Everyone,
All i can say is WOW. Thank you for your advice. I appreciate it a lot. I will incorporate the heavy load training as much as I can. As it goes for trails the closest one is 1.5 hours away so it might not work for me to do that as much as I probably should. Tonight I was able to do 3.5 miles in 33 minutes which is the farthest I have done since about 10 years ago. Not the fastest but i felt good afterwards but I don't think i could do another 3.5.
I will try box steps tomorrow with my legs workout. I usually don't have much left in the tank but I will see. I was for sure more tired during the backpacking out of the mountains with the elk so it was a lot of lack of strength (plus my extra weight!!!!) I have been waiting for my goal of 30pounds of fat loss to change my workout. I guess the next question is I am going to try this 12 week crunch ( I dont really want to pay for something yet!) and see where it goes from there. I am very poor at doing my own plan so if anyone has something or is willing to help me develop my own I am willing to listen and do whatever it takes.
Guys thanks again! For being my FIRST post on ROKSLIDE this community is AWESOME!!!!
If you're going to go the running route, that's great, but it will take discipline to avoid getting injured. It's counterintuitive, but I've found that the most discipline is required to run SLOW enough and not add mileage too quickly until a strong base is established. The goal is to work the aerobic system, so if you're going too fast then you are working the wrong system.
If you're looking for a plan, how about this: in addition to the strength work you are currently doing, run 3ish miles a week, 3 times a week, at a SLOW pace for at least 3 weeks. (Slow pace here would be what's referred to as "conversational;" basically where you could speak a sentence or two in a row to a companion without struggling. So no ragged breathing, but not so easy that you could carry on a monologue.) After that, perhaps add 1 mile to 1 run a week. (First week, 4-3-3; second week, 4-4-3; third week, 4-4-4.) Then I'd stick with 4 miles three times a week for another two weeks. Then, if feeling good, do one 6 mile run a week, with the others at four miles, all at a conversational pace. I wouldn't do any more miles than that, or add intervals this season. (The actual speed at which you can maintain a conversational pace should increase pretty quickly.) If you are disciplined and run slow enough, consistently enough, and don't succumb to the temptation of increasing speed or distance too much, this should help a lot. If you are metrics-driven (and you appear to be, from timing your first run), the best measure of progress would probably be resting heart rate or perceived effort. After a month or so your resting heart rate should go down pretty dramatically, and your 3 or 4 mile runs should become very comfortable.
And, for specificity, perhaps make the drive to the trails once every two weeks or once a month and do some weighted pack hiking.
Best of luck and enjoy!