10 x 200m hill sprints tonight with a decent warm up and cool down. About 8.5km total.
On 20km for the week.
Anyone know of any decent races this month or next?
Haha.It will be a shame if you never manage a marathon owing to physical limitations. I recommend the average runner should aspire to run at least one and maybe two or three. The extra mileage, variety of training and diet takes fitness to a different level with secondary improvements at shorter distances, even down to 5k.
OK. Hopefully the injury can be sorted as you think, even if it takes a while. A marathon could be possible sometime in the future. Good luck.Haha.
This has certainly made me think a little.
Was chatting with someone at work just before Xmas and she's booked in two (in Europe) this year.
I'm fairly sure I wouldn't be able to with my current leg situation. Gets sore around the 11k mark.
It's great to see so much activity in here, with lots of good running and healthy habits. I always enjoy reading about how you lads are getting on.
After a period of injury, illness and weight gain, I finally feel like I'm moving forward with good habits and a path to health and fitness.
My weight has started coming down, I've largely cut out the junk and I'm gradually getting back into the swing of things with exercise.
I've never been one for New Year's resolutions but this happens to have come at a good time for me to get on the case with it.
Here's to a great and healthy 2024 for all of us.
71 year old bloke doing his 300th parkrun today.
He beat me.
I'm just an overweight retired FOC who has made slow running part of his weekly activity. I appreciate there's others on here who can run further and faster but I just enjoy doing what I can do on my own terms.
Absolutely this mate, I'm always saying the 25 stone bloke who is chugging round a marathon in 9 hours is working far harder than the whippets at the front, the mental fortitude to get it done that them folk have is huge.Its the best thing about running the only real competition is with yourself and times are really only personal to you.
Could not agree more. One of the most difficult things when running longer distances is holding it together mentally. Im relying on music at the moment, as I am not quite there yet. Those who stack up the hours to train for a marathon and then, as you say chug round in 9 hours, that takes some mental strength, not just race day but all the hours of training and suffering to get there.Absolutely this mate, I'm always saying the 25 stone bloke who is chugging round a marathon in 9 hours is working far harder than the whippets at the front, the mental fortitude to get it done that them folk have is huge.
Most in the running community is are hugely supportive of each other as its pretty much understood your only ever racing against yourself and your own goals...... well that's apart from that Dutch bloke who is currently getting miles in front of me in the montane virtual spine race! It's an ultra not a sprint pal!!