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2015-05-26 8:44 AM
in reply to: ok2try

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Subject: RE: Weekend!
Got in a couple of one hour rides on the indoor trainer over the weekend. It didn't feel too bad, all things considered. That's pretty encouraging since I'm only 4 weeks out from the surgery. My HR still goes up to 158...only at much lower watts.

I guess the good news is the road is long.

Running and swimming can start in mid June!

Hope you all had a great weekend.

Steve


2015-05-27 9:54 PM
in reply to: lutzman

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Subject: RE: Weekend!

Wow you are all very busy.  I love reading your progress and updates - the good and unfortunately, the bad.

I have to say I find the nutrition information interesting.  I did a big bike ride last weekend, didn't bonk but was close - my quads started cramping and I know I didn't drink near enough.

I was telling my husband about the ensure mixture for the bike - he has done IMCDA 2x and we have never heard of that mixture before - we find it fascinating.  Would you reduce mixture for a 70.3?    We just did a large Hammer order with Perpetuem tabs/mix along with Heed, etc.   I personally like the perpetuem tabs but I am the only one in our group of tri crazies.

We are participating in a sprint tri on Saturday - I usually do this with both my daughters but only the youngest this year.  We will swim in the same lane - I asked her not to lap me too many times.    

Wondering what you are doing for swim yards for 70.3 distances?  My race isn't until late July so I have some time to build but am really only at 12-1700, so I plan to add yards starting next week.

 

 

 

2015-05-27 10:14 PM
in reply to: mtsnorider

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Subject: RE: Weekend!
Originally posted by mtsnorider

Wondering what you are doing for swim yards for 70.3 distances?  My race isn't until late July so I have some time to build but am really only at 12-1700, so I plan to add yards starting next week.

 

 

 




I'm a slow swimmer. When I trained for the two 70.3's I competed in I feel like I was under-trained on the swim. I was typically doing 2,500 yards per workout, a minimum of 3x per week, sometimes adding a 4th workout of about the same distance. I was mixing in a fair amount of sprint work through the workout.

Almost every training plan I looked at indicated I was not swimming enough. The recommendation was always in the range of 3,000 yards+. But I just didn't have the time. I had one hour in the morning to swim and 2500 was all I could get in.

For a guy with a desire to finish toward the front of my AG, it was not enough. I think I swam 37 minutes my first 70.3 event and 39 in the second race (rough water). That put me in the top 20%, but five minutes or so behind the top AG guys.

The big question is what's your goal? If your goal is to simply finish the event and feel good, 1700 yards will probably get you through the swim. If you're looking to be competitive in your age group, you'll need to ramp it up.

Hopefully Scott will chime in so you can get advice from our resident swim expert.

Good luck!

Steve
2015-05-27 10:54 PM
in reply to: mtsnorider

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Subject: RE: Weekend!
Originally posted by mtsnorider

I was telling my husband about the ensure mixture for the bike - he has done IMCDA 2x and we have never heard of that mixture before - we find it fascinating.  Would you reduce mixture for a 70.3?  




One bottle has about 1000 calories so it depends on how many calories you plan to consume on the bike. I'm new at this, so I'm not really an expert at how many calories you need. I finished the bottle in one lap of the bike course - equivalent to a 70.3 bike course - and also had a pack of Cliff Shot Blocks (100 calories). The consensus in the group was that I should have eaten more. I think the other members of the group also consumed their ensure mixture on the first lap and then either converted to other nutrition for the second lap or had a second bottle of the ensure mixture in special needs.

2015-05-28 4:35 PM
in reply to: lutzman

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Subject: RE: Weekend!
Originally posted by lutzman

When I trained for the two 70.3's I competed in I feel like I was under-trained on the swim. I was typically doing 2,500 yards per workout, a minimum of 3x per week, sometimes adding a 4th workout of about the same distance. I was mixing in a fair amount of sprint work through the workout.



Oh boy, this is a reality check. My HIM plan swim distances are shorter than 2500 yds.
2015-05-29 5:44 AM
in reply to: lutzman

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Subject: How Far Should I Swim in Training for My Triathlon?

Hey everyone,

Sorry I have been AWOL.  I enjoyed the holiday weekend just a little too much!

Anyway, I see there is a question about how far an athlete should swim to prepare for the swim leg of a triathlon.

We are going to assume that your technique is good.  If it isn't, that is your first order of business - get your technique sorted out.

