- Thread Starter
- #21
Lots of good here! I did buy the uphill athlete and 39 pages in this evening… all I can say so far is dense content! I peaked in the back at some of the plans but I’m committed to reading this whole book through.Hey there,
I have a similar goal of 100 miles the year I turn 40…which is next year.
I’ve run several 50ks and 60ks, and trail marathons. Jemez Mountain 50k in los alamos would be a good one for you in New Mexico. But it’s May 20, which is pretty soon. I did the Jemez 15 miler and valles caldera marathon, which would be a good training run for you. Not sure if they’re still doing that…some lady got crunched by a bear the year or two after I did it.
Edit: a good training run would be the four pass loop on Colorado. That is a really fun day. Highly recommend an “adventure run” like this, it’s super fun. Trans Zion, rim to rim to rim, four pass loop, something like that.
Here’s some training advice. Happy to go by pms or email as well. It’s worth what you paid for it, your mileage may vary.
-Miles: you can do the 50k so long as you get your long runs in. And by that I mean 4-5, 20+ mile runs. For my events in August, I’d start the 20+ runs in June, doing one every week or every two weeks. I’d work backwards from there, ie, need to be to 18 miles by June 1, so long runs in the teens in May, 10ish in April. I think I peaked at 60 miles a week for my best races. I recall my peak, peak week which was 60 miles, 6,000 elevation gain and another 23 miles biking on top of that. So not super high mileage.
-Workouts: getting the miles will do you good, but getting some workouts really helped me. I’d recommend going in 8-week blocks where you do one workout a week. First block: 1-mile repeats or other “fast” workout (400s maybe) (1-mile fast…a bit more than comfortably fast, recover jog 4 minutes, 1-mile again…i got miles down to 5:48 for 4 repeats.) Second block: tempo run, start at 20 minutes comfortably fast in the middle of a run, get up to 40 minutes if you can. I did these on hills and ran by heart rate…I think I did 5 miles tempo in the middle of a 10 mile run in Tuesdays. Third block: end your long runs at increasing tempo, known as progression runs. I think I did the progression starting at mile 10 of the long runs. I don’t think the workouts are completely essential, but they really helped me out. If you feel overtrained or injured, back off on these first.
-Weight training: I’d recommend keeping up on strength training perhaps 2x per week. (My runs were mountain runs, the 60ks took 9+ hours because they had 10,000 plus or elevation gain.) Something streamlined but that hits the main muscle groups, don’t forget upper body. I did squat, single leg deadlift, reverse lunge, push-up, pull-ups.
-Mobility: Don’t overlook. Come up with a 5-minute routine you do at least three days a week.
-Physical therapist: if you get a pain, take 2 days off, and if it doesn’t go away talk to a PT.
Might look into the big vertical training plan by uphill athlete. I have their books, which are great. I’d recommend Training for the uphill athlete, it’s a really good discussion that will give good context to evaluate training plans and strategies.
Have fun! It’s a long journey, simple but not easy.
Last edit: I had a fair bit more to say about this than I thought! I neglected to answer your actual questions. For pace, the race will have a cutoff, so check that. But we have a guy up here in Boise that speed walks ultras and makes it no problem. Now, he’s a dang fast walker, and he’s always right at the cutoff.0But if you get 4-5 20+ milers in, do your long runs such that you are walking uphills and running flats/downhills the entire run, you’ll be fine.
The mobility comment hits home. I know that’s a weak area that I overlook easily. My wife is a yoga instructor so she has been working with me some but admittedly I could ask for more help