out at the last minute, so we had to cancel. We had bad weather that canceled a match. Then I hurt my knee (see below in Health) and had to get a sub. So I haven't played any tennis for a month!
I've also been setting my next race plans. Now that I've done a trail 50k, and it took a LOT of training time, I'm aiming for shorter distances for my primary races in 2024. But, I want to have more elevation gain in the races because I need to improve my abilities on hills if I really want to have more trail race options.
Consequently, I've decided that I'm going to do the 27k Tour de Dodge in Dodgeville, WI on April 20. This race has about 2300 ft of elevation gain in the 27k, compared to my 50k race which had a bit over 3000 ft. So this 27k will be more challenging in terms of the vert.
To train for that, I'm going to be alternating weeks with a day of high incline treadmill walking and with what I call "tempo ramps". Tempo ramps are tempo effort on inclines of a few percent. I will continue the hill repeat HIIT workous that I've been doing, because those should help. In addition, my Saturday trail runs will be on hilly trails in particular.
What's difficult to train for is the technicality of the trails. I'm not sure how technical the Dodge course will be, but I'll have to try to find out. There's a big difference between power hiking up a pretty smooth trail versus climbing up bigger rocks and roots.
Monday before dinner: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:33:02
- distance: 3.83 mi
- ave pace: 24:17
- comments: I had hurt my knee the evening before (see below on Health) so I lowered the pace and no incline.
- Before breakfast: foam rolling and stretching (carefully)
- Before dinner: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:26:03
- distance: 4.21 mi
- ave pace: 20:26
- Before breakfast: core workout (revised since I last did it)
- 60-s plank
- 20 starfish
- 20 dead bug
- 20 bird dog
- 20 each side flutter kicks
- 20 bicycle crunch with hold
- 5 10-s hollow-body holds
- 2 30-s side planks
- 20 double leg lift/lower
- After work: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:32:27
- distance: 4.64 mi
- ave pace: 19:55
- comments: 0 - 7.5% incline
- time: 1:26:02
- distance: 4.3 mi
- ave pace: 20:01
- comments: 1 - 8.5% incline
- Before breakfast:
- Core workout
- 60-s plank
- 20 starfish
- 20 dead bug
- 20 bird dog
- 20 each side flutter kicks
- 20 bicycle crunch with hold
- 5 10-s hollow-body holds
- 2 30-s side planks
- 20 double leg lift/lower
- Knee PT - 2 sets of:
- 10 VMO activation knee squeezes
- 10 each side twisted leg raises
- 10 ball bridges
- 10 wall squats with ball
- Core workout
- Before dinner: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:33:04
- distance: 4.63 mi
- ave pace: 20:06
- comments: 2 - 9.5% incline
- Before lunch:
- HIIT workout - warm-up + 3 x [8 x (20s on + 20s rest) + 4min rest], with exercises:
- high knees
- crouch to sprawl
- left/right hop
- seal jacks
- fast feet forward/back
- plank ups
- forward/back hop
- fast feet in/out
- Knee PT - 2 rounds of:
- 10 each side twisted leg raises
- 10 ball bridges
- 10 wall squats with ball
- 20 each side clams with band
- 10 each side monster walks with band
- HIIT workout - warm-up + 3 x [8 x (20s on + 20s rest) + 4min rest], with exercises:
- Before dinner: walk on treadmill
- time: 1:24:44
- distance: 4.25 mi
- ave pace: 19:56
- comments: 3 - 10.5% incline
- time: 2:24:42
- distance: 7.17 mi
- ave pace: 20:11
- comments: 10 min 0% incline, then 5-min blocks alternating 0% incline and 4 x 15%, 4 x 10%, 4 x 5%
- comments: Watched Star Wars Episode VIII!
Health
I'm over my cold, but the cough is still hanging on very annoyingly.
Knee: last Sunday night (after I wrote last week's training log entry), I was kneeling in the shower to clean the grout between the tiles, and I somehow really hurt something below and inside my left kneecap - probably a medial tendon or something. I thought I was just feeling the pressure of kneeling on it, but when I stood up, it really hurt. It hurt all night and made finding a position to sleep in nearly impossible.
The next day (Monday), it still hurt like the blazes. I wore my knee sleeve and took ibuprofen, but it really worried me. But then fortunately on Tuesday it was significantly better and by Wednesday I could hardly tell it had happened. As I write this now, that particular sore spot is fine. Go figure - so strange!
At any rate, as I've said before in this log, I know that I have patellofemoral syndrome (kneecap alignment problems) in both knees. Now that I'm done with my big race and we're between semesters at work, I have more time to get started on some PT that will hopefully help this. Now that that weird incident has passed, I have the typical pain in the tendon that goes over the top/front of the kneecap - pretty classic. I can also see that my right kneecap definitely moves to the outside quite a bit more than my left kneecap. I'm hoping that the VMO-focused PT will be helpful.