A very general rule of thumb is, to be a middle of the pack swimmer, you need to work up to swimming 1.5 - 2.0 times the race distance per workout, a minimum of three times a week.  Generally you will have an 8-week build up to the proper distance and then 8-weeks at that distance for a total of 16-weeks.  I would consider that a minimum!  That distance should be broken down into intervals.  You do NOT want to be swimming long steady state swims - that is an absolute waste of time.

Using that formula, here are the ranges for each of the race distances (the race distance is in meters, then I converted to yards as most people train in a short course yards pool.

RaceDistanceYards (apprx)Workout Range
Sprint750 M8001,200 - 1,600 yards
Olympic1,500 M1,6502,500 - 3,300 yards
HIM1,900 M2,1003,200 - 4,200 yards
IM3,800 M4,2006,300 - 8,400 yards

 

 

 

 

If you want to be a front of the pack swimmer, you should be swimming 2.0 - 3.0 times the race distance per workout 4-times per week.

The other part of this is how to swim those yards in training.  We have touched on that briefly in the past.  If anyone is interested, I will be happy to revisit threshold pace as well as how and why you should develop your threshold pace.

Hope that helps.



2015-05-29 8:19 AM
in reply to: EchoLkScott

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Subject: Race Day Nutrition

Originally posted by EchoLkScott
Originally posted by mtsnorider

I was telling my husband about the ensure mixture for the bike - he has done IMCDA 2x and we have never heard of that mixture before - we find it fascinating.  Would you reduce mixture for a 70.3?  

One bottle has about 1000 calories so it depends on how many calories you plan to consume on the bike. I'm new at this, so I'm not really an expert at how many calories you need. I finished the bottle in one lap of the bike course - equivalent to a 70.3 bike course - and also had a pack of Cliff Shot Blocks (100 calories). The consensus in the group was that I should have eaten more. I think the other members of the group also consumed their ensure mixture on the first lap and then either converted to other nutrition for the second lap or had a second bottle of the ensure mixture in special needs.

I thought I would make a comment on race day nutrition, especially since triathlon season is nearly upon us.

Scott and Tammy, this is not directed at your nutrition comments per se.  Your comments merely provided an inspiration.

We triathletes are a fickle bunch.  We constantly are trying to find a better way to do something.  Whether that be the latest training fad, the most recent new-wave recovery method, or the latest and greatest nutrition plan.  In the process of finding all those revolutionary new theories so that we can simplify things, we tend to over-complicate them.

Race day nutrition is no exception.  However, when you look at the science, it doesn't have to be complicated.

The simple reality is, depending upon the amount and type of carbohydrate you consume, your body can generally only process approximately 1 gram of carbohydrate per minute during intense exercise - that is 4-calories per minute or 240 calories per hour.  Slightly more if your carbohydrate is from multiple sources such as sucrose and fructose - getting you up to maybe 300 calories per hour.  Anything more than that is a waste and an invitation to GI distress.

I have heard athletes on more than one occasion say something like, "Oh, well, I take my "XYZ" blend, mix it at double the normal concentration, add a pinch of this and a dash of that, shake it up and put it in my bottle.  That gives me 800 calories in each bottle so I just drink one an hour and I am good to go."  NO they are not!  In reality, in that situation, the athlete is probably getting next to nothing per hour.

Bodily fluid osmolality is typically in the range of 270-310 mOsm.  Any fluid ingested should be at an osmolality below 300mOsm/kg.  If you don't know what that means, then you probably shouldn't be trying to come up with your own concoction to use as your nutrition because it is just going to sit there in your gut and cause GI problems - your body will simply not be able to digest it until it is at the proper concentration.  To dilute it, you either need to take in massive amounts of water, which can create problems all by itself, or your body will draw fluid from other parts of your body, such as the blood or muscles, which can also create other problems.

Beyond the concentration of whatever you are taking in, you need to consider electrolyte replacement, especially sodium, as well as protein and/or caffeine intake.  There are numerous studies that show taking in protein along with carbohydrate during longer events like an IM will help minimize muscle catabolism - your body "eating" muscle to produce energy.  Again, if you don't understand the science, you probably shouldn't be mixing your own formula because you are, quite literally, playing with fire.

The simplest solution is to use one of the multitude of products that are currently on the market.  Gels typically have 100-130 calories per dose - depending on the gel, 2-3 per hour and you are good to go.  Most of them don't have protein or electrolytes so you would need to supplement.  There are any number of sports drinks that include carbohydrate, protein, electrolytes and even caffeine and they are designed to put you in that sweet spot of 240-300 calories per hour.  There are also a number of companies that allow you to "custom blend" your sports drink to exactly what you want - number of calories, amount of protein and carbohydrate, whether there is caffeine or not, how strong the flavor is, etc.

