avondale
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2017
- Messages
- 2,064
Yes, it's really hard to know who a plan's target audience really is. One person's "beginner" is very different from another person's.Because let's be honest: David Roche's "beginners trail 50k training plan" was not written with someone who is planning go sub 15min/mi on race day at the forefront.
To summarize:This week has my running 35k (almost 22mi) on Saturday and having Sunday off (I usually am scheduled to run 6+mi on Sundays) and then the following week (which I had written differently from the online plan) as my peak week we had previously discussed me going 20+ on Saturday and then 6-10mi on Sunday instead of the published 10 and then 6-10 (weather/heat permitting.)
July 26: 22 mi
July 27: off
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Aug. 2: 20 mi
Aug. 3: 6 mi
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Aug. 9: ?? I was confused by the last bit in your text about this
Aug. 10:??
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Aug. 16/17: taper
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Aug. 23/24: race
So the Aug. 9/10 week should definitely be starting the taper, but probably on the order of at least a half-marathon for the longer of the two runs.
Yeah, training for a 50k involves a lot of miles and a lot of time. You can't just somehow jump up to that kind of time and mileage - you have to build it. That's what you're doing.
Comparing to Dopey only gets you so far, because your marathon on Dopey wasn't as long in either distance or time as you're expecting this 50k to be. And the trails are more difficult than going through DW. You have to put in more training for this. But you are almost there!
Anyway, at this point, I don't think I'd suggest changing anything in your plan. I still feel like the ordering and totals of the July 26/27 and Aug. 2/3 weekends is a bit odd, but there may be some training subtlety that I'm missing. And mentally it sounds like you wouldn't be good with adding anything to the Aug. 2/3 weekend.
Once you get over the hump of the Aug. 2/3 weekend and start to taper, you'll start feeling better because you'll won't be running so much, so you will actually start to recover. And that's the whole idea.
This was also good prep for your race. Your emotions will be all over the place, and you already know you're going to have a tough time getting sleep before the race. I guess take this as emphasizing to you how much you need to focus on the importance of sleep in the 7 - 10 days before the race, since you won't necessarily get a lot of sleep the night or two before.I'd be lying if I said things went great mentally. It was really up and down in parts...literally mile-to-mile would be a change just past mile 14 where I would feel great, and then feel horrible. But even though I wasn't thrilled to do this run on my own, it was probably a really good thing for me. I also firmly believe that having multiple nights of poor/less-than usual sleep messed with this as well.
That's a pretty respectable grade. I'd be walking that for sure, especially with that distance. Practicing the power-walking on the treadmill will help.it's about a 5.7% grade, so it's not terribly steep
You are in the homestretch, so don't give up on the training now!