General Discussion Triathlon Talk » Starting Over From Scratch Rss Feed  
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2009-08-12 11:36 AM

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Subject: Starting Over From Scratch

Hello All,

Thank you in advance for advice.

I am 50 year old registered for my first sprint-tri Oct 4th.  My background is as follows. I have been a reasonably fit adult (HWP) but with no formal long term exercise program. This spring I had a health problem (weird post-viral neuropathy) that had me functionally bed-bound for 2 months and then severely limited an additional two. I began exercising early July…starting on bike and very slowly. Summary is:

Bike: now up to 5+ days a week. Spinning low gears only. Can now make 15 miles at @15 mph with heart rate holding under 150. I am up to 70 miles per week.

Swimming: I was “raised in the water” and am very comfortable there, but have never been an efficient swimmer or swum competitively. Wanting to do better, I have purchased “Total Immersion” and my current swimming is strictly following the exercises in the book. Yesterday did ¼ mile on back/side, no arms, gentle kick only. I am impressed with the noticeable improvement and am optimistic. It is a cool and logical method. I expect to be back to swimming freestyle in about a week. FYI: As a baseline I can easily swim ¼ to ½ mile with combination of freestyle/breast stroke. Slow (10-12 minute ¼ but safe. Open water is not an issue. I will not drown.

Running: This has been the worst. WOW. Talk about de-conditioning effects. I am currently “running” 3 miles 3 times a week. It is more like run-walk with the “run” at 12:30 pace. Ugh. I can make about a mile without stopping then run-walk the remainder. Usually walk when legs poop out which equals HR of around 160-165 (my max is about 178). Walk ‘til HR is 130 then “run” and so forth. Pace today for 3 miles was 12:50 (ugh again).

When I decided to add the tri it was out of long term desire combined with goal-oriented motivation. I have no illusions of “peaking” or pushing for times. This is just part of continued training. Last is ok compared to 4 months ago when standing was strenuous. Before I registered I did a “home neighborhood” tri of same length to make sure I wasn’t being unrealistic; (1/4…14…3.2) walking most of run was done in 1:57. My goals are: #1 get back in shape. I have no desire to EVER AGAIN feel the fatigue and lethargy I experienced this spring. #2 establish a life-long term training program. I have unlimited time to train for the next 2 months…then it will be more restricted.

So the questions:

  • I want to gain as much as possible over next 8 weeks…but without risking injury/set back. (I do have full green light from cardiology to push). I can do 1,2,3, more sets per day; can mix and match workouts, add weights, stairs and so forth, but have not yet done so.
  • What are your thoughts on the most gain while being injury-safe conscious?
  • Riding is comfortable, should I push that mileage on up or is it better to focus on what is weakest?
  • Ideas about how to gain on run (which I assume is most injury prone). Add stair-master? Walk between running days? Weights?
  • And finally what about rest periods. I am exercising so slowly and carefully I don’t “feel” the need for off days but know that somewhere there exists a logical balance for best overall gain.

 Thanks you all so much and I look forward to meeting some of you.

 John



2009-08-12 12:43 PM
in reply to: #2343970

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Subject: RE: Starting Over From Scratch
Seems like you have thought about this quite a bit and have a good plan and have the time, which is great and my biggest limiter to training.  My thoughts:

I would keep up with the run/walk and your swim technique work, but perhaps add more on the bike as it is less likely to cause injury.  Slowly add mileage, but add some intesity too and if your Tri will have hills, make sure to get some hill work in.

Also, you are on the bike for the longest time in a Tri and can therefore get the most gain for your training buck - all things being equal - on your bike.

Work in a rest day to let your body fully recover. Remember to taper and add some rest days before your race.

Good luck!
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