Whatever solution you decide upon, make sure you test in in training.  Remember the adage, "Nothing new on race day."  That particularly applies to nutrition.  Just because you can tolerate something sitting on your couch in the living room, doesn't mean you will be able to tolerate it after 5-hours on the bike.

One final thought.  You can precisely calculate your energy requirements for whatever race you plan to do.  Knowing that, you can then accurately plan your caloric intake to meet your energy budget.  While your body can only process 240-300 calories per hour, you may not actually need that much.  An athlete doing a 5-hour bike ride may or may not have the same energy needs as an athlete doing a 7-hour bike ride.  In some ways, the athlete doing the 7-hour bike ride has an advantage because they have two additional hours to take in calories.  An athlete doing a Sprint Triathlon has different energy needs than an athlete doing an Ironman distance.

You don't need to over-complicate your race day nutrition.  Aim to take in 240-300 calories per hour along with 3-5 grams of protein for longer duration races as well as electrolyte replacement.  Calculate your sweat rate so you know how much fluid you need to take in per hour - generally one bottle per hour on the bike.  I encourage the athletes I work with to take in nutrition while still in T1 instead of waiting until you are 15-20 minutes in to the bike because you are coming out of the water at a caloric deficit.  The sooner you get ahead of that, the better.

Happy racing!

Hope that helps.

 

2015-05-29 8:31 AM
in reply to: k9car363

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Subject: RE: How Far Should I Swim in Training for My Triathlon?
Tammy - I"m so glad you asked this question. Seems like my training plan was a bit light on swim distance.

Scott - Thanks for this response. My HIM race is in mid August, so I'll have 8-10 weeks to build in the extra yards.

Hope everyone has a great weekend.

Dave
2015-05-29 8:43 AM
in reply to: 0

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Subject: RE: Weekend!

Originally posted by EchoLkScott

One bottle has about 1000 calories so it depends on how many calories you plan to consume on the bike. I'm new at this, so I'm not really an expert at how many calories you need. I finished the bottle in one lap of the bike course - equivalent to a 70.3 bike course - and also had a pack of Cliff Shot Blocks (100 calories). The consensus in the group was that I should have eaten more . . .

Hey Scott,

I looked at your log.  I think you are referring to the 5/16 ride where you were on the bike for 5:48.  If that is the correct ride, then yes, you probably could have taken in more nutrition.  Ideally you would have taken in 1,380 - 1,725 calories during that ride.  Without knowing your FTP and some other numbers from the ride I can't really fine tune it any better than that.  Undercutting the caloric intake on the bike typically doesn't impact the bike.  You generally can't take in as many calories while running so the caloric deficit from the bike will carry over and rear it's ugly head during the run.

Just remember, if you find yourself rubbing up against the wall, Coca-Cola in the aid station will become your very best friend!



Edited by k9car363 2015-05-29 8:48 AM
2015-05-29 12:56 PM
in reply to: k9car363

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Subject: RE: Race Day Nutrition
Originally posted by k9car363

...

You don't need to over-complicate your race day nutrition.  Aim to take in 240-300 calories per hour along with 3-5 grams of protein for longer duration races as well as electrolyte replacement.  Calculate your sweat rate so you know how much fluid you need to take in per hour - generally one bottle per hour on the bike.




Hi Scott, I was hoping you'd respond!

Yes, everyone at camp was shooting for 300 calories per hour. It sounds like that should be the maximum calorie consumption - not the target. I don't want to flirt with GI distress, so I may shoot for something a little lower. The camp literature says maximum carbohydrates of 250cal/hr with the remaining 50cal/hr being fat/protein. That is probably why they chose the Ensure - 9% or it's calories are from fat and 18% of it's calories are from protein.

How do you compute your sweat rate? The camp literature just broke it down into "High", "Medium", or "Low" relative sweat rates, but didn't say anything about how you would calculate your personal sweat rate. They just had some general guidelines - "If you shirts are crusty with salt after a run you probably have a high sweat rate". They suggested 24oz of water per hour for high sweat rates, 20oz/hr for medium, and 16oz/hr for low, and that your should bump your consumption up a level (say medium to high) for hot race locations.

