Count me in the choose not to road run category then. I still do it a few times a year as I prefer it to the treadmill and I can't always be on a trail, but I don't do it regularly.There's "cant" road run, and "choose not to" road run. No one "cannot" road run.
Most running injuries are attributed to road running but I don't believe that's true. At least that's not been the case with me. It's more likely due to poor biomechanics and lack of focus on specific strength to avoid injury from running. For example, anterior pelvic tilt will lead to a host of injuries. Most people that sit at a desk all day long have anterior pelvic tilt. Most people don't focus on correcting this and instead blame running.
As far as your claims that people blame injuries on road running when it might be other issues, that may be true, but I know for me all of those issues went away when I started trail running and got off the pavement.
Those two weeks caused all kinds of problems for me; problems magically disappeared when I got home back on the trails.
Makes sense to me. When I rapidly switched from road to trail in preparation for a race, I battled all kinds of foot and hip issues. Turns out it was the smaller stabilizer muscles in my feet and hips not used to running on uneven terrain. Took a few months to work through it, but eventually turned out just fine. I currently run 75/25 trail-road, that mix seems to be about right for me. The biggest reason I don't like road running is the complete lack of scenery and the ambient distractions.
Sage advice right there.I was a competitive 1/2 mile, mile, and cross country runner in my ill-spent youth. Two knee scopes later and woke up 64 the other day. Have cycled and only run a short distance on grass for 30 years.
I always said if I spoke to a high school track team I would preach "NEVER run on hard surfaces and buy the best cushion shoes out there".
Soft tissue just flat wears out. Stupidest thing going in our society is road runs, marathons on the street etc. The orthopedic surgeons must chuckle.
I stopped half a lifetime ago to preserve my body to do what I love. Heading back to the mountains this fall to live out of a 40lb pack for 10 days.
Oh and PS....same goes with heavy power lifting. My brother and 2 of my friends are all busted up and suffering from years of macho heavy lifting. cartilage just won't stand it.
Read this you young guys....worst thing is when wisdom comes too late in life.
Anyone else that has given up on road running (hard or paved surfaces) because it’s just to uncomfortable? Not that I’ve ever been a huge runner but now that I’m almost 50 , I can just feel it in my joints and hips and don’t like it. I can treadmill run without a problem and hiking and walking are fine, even with a ruck/weighted pack, and weight training and KB work goes great… sometimes I get stubborn and try to rip out a few miles on the pavement and always regret it lol
Stationary bike and swimming are alternatives to pounding the pavement. Much easier on the joints.Anyone else that has given up on road running (hard or paved surfaces) because it’s just to uncomfortable? Not that I’ve ever been a huge runner but now that I’m almost 50 , I can just feel it in my joints and hips and don’t like it. I can treadmill run without a problem and hiking and walking are fine, even with a ruck/weighted pack, and weight training and KB work goes great… sometimes I get stubborn and try to rip out a few miles on the pavement and always regret it lol
If that works for you, that's all that counts. But if trail running bothered my ankles, I'd feel like I needed to strengthen them and try to adapt. After all, I'm going to be hunting high and steep, so I need to do something for adaptation and stability.I ran trails but my ankles hated me.
That's true, but I guess I answered the question from a backcountry hunting perspective, not a general health and fitness perspective.Stationary bike and swimming are alternatives to pounding the pavement. Much easier on the joints.
You might be surprised what a stationary bike and some zone 2 work would do for hunting fitness. It definitely isn’t the only thing you should be doing but a good option for improving overall fitness. Anything to make those heavy and long miles easier.That's true, but I guess I answered the question from a backcountry hunting perspective, not a general health and fitness perspective.
Stationary bike is something I'd do to warmup before strength training and swimming is something I'd do on days off for recovery and enjoyment.
I agree with everything you said, but understand you are an exception. That's an exceptionally high mileage amount, road or trails. I'm guessing if you had a running analysis done, your biomechanics would be nearly flawless. Biomechanics play a huge role in injury prevention especially at higher mileage levels. I average about 60 miles a week as a mix of road and trails with 2x/week strength training.I'll offer a counter view - I run ~100 miles per week on roads when training for marathons, and a little more volume for my first ultra on trails this year. I'll be around 90 miles this week on the road.
It was said earlier in this thread but most injuries can be attributed to doing too much too fast, lack of specific strength, or both. Our muscles can adapt quickly, but it takes much longer for our tendons and ligaments to strengthen. Go slower than you think you should, and do a combination of walking/jogging if needed. A lot of folks need to feel like they worked out, so they end up pushing harder than they should starting out.
Strength training is important and just downright fun to throw some weight around. It's also important to help imbalances that lead to injuries.
For me I don't view it as exercise or a chore, even though there are plenty of days I don't feel like heading out at 5am. The solitude at that time of day, the fresh air, and time to myself before the crazy day gets going is worth it. That can be achieved through other methods, but the barrier to entry is low - just need to throw on some shoes and go.