Herding_Cats
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2017
- Messages
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80% chance of thunderstorms tomorrow morning. Glad I haven't pre-registered yet (procrastination pays off some times!) and "wasted" $45.
Pull back on the training for the next week or so to allow some recovery given this was harder than expected. Also, don't let this be a hit to the confidence. A temp like this is highly unlikely for October or Disney.
Im not going to lie. It was really messing with my head that it was so hard. And it still is today. The logic side of me says “it was so hot, you probably should’ve cut it at 10, this doesn’t mean oct/MW will be awful” but the emotional side of me is trying to say that this is a signal that I’m taking on more than I should, I’m not running enough, etc. I’ll probably walk my 2mi EAs today and tomorrow and see how things feel on Thursday for the scheduled 6-miler.
Good luck to your team! Sounds like a fun race experience!Sounds like I’m going to be the team shuttle (for most of our team since I have a lot of kids) for the local team relay marathon race tomorrow. The CC coach/race director says there are around 70 teams signed up. It’s 4 5-mile legs and 1 10k leg (that our team is splitting in half with 2 8th grade boys.). I looked up team results from 2019 and one of the men’s teams (there are men’s, women’s, coed, and individual categories, grouped by cumulative age I think??) “Playmakers NB Elite” ran it in like 2:21. I’m estimating the team I’m driving will be somewhere around the 3-3:30 mark.
So I’m considering doing my Friday long run (9mi LR + 1mi M tempo) in all intervals. So my question becomes, should I all of my EA/B runs as intervals this week also?
after my half in May and last weekend’s debacle, I’m wondering if the intervals would help push back that feeling I get at around mile 8 where my body just doesn’t wanna move any more
Doesn't have to be if you don't want to. I know runners that do continuous runs during the week and then do intervals for their long runs. So if you do a classic Galloway LR pace, then you're aiming for a 13:55 min/mile (M Tempo + 2 minutes). I typically like to see runners do their "run" pace of the run/walk around their LR pace. So keep the running at 13:00 min/mile and add structured walking breaks to make the average closer to a 13:55 min/mile. What kind of duration for run/walk do you plan on doing?
There are some that are better predisposed to run/walk intervals. They tend to be speedsters. Tons of speed to burn, but lack the endurance.
I ran my 4.5 miles of EB (plus strides) today and ran all of it too fast. I was expecting mile 3-4 to be faster because that’s when I did the strides, but all of it was more like slightly too fast LR pace. I’m going to pay for that come Tuesday.
I was going to try to keep my LR pace though the duration of the interval, which means the run portion would be faster than LR...but I’m reading your comment as it should be slower? Or just for Galloway methodology? I was thinking about starting with 90/30 intervals and see how its going after about 2 miles. But I’m not necessarily attached to that
as far as being a speedster, probably not a good descriptor for me.![]()
Used a new Spotify station in an attempt to get my cadence higher since I usually hang out at around 165. I managed to get it up to about 172 during the run portions of the intervals, and it felt hard. The T intervals felt really awkward at that cadence...like my stride length to make it work was not what my body wanted to do.
not gonna lie...those T intervals sucked and I was not sorry to be done with them. Lots of mind games to get through all 15 minutes, and make it to the half way point of the 2nd one so I could convince myself that now I HAD to do the rest of them.
Wish us luck because it’s supposed to be in the 80s all week, so it’s gonna be a warm start and a late finish. I’m a bit anxious about the elevation gain, and we are both anxious about finishing the race.
It'll definitely feel that way in the beginning. But remember that rather than a certain number, it's more about quick light steps. Like running on hot lava. The less time your foot is on the ground the better. The cadence is a function of that. As a 6 foot runner, my cadence is about 150-155 at a 10:50 min/mile for comparison.
Was that more because it was "hard and on the treadmill", or was it just "hard" in general? To be fair, your description of them sounds a lot like T pace to me. It's a comfortably hard pace. And not necessarily something fun to run at. Especially when you get in the 15-20 min rep range. Just remind yourself you did it, and the workout will be fruitful. A 3x15 min T + R finish is a very hard workout. So take pride in that.
That sounds like a good idea if it is indeed hot out. I’m hoping that Lake Michigan moderates the temperature some, but I’m not sure it’ll do much at this late point in the summerSo how about:
15:30, 15:15, 15:00, 14:45, 14:30, 14:15, 14:00, 13:45, 13:30, 11:55 (M Tempo).
If it's around a T+D of 150 or so, then everything from 14:00 pace and slower would be slower than Galloway+2min. So only the last three miles would be above and beyond a traditional Galloway LR in those conditions. And if you come to the 8th mile and want to hold 14:00, then do that. See if you can increase the pace for the last one. I've felt spent going into that fast finish and sometimes I can pull it out and sometimes I can't. But more often we're capable of more than we think. All of this pacing advice does not take into account the elevation profile changes.
I finally found a runner with Strava Premium who ran the Sleeping Bear Marathon in 2018:
https://www.strava.com/activities/1888115177/overview
View attachment 597625
So you can at least get a rough idea as to the effect of that steep uphill at Mile 3/4 and 21/22. Looks to me to be at least a 30 sec/mile hit for someone at his pace. So I would anticipate that the difference might be even more extreme for you