I just consumed water when I was thirsty. My water consumption came out to about 1 bottle per hour, but I didn't plan it that way.

Thanks!
2015-05-29 1:29 PM
in reply to: k9car363

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Subject: RE: Weekend!
Originally posted by k9car363

Originally posted by EchoLkScott

One bottle has about 1000 calories so it depends on how many calories you plan to consume on the bike. I'm new at this, so I'm not really an expert at how many calories you need. I finished the bottle in one lap of the bike course - equivalent to a 70.3 bike course - and also had a pack of Cliff Shot Blocks (100 calories). The consensus in the group was that I should have eaten more . . .

Hey Scott,

I looked at your log.  I think you are referring to the 5/16 ride where you were on the bike for 5:48.  If that is the correct ride, then yes, you probably could have taken in more nutrition.  Ideally you would have taken in 1,380 - 1,725 calories during that ride.  Without knowing your FTP and some other numbers from the ride I can't really fine tune it any better than that.  Undercutting the caloric intake on the bike typically doesn't impact the bike.  You generally can't take in as many calories while running so the caloric deficit from the bike will carry over and rear it's ugly head during the run.

Just remember, if you find yourself rubbing up against the wall, Coca-Cola in the aid station will become your very best friend!




Yes, that is the ride I was taking about. That was the second day of riding the course, and I was planning to do two full loops. After I started the second loop I realized my leg muscles were not up to some of the bigger climbs and just did a couple loops on the shorter and flatter first section of the course. I wasn't going all-out at that point. From my Strava feed, it looks like the first loop took about 4:30. 1100 calories in 4.5 hours is about 245cal/hr - at the lower end of your range. They were suggesting I should have been closer to 300cal/hr.

They were far more concerned about my first day, when I did one loop in 3:41 consuming only 300 calories. That is less than 100 cal/hr. My brick run that day was pretty pathetic - my legs just didn't want to move! Lesson learned!

I haven't had Coca-Cola for many years. What makes that the preferred drink? The carbonation?

Thanks!


2015-05-29 2:47 PM
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Subject: RE: Weekend!

Originally posted by EchoLkScott  . . . After I started the second loop I realized my leg muscles were not up to some of the bigger climbs and just did a couple loops on the shorter and flatter first section of the course . . .

I doubt this was "hitting the wall."  It was more likely the accumulated fatigue from everything you had done over the course of the camp.

Originally posted by EchoLkScott They were far more concerned about my first day, when I did one loop in 3:41 consuming only 300 calories. That is less than 100 cal/hr. My brick run that day was pretty pathetic - my legs just didn't want to move! Lesson learned!

This may well have been the beginning signs of "hitting the wall."  In more advanced cases, not only do your legs not want to move, they simply won't support you.  It can go downhill from there.

If you have never seen it, here is a link to Julie Moss hitting the wall in the 1982 Ironman World Championships.  This went worldwide on ABC's Wide World of Sports and brought many people into triathlon.  This is a very clear example of hitting the wall. It isn't pretty to watch, in fact, as an athlete, it is almost painful, but certainly worth the 3-minutes to watch and take a lesson from - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbWsQMabczM

Originally posted by EchoLkScott I haven't had Coca-Cola for many years. What makes that the preferred drink? The carbonation?

No, it isn't the carbonation.  When you hit the wall, you need energy RIGHT NOW.  The fastest source of energy is soda pop and most triathlons happen to have Coca-Cola on hand.  Gels will work, sports drink will work, but neither of those will be as fast acting as soda.  If you hit the wall, grab a can of soda pop, immediately follow that with a couple gels.  Significantly lower your pace for the next 10 minutes or so and then you should be back on track - albeit at a huge caloric deficit which you will have to manage as the wall is still looming out there.



Edited by k9car363 2015-05-29 2:56 PM
2015-05-29 7:37 PM
in reply to: EchoLkScott

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Subject: RE: Race Day Nutrition

Originally posted by EchoLkScott

How do you compute your sweat rate? The camp literature just broke it down into "High", "Medium", or "Low" relative sweat rates, but didn't say anything about how you would calculate your personal sweat rate. They just had some general guidelines - "If you shirts are crusty with salt after a run you probably have a high sweat rate". They suggested 24oz of water per hour for high sweat rates, 20oz/hr for medium, and 16oz/hr for low, and that your should bump your consumption up a level (say medium to high) for hot race locations.

I just consumed water when I was thirsty. My water consumption came out to about 1 bottle per hour, but I didn't plan it that way. Thanks!

