This has had a number of effects on my overall fitness but to cut a long story short my mate Steve dragged me out on a 'long ride' to last week to see if we had the 68mile red route in us. After I had repeatidly begged him to cut it short, (alas the river tay is a fine natural obstacle) we ended up doing 55 miles from Fundee through to Fife, Perth and then back via Scone. This also married up rather akwardly with some great weather and a rare Friday off for my better half. So after 55 miles (the furtherst I have every cycled by a huge margin) I ended up going to Dunkeld and walking the inver route through the Hemitage and along the river. To my suprise the next day I felt good. Not great, but I wasn't walking as if I'd been spanked by and angry grocer for stealing apples. Not something I do often I might add.
So after all of that the only thing left to do was to pass myself off as a fitness expert, use all of the pseudo science I can muster. I'll be using ideas so shaky they're too insecure to look 'BroScience' in the eye and test my fitness
Bring in the Beast, or at least the Ben. No, not 'The Ben', my Ben. Ben Vrackie.
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Ben Vrackie |
This is by far one of the most fun walks to do if you want to get into hill walking as it is challenging enough for you to earn your pint at the finish. Also, low and behold there's a pub at the finish.
I ran this route roughly 6 months ago completing it in 89:51 I started that a little early so will cut of the appropriate time etc... (why let details get in the way of a good story)
Inorder to add a little scientific vigor I proceded to alter 90% of what I did in the lead up to this run, though I think I was post nightshift in both. Instead of cycling I walked from Pitlochry train station up but made sure it was at a good pace, I was in shorts and didn't want to get cold. It was also a lot hotter, a little less blowy but I still had much to much in my bag. So all things being far from equal but hopefully still meaningful I set off for the top. It was strange being on the hills so late in the day. I got into Pitlochry at about 12:10 but normally head out first thing. This did mean that I had plenty of people to reel in as I made my way through the first section. As is often the case with steep hills I soon adopted a run walk strategy of running past someone then walking again ;) Before the start I hoped that I could do finish in 80 minutes but that might be the disney dreamer in me. After all my last run further than parkrun was a month ago.
I tried to run more than I did last time thinking that a slower more consistant pace might be quicker than running up hill only to stand still and get my breath back pretending to take photo's as an excuse......
The going is pretty good until you get to the loch, after that it's about putting one foot infront of the other and focusing on moving forward consistantly. The weather was pretty good but I was still getting too hot and I was only wearing shorts and T-shirt. The sweat and snot was streaming off me quicker than a waterfall. At the top I was surprised to still see some snow as you come round the back of the top. There is something pretty cool about running through snow in shorts. Once I had got gotten over the Rocky daydream I decided to put on my cycling arm warmers. Yes runners, cyclists have far more, and better acessories. The start of the down was still far slower than I think it should be. I kept putting on the breaks as I didn't want to fall on what I view as technical downs. Once back onto the loch side I realised that my quads were shot. I remembered the last section being the most fun last time as you could just take of the brakes and go. The path is smooth, wide and easy but my legs were already gone. I kept having to slow down which probably put more strain on them. Once at the final wooded section I knew I'd 'beat' my last time but that I wouldn't make 80 mins.
Once I had finally finished my legs were screaming at me and I think the bloke coming down a minute after me must have thought I was mad as I wasn't running anywhere and stopped very suddenly. Pleased to have finished quicker and convinced my 'up' was faster than last time but that my 'down' was the slightly slower I was keen to compare.
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shattered |
As a committed scientist a checky wee half pint was in order before the analysis. Well it would have been if I didn't realise the next train was in 20 miuntes and the next one not for 3 hours. I drank as much as I could in one go (I'm not 20 anymore) and ran to the train starion as quickly as I could, via the chip shop. I made the train with not much time to spare looking a sweaty mess. About to infuriate everyone by being the bloke that takes chips on the train and stinks the carriage out. I'm not sorry though, they were good chips and I earned them.
SO what does the 'science' show?
Before looking at the numbers I was convinced that they would show improvements on the up but not the down. The down hill felt so hard I was convinced the lack of specifically running down hill in the last month would hit me hard. I was surprised to show only moderate improvements in my climbing especially as I felt I had climbed much better with more running than last time. I also thought that the last month of cycling would have translated into good hill running. So, having to throw out the projected hypothesis that cycling and consistent training would help me running up hill but not down what does it all mean? I think it shows that the last 6 months of consistent training had meant my CV fitness has improved and all the focus on down hill running for Loch Katrine is still in there somewhere.
(Update, one day later my quads are in tatters)
I also think the last year is the first time I've trained consistently 3-4 times a week for a solid period since leaving University. Because of this, my overall CV fitness has seen the benefits. Perhaps this is the reason for the improvements. It's sometimes nice to think that a short intensive block of exercise can dramatically change your overall fitness but I think the reality is long term habits and consistent training over a long period trump miracle cures. Sometimes shit is just hard and there aren't any quick fixes or miracle cures. Trust me I've looked for them. I'm slowly learning it's about small consistant patterns of behavior change. A slightly dull and simple truth, but true.
So.......
Next week I've got the cycle and then after I'm going to focus on getting out in the hills more. Although I don't have any firm races in mind I might see if I can do the Ben Ledi hill race, though that's all dependant on the God of Offduty.
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