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From couch potato to 8 day ultra marathon event (Read 3330 times)

    Hi

     

    I've been challenged by a friend to run the Goretex Trans Alpine Run in 2012. 270 km distance and 15 km altitude (total elevation gain) over 8 days. I've just posted my training schedule at: http://alpinerun.blogspot.com/2011/04/training-calendar.html

     

    4360 km in 18 months. Doable? What do you guys think? Will I succeed at the challenge? I'm new to serious running, so would appreciated all feedback.

     

    Thanks! Big grin

    Running Blog: On my two feet


    Beginner all over again

      I suppose it depends on your fitness level and your body's tolerance to training?

       

      If you listen to your body,

      gradually increase

      but  cutting back every few weeks for a "Lite week"

       

      I'd say likely you will make a lot of progress over time.

       

      Smile

       


      A Saucy Wench

        wow...I read the title as "from couch potato to ultra marathon in 8 days".   18 months sounds better!

         

        More than anything focus on keeping most of your runs easy. No, easier than that.  NO, like you could take a nap while running easy.  Your biggest challenge is going to be to build a big base with no injuries.

        I have become Death, the destroyer of electronic gadgets

         

        "When I got too tired to run anymore I just pretended I wasnt tired and kept running anyway" - dd, age 7

          Really the thing that matters most is how obsessive and stubborn you are. Those are the two traits that matter most in endurance runners: obsession primarily during the training and stubbornness mostly during the event.

          LedLincoln


          not bad for mile 25

            Yeah, it may be less of the physical challenge than whether you get sufficiently obsessed with running to feel it's worth doing the ultra.  It could happen.  Good luck!

            xor


              >> 15 km altitude

               

              Are you sure about this?

               

              Do you mean total elevation gain perhaps?

               

                NO, like you could take a nap while running easy. 

                 Thanks.

                "If you have the fire, run..." -John Climacus

                  With 15 km altitude I mean that the total climb of all trails put together is 15 km elevation gain. Dead

                   

                   

                  My cardio fitness is moderate, by that I mean average. Not rubbish, but neither is it good. Beginner level.

                   

                   

                  Most of the training will be slow. I can't run faster than jogwalk anyway - my left arm still healing from a two+ week old fracture. But I will need to run a lot of trail - and a lot of hills. The climbing is what worries me most, as the area where I live is quite flat. Seems that I'll need to do a lot of out of town running during weekends.

                   

                   

                  Proper link to the training schedule.


                  Training Calendar

                   

                   

                  Do sign up as subscribers to the blog if you like it. I'll try to post updates on my progress regularly. Big grin

                   

                   

                  My training log is public and visible here on RunningAHEAD.


                  Training Log

                  Running Blog: On my two feet


                  I look my best blurry!

                    Yeah, it may be less of the physical challenge than whether you get sufficiently obsessed with running to feel it's worth doing the ultra.  It could happen.  Good luck!

                     I definitely believe it only takes about 18 months to be adequately obsessed!  Building a base without injury is tough if you become overzealous.  Don't I know it!  Good luck!

                      Slow! Got that, thanks Big grin I'm gonna build a milage base by going mostly veeeery slowly. My fitness level is so bad, right now I don't really have any other choise on that one Shy

                       

                      Any suggestions on how to prepare for the long climbs? Except the obvious: to train long climbs in the mountains.

                       

                      The area where I live is quite flat. I've bee thinking about running/walking in the stairs of some high building once a week or so.

                      Running Blog: On my two feet

                        I've never run an ultra, but I have an interesting conversation with an ultramarathoner.  We talked for a few miles while running a marathon.  He mentioned running a 100 miler each of the two previous weekends.  His hill training was 4 to 6 hours at 4.5 MPH on a treadmill set for a steep uphill (15% ?) on Saturday, followed by 3 to 5 hours on Sunday on the same treadmill at the same speed except it was set for a steep downhill.  I googled him afterward.  He was one of six people to complete the Grand Slam of Ultrarunning that year. 

                         

                        There's a lot of good information on training for ultras at www.ultrunr.com.

                        Seanv2


                          Really the thing that matters most is how obsessive and stubborn you are. Those are the two traits that matter most in endurance runners: obsession primarily during the training and stubbornness mostly during the event.

                           

                          This.

                          Have you qualified for Boston? I want to interview you!

                          Message me!

                           

                          www.miloandthecalf.com

                           

                             

                            My cardio fitness is moderate, by that I mean average. Not rubbish, but neither is it good. Beginner level.

                             

                             You may be thinking about priorities wrong. What you need to transform the most with your training is not your body, it's your mind.

                             

                            There are lots of ways to take that comment, some of them unflattering. They probably all apply. Smile

                            BigDH


                              good luck.

                              Purdey


                              Self anointed title

                                His hill training was 4 to 6 hours at 4.5 MPH on a treadmill set for a steep uphill (15% ?) on Saturday, followed by 3 to 5 hours on Sunday on the same treadmill at the same speed except it was set for a steep downhill. 

                                 

                                That is going to hurt. Do NOT do this. Not yet anyway.

                                 

                                 

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