Calculating your sweat rate is fairly easy to do, as you will see in just a minute.  There is some debate as to whether you should calculate your sweat rate separately for the bike as well as the run.  They are likely going to be a little bit different.  Some coaches are happy just knowing the sweat rate for the run and using that for everything.  Others want to know the specific sweat rate for each sport.  That choice is obviously up to you.

To do the test -

1)  Strip down to your birthday suit and weigh yourself.  The more accurate your scale, the better.  Write your weight down.

2)  Go for a one-hour bike ride/run at the same approximate intensity you anticipate on race day in similar environmental conditions if possible (time of day, temperature, humidity, etc.).

3) Record exact amount of any fluid taken in during the test (I do this by measuring water into a bottle, then measuring the remaining water after the exercise, the difference is the amount ingested).

4) After your ride/run, strip down to your birthday suit again, dry yourself with a towel (this is important) and again weigh yourself.

5) Subtract the weight in step 4 from the weight in step 1, convert that answer to ounces, then add the amount you drank from step 3.  The result is your hourly fluid loss.

Example:

Let's say you weigh 146.6 pounds before exercise.  You go for a one-hour run, consuming 6 ounces of water during the run.  Afterwards, your weight is 145.5

To determine sweat rate -

146.6 - 145.5 = 1.1 lbs x 16 to convert to ounces = 17.6 ounces + 6 ounces taken in during exercise = 23.6 ounces lost per hour

In this example the athlete would need to consume 23.6 ounces of fluid to replace what was lost.

I use my sweat rate as a guide to hydration.  If I calculate 23.6 ounces I am not going to freak if I only take in 22 ounces, nor is the world going to change it's axis if I drink 25.

Hopefully, knowing how to calculate your sweat rate will give you some insight into race day and training hydration.

2015-05-29 8:14 PM
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Subject: RE: Race Day Nutrition
Originally posted by EchoLkScott

Originally posted by k9car363

...

You don't need to over-complicate your race day nutrition.  Aim to take in 240-300 calories per hour along with 3-5 grams of protein for longer duration races as well as electrolyte replacement.  Calculate your sweat rate so you know how much fluid you need to take in per hour - generally one bottle per hour on the bike.








Scott--I agree with the calorie intake. When I did the Florida 70.3 (my first HIM) I really missed on the calorie intake. I had one sleeve of clif blocks and I think I ate about 3/4's (about 200 calories) of the pack over 56 miles. No salt intake. I mostly used my water bottle and I only went through the one I started with for the entire ride...so I was way low on both calorie and fluid intake. I didn't really understand it at the time, but when I got off the bike I was cooked.

My bike time was solid (2:40) but I was completely spent from the ride and had my worst HM time ever.

Learning from that experience, at Boise 70.3 I had six gels taped to my top tube along with salt sticks. My plan was one gel at the start and then follow with a gel every half hour like clockwork. Water intake was one full bottle (one liter) per hour. I was following that plan exactly right up to when I crashed at mile 52 (on pace for 2:43 finish). But I was feeling really strong and was already thinking I was ready to run a solid HM. So, to your point, having a good strategy in place for getting those calories consistently (with liquids) is critical.

Steve

Edited by lutzman 2015-05-29 8:17 PM
2015-05-29 10:01 PM
in reply to: k9car363

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Subject: RE: How Far Should I Swim in Training for My Triathlon?

Scott - I see by your chart that I too have been undertraining for the swim.  I typically swim 3 times per week but not far enough.  Since I got your info on threshold swimming I have seen some improvements in my swimming.  I've been OWSing in a local lake a nice 18C/64F (perfect temp).  So, how do I break my swims up to intervals in the lake?  It is a small lake 1km by 600m in size and no motors allowed so we can swim without any limitations.  Today I swam about 3800m in 1:30 but in 5# intervals.

I'm afraid I too have been AWOL for a while.

2015-05-30 2:20 PM
in reply to: lutzman

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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...




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2015-05-31 2:27 PM
in reply to: k9car363

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Subject: RE: Race Day Nutrition
Originally posted by k9car363

Calculating your sweat rate is fairly easy to do, as you will see in just a minute.  There is some debate as to whether you should calculate your sweat rate separately for the bike as well as the run.  They are likely going to be a little bit different.  Some coaches are happy just knowing the sweat rate for the run and using that for everything.  Others want to know the specific sweat rate for each sport.  That choice is obviously up to you.

