Friday 8 August 2008

Training Monday 30th July - Sunday 6th August

This week's training was spiced up by a long weekend away in Cornwall, to train and try and learn to surf!
Before we headed South West on Friday I completed another solid block of training. Again my track session was successful and just about enjoyable. My coach, Robin, cut back the distance of each rep so we could concentrate on upping our leg speed. The group all felt the session didn't seem that tough but we were wrong. 600, 400, 300, and 200 metre's four times. We all felt that as the reps were short we'd zoom through the session no problem. But slowly it caught up on you. The lactate would suddenly start to hit, as a result of the increased speed and only a short jog recovery between reps. I was on my knees by the end. One more rep and I think it may well have been curtains for me. I guess that shows the coach got the session spot on, it took us to the limit, but didn't tip us over the edge.
The rest of my week, whilst still at home, went well, some solid runs, and good mileage in the bank.

I travelled down to Cornwall on Friday and the surf was up dude!! I'm often a little worried when I go on holiday mid-season. It's often quite hard to motivate yourself to go out training, especially as there are so many more distractions than at home, engrossed in your normal routine. But I wasn't worried this time as two of my fellow surf dudes were runners and were keen to keep up on their own training. For the first two days, a mixture of steady runs and surfing worked well. As I quickly found out, surfing is an excellent core and upper-body work- out. Just carrying the dam board from the surf hut to the designated surf area, around half a mile, had me completely knackered. Beginners boards are big, heavy, ungainly things, I made many kids weep as I trampled on their sand castles, to walk round with the blooming board was not at option, I was taking the shortest point from a to b come hell or high water, pun definitely intended!

As it turns out I'm rubbish at surfing and extremely competent at falling off in a spectacular manner. Hauling my battered body back onto my board was a great core work out, especially after my three hundredth and forty second dunking!

Sunday was dune-running day. We found a steep hill in the sand and decided to run up it twelve times, holiday makers looked at us like we were the most stupid people on the planet. I guess we were as it was one of the hardest sessions I've ever done. The sand had sapped my strength and my lungs were burning after only the first run to the summit, just eleven to go then! With each assent we churned up the sand a bit more, thus making it harder to find grip, as well as making the path so uneven you spent as much energy falling from side to side as you did moving forwards, but we made it to twelve. My legs were burning like never before, I had a massive headache and standing between me and a nice cup of tea was an even longer and steeper run back to the campsite - brilliant!
Surfing felt like a breeze after that run, and the freezing temperatures out at sea quickly brought my legs back to life. It was definitely an early night for me that night and to my surprise my legs were just about in working order for my morning run.
It was great to have a change of scene for a couple of days. It's strange how such a simple thing can really rejuvenate you and I've definitely felt the benefits of hill running in the dunes. I'll just have to find ones a bit closer to home as a six hundred mile round trip is a little far to go, even for the hardest session in the land.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Sounds like you had a good time:)
Come in for a visit soon.