Subject: RE: How soon does fitness follow output and effort?Steve- - 2009-08-05 5:45 PM the body adapts very quickly. for example, if you go out and do a 50 mile ride on saturday and then do a 50 mile the following thursday you'll feel the 2nd 50 mile ride to be easier than the previous 50 mile ride. however, full physiological benefits from a "workout" typically have been shown to take anywhere between 2-3 weeks. not quite; from a single session it takes 4-7 days to realize the training adaptations and full adaptations for the same stimulus around 4 to 6 weeks depending on different variables. Is for that reason many experienced coaches choose 5-6 weeks cycles as opposed to the popular (though far from optimal ) of 3 on 1 off cycle. OP - it depends on your fitness level and years training. In general untrained individuals produce greater fitness gains and those tend to occur on shorter periods of times. Trained individuals can get fitness back faster but training gains become incrementally more difficult to achieve the greater your fitness level. Each time you exercise you increase your fitness but you accumulate fatigue, the difference of those = performance. Hence after a hard session today @ threshold for instance you will be fitter than yesterday but you will be marginally more fatigue and it will take time (24-72 hrs depending on fitness ) to recovr and 4-7 days to fully produce the gains from that session. The following week you should be fitter but most likely also have accumulated fatigue from other sessions. As you body recovers and adapts sessions will become easier but if you are following an adequate progression you'll also be pushing a bit more each time hence some sessions will still be challenging. Once you hit a point in which it is taking you longer to recover is time to unload (recover ) to fully realize the training gains and start fomr that point. In short, yes fitness gains are a day by day thing but depending on stimulus and recovery it will take your 4+ weeks to fully achieve fitness gains. |