To do the test -

1)  Strip down to your birthday suit and weigh yourself.  The more accurate your scale, the better.  Write your weight down.

2)  Go for a one-hour bike ride/run at the same approximate intensity you anticipate on race day in similar environmental conditions if possible (time of day, temperature, humidity, etc.).

3) Record exact amount of any fluid taken in during the test (I do this by measuring water into a bottle, then measuring the remaining water after the exercise, the difference is the amount ingested).

4) After your ride/run, strip down to your birthday suit again, dry yourself with a towel (this is important) and again weigh yourself.

5) Subtract the weight in step 4 from the weight in step 1, convert that answer to ounces, then add the amount you drank from step 3.  The result is your hourly fluid loss.

Example:

Let's say you weigh 146.6 pounds before exercise.  You go for a one-hour run, consuming 6 ounces of water during the run.  Afterwards, your weight is 145.5

To determine sweat rate -

146.6 - 145.5 = 1.1 lbs x 16 to convert to ounces = 17.6 ounces + 6 ounces taken in during exercise = 23.6 ounces lost per hour

In this example the athlete would need to consume 23.6 ounces of fluid to replace what was lost.

I use my sweat rate as a guide to hydration.  If I calculate 23.6 ounces I am not going to freak if I only take in 22 ounces, nor is the world going to change it's axis if I drink 25.

Hopefully, knowing how to calculate your sweat rate will give you some insight into race day and training hydration.




Ah, yes, I have heard about using weight to compute sweat rate. Thanks for the instructions!
2015-05-31 2:56 PM
in reply to: lutzman

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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...
Originally posted by lutzman




VERY COOL! That's just a five hour drive from my house.

Make it a long-distance training plan! Or, perhaps duathlon or aquathon. From the ITU announcement:

"In 2017, Penticton, Canada will organize the first Multisport World Championships Festival, which will see duathlon, long distance triathlon, aquathlon and cross triathlon championship races organized together during a week-long festival."

Apparently the Olympic distance World Championship will be held separately.
2015-05-31 9:52 PM
in reply to: lutzman

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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...

Steve - Glad to hear you're getting going again.  I also see you won't be racing in Chelan either.  Sorry to hear that.  I'll try to remember to watch for you along the bike route.  I'm slow so I'll be near the back of the pack and looking a lot like my profile pic (Papa Smurf).  I'm all signed up and fortunately I was able to reserve a room at the Midtowner in Chelan (Wed to Mon).

Locally, There hasn't been a lot of buzz about the ITU World Championship Festival.  I expect I'll be doing some heavy duty volunteering for the duration of the festival.  And, I'd like to get involved in some of the racing.

EchoLkScott - The Festival should be pretty good.  Hopefully, you will come up and have a good time.  When my friend and I drove to Lake Stevens for our first HIM we went by Hwy 20 in Washington and it was a pretty scenic easy drive.   We have a lot of good swimming lakes and ride/run routes.

 

Yesterday I rode 5 hours around the Ironman/Challenge bike course.  We climbed 1238m/4062' so my pace was very slow but I made it up all the hills after doing a three hour run on Wednesday.  For the ride I consumed 5 bottles of Perpetuem, 1 bottle of gatorade, 1 bottle of Coke and 1 bottle of recoverite plus one HSwaffle and a Luna bar.  I also included saltstick to my repertoire.  I haven't calculated precisely but my caloric intake was comfortably over 300g of carbs per hour and about 100g of protein total.  I also consumed over 240mg of sodium per hour.  As a diabetic I don't normally drink pop but I figured I earned it on the ride.  According to my Garmin I burned 4238 calories (not sure how accurate it is).

This week I am tapering for my Oliver 1/54/10 race this weekend.  My first event of the season and it is an Oly race with a 54km bike ride.

 

2015-05-31 11:33 PM
in reply to: wenceslasz

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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...
Originally posted by wenceslasz

Steve - Glad to hear you're getting going again.  I also see you won't be racing in Chelan either.  Sorry to hear that.  I'll try to remember to watch for you along the bike route.  I'm slow so I'll be near the back of the pack and looking a lot like my profile pic (Papa Smurf).  I'm all signed up and fortunately I was able to reserve a room at the Midtowner in Chelan (Wed to Mon).

Locally, There hasn't been a lot of buzz about the ITU World Championship Festival.  I expect I'll be doing some heavy duty volunteering for the duration of the festival.  And, I'd like to get involved in some of the racing.

EchoLkScott - The Festival should be pretty good.  Hopefully, you will come up and have a good time.  When my friend and I drove to Lake Stevens for our first HIM we went by Hwy 20 in Washington and it was a pretty scenic easy drive.   We have a lot of good swimming lakes and ride/run routes.




Hey George,

I'm registered for the Chelanman Olympic and my wife and I are also staying at the Midtowner (Friday and Saturday nights). See you there!

2015-06-01 11:18 AM
in reply to: wenceslasz

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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...
Originally posted by wenceslasz

Steve - Glad to hear you're getting going again.  I also see you won't be racing in Chelan either.  Sorry to hear that.  I'll try to remember to watch for you along the bike route.  I'm slow so I'll be near the back of the pack and looking a lot like my profile pic (Papa Smurf).  I'm all signed up and fortunately I was able to reserve a room at the Midtowner in Chelan (Wed to Mon).



Hey George:

I'm not signed up to race in Chelan...yet. I'm back on my bike, at least the trainer. My watts are low but I actually felt better than I expected. I should be running next week and cleared by to start swimming after my follow up Doc appointment on June 22. That gives me about 40 days to get back some level of swim and run fitness so I can at least show up. Depending on how my training goes I'll consider signing up if there are open spots. In the past the race has sold out, but not last year.

So, I might see you there yet...in the Olympic or Sprint, not on the HIM.

PS--As I'm sure you know, there are some significant hills on the Chelan HIM course. Make sure you're getting in plenty of hill work!.


2015-06-01 3:06 PM
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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...

Steve - Sounds like you are coping really well.  It is hard to ride here without climbing hills which is really bad for me as I am very slow on any climbing.  I had looked at maps of the ChelanMan bike route and they claim 709m of climbing.  Is that inaccurate?  I shouldn't have too much trouble with 709m unless it is a fairly steep gradient.

Over the next few weeks I've got several rides of 1200m of climbing scheduled (but nothing over 10% grade).



Edited by wenceslasz 2015-06-01 3:07 PM
2015-06-01 4:01 PM
in reply to: wenceslasz

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Subject: RE: start up your training plans...
Originally posted by wenceslasz

Steve - Sounds like you are coping really well.  It is hard to ride here without climbing hills which is really bad for me as I am very slow on any climbing.  I had looked at maps of the ChelanMan bike route and they claim 709m of climbing.  Is that inaccurate?  I shouldn't have too much trouble with 709m unless it is a fairly steep gradient.

Over the next few weeks I've got several rides of 1200m of climbing scheduled (but nothing over 10% grade).




Hey George:

The 709m of climbing is probably accurate. In thinking about the course, the hills tend to come in relatively short sections. The climb out from Lake Chelan (just before mile 32) is a probably a little under two miles long but it has a pretty good slope. Then the climb off the Columbia River back up (around mile 39) is maybe a mile or so but it's a tough pull. There's more coming, but those two sections are notable. There is probably nothing greater than about an 8% grade. It's just a wide open exposed climb and it can be a very hot ride if the weather is a scorcher. There is one section that is probably 10%, but it's going downhill.

Based on your training, it sounds like you'll manage just fine.

Steve
2015-06-02 12:58 PM
in reply to: wenceslasz

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Subject: RE: How Far Should I Swim in Training for My Triathlon?

Originally posted by wenceslasz

Scott - I see by your chart that I too have been undertraining for the swim.  I typically swim 3 times per week but not far enough.  Since I got your info on threshold swimming I have seen some improvements in my swimming.  I've been OWSing in a local lake a nice 18C/64F (perfect temp).  So, how do I break my swims up to intervals in the lake?  It is a small lake 1km by 600m in size and no motors allowed so we can swim without any limitations.  Today I swam about 3800m in 1:30 but in 5# intervals.

I'm afraid I too have been AWOL for a while.

Hi George,

Sorry, somehow this slipped by and I didn't see it.

First, the reason for intervals.  Simply stated, using intervals, you can swim fresher, faster, longer with proper technique.  A quick example:  If you are at the point where you are doing "speed work" - this would generally be at a pace around [STP - 3/5 seconds/100] or faster - you would use intervals to allow you to swim a greater distance at that pace.  We know that once you are anaerobic, technique breaks down and you can't maintain the pace for more than a brief period of time.  By using intervals with short recovery times, you are able to stay right at threshold and recover quickly, which allows you to maintain proper form and lets you get the increased distance at the faster pace.

Contrast that with long, steady state swims, such as you typically would get in an open water swim.  Since there are no walls to cling to, you must swim at a reduced pace in order to "last" so you can swim the distance.  This might be a pace around [STP + 5/8 seconds/100] or slower.  However, to increase threshold pace (STP) you need to swim near threshold pace.  To increase speed, you need to swim slightly faster than threshold pace.  Doing either of those things is difficult, if not impossible, to do in a long, steady state, OWS.

In a perfect world, an athlete would have access to a pool in order to do intervals so the "rest" time is truly rest.  However, sometimes, all you have is a lake or other large body of water.  So, as the saying goes, when life gives you lemons, make lemonade.

There are a couple of options.  You can use what I call "object intervals," count intervals, ladders or pyramids.  The goal of each of these is to allow for swimming at or near race pace for a sufficient amount of time to improve race pace.

I guess I should make the standard disclaimer - have your buddy with you or at least observing your OWS.

Object Intervals - Find an immovable object in the distance that you can see clearly, a buoy, a tree, rock, or maybe a pier.  Swim at race pace (or your STP training pace if you are using STP) to the object, then slowly swim back to the starting point and repeat.

Count Intervals - This is similar to object intervals, however instead of an object, you are counting strokes and going out a set number of strokes.  For example, if you swim "out" 100 strokes, you will likely have swum a bit over 100 meters (most average MOP swimmers are around 18-22 strokes per 25 meters as a general guide).  So swim out 100 strokes at race pace, then swim slowly back to shore, and repeat.

Ladders - You can do ladders a number of different ways.  The idea is to break up a long steady state swim into "intervals."  You might start out by swimming 100 strokes at race pace, followed by 100 strokes at a slow recovery pace.  Then repeat with 200, 300, 400, and 500 strokes.  Or, as an alternative, you could start with 500 and work down.

Pyramids - This is the same as ladders, except you work up and then back down.  Something like 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 400, 300, 200, 100.  You can do it where you do a specific stroke count at race pace, followed by the same stroke count at your recovery pace working through the pyramid.  Or you could do 100 race pace, 200 recovery pace, 300 race pace, 400 recovery, 500 race, 400 recover, 300 race, 200 recovery, 100 race pace.

The variations are limitless.  The idea is to swim at a faster pace, followed by swimming at a lower pace to recover.

Hope that helps.

2015-06-03 3:18 PM
in reply to: k9car363

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Subject: RE: How Far Should I Swim in Training for My Triathlon?
Originally posted by k9car363

Hey everyone,

Sorry I have been AWOL.  I enjoyed the holiday weekend just a little too much!

Anyway, I see there is a question about how far an athlete should swim to prepare for the swim leg of a triathlon.

We are going to assume that your technique is good.  If it isn't, that is your first order of business - get your technique sorted out.

A very general rule of thumb is, to be a middle of the pack swimmer, you need to work up to swimming 1.5 - 2.0 times the race distance per workout, a minimum of three times a week.  Generally you will have an 8-week build up to the proper distance and then 8-weeks at that distance for a total of 16-weeks.  I would consider that a minimum!  That distance should be broken down into intervals.  You do NOT want to be swimming long steady state swims - that is an absolute waste of time.

Using that formula, here are the ranges for each of the race distances (the race distance is in meters, then I converted to yards as most people train in a short course yards pool.

RaceDistanceYards (apprx)Workout Range
Sprint750 M8001,200 - 1,600 yards
Olympic1,500 M1,6502,500 - 3,300 yards
HIM1,900 M2,1003,200 - 4,200 yards
IM3,800 M4,2006,300 - 8,400 yards

 

 

 

 

If you want to be a front of the pack swimmer, you should be swimming 2.0 - 3.0 times the race distance per workout 4-times per week.

The other part of this is how to swim those yards in training.  We have touched on that briefly in the past.  If anyone is interested, I will be happy to revisit threshold pace as well as how and why you should develop your threshold pace.

Hope that helps.




Dang, I didn't notice this before. I need to up my workout distances. I've been averaging in the low 2000's per workout. That's close to the lower end of the Olympic range (doing Oly's this summer) but substantially below the HIM range (first HIM is September). I can't really increase the yardage during the hour Masters workout, so I'll need to stay an extra 30 to 45 minutes. That's going to be tough - I'm usually pretty wiped-out by the end of the masters workout.

Scott, how much benefit do you lose by doing the additional yardage in a second workout the same day? Or, in doing more workouts per week?

Thanks!

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