Couch to Half by June?
oremgirl1
Posts: 59 Member
I really want to participate in a half marathon sponsored by my work this Summer but I don't know if this is a realistic goal. The most I have ever run is 5 miles and that was several years ago. Basically starting from scratch. Registration opens next week....thoughts??
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We font know your fitness level, do it's really hard to say. How long has it been since you ran 5 mi? You could consider walking part of it if needed. Sometimes there are shorter events like a 10k or 5k offered as part of the main event. You could find out if that's an option if you don't feel ready for a half.0
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6 months to get ready for a half marathon is more than reasonable for most people. If you are in good enough health to start training then I would absolutely register and get started!0
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You can do it, don't rush it.0
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I think it's very realistic. Start building up your weekly mileage now. Start with 3 miles 3x a week and gradually build it up by adding a mile to one of your runs (and eventually you can add 10% of your weekly mileage). Run all your miles at an easy conversational pace. One of your runs will become your long run (it will be your longest run of the week and should become 13 miles 2 weeks before your race). This long run should at any time represent only 25-35% of your weekly mileage so you build up the miles of all your runs together.
Make sure you get at least a days rest in between runs in the beginning. You may add a fourth day of running later on. If you don't feel recovered by your next run then insert a cut back week where you subtract about 20-30% of your weekly mileage for only a week to give your body some extra rest. You will want to plan a cutback week exery 3 or 4 weeks anyway.
Send me a message if you have any questions about making a training plan or adapting an existing plan that you found online.0 -
It seems to me *starting* at 3 miles 3 times a week would be tough for someone starting from scratch. Most newbie running programs take 8-10 weeks to get to 3 miles.0
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So happy to hear this I also want to do a marathon this year in May with my son who is 10 and ran one last year with his school.0
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Assuming you are in decent shape it shouldn't be an issue. I went from running 1-2 miles at a time in January to completing a HM at the end of May. Just take it slow or you will risk injury (trust me on this ). Good luck.0
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deniseteas wrote: »So happy to hear this I also want to do a marathon this year in May with my son who is 10 and ran one last year with his school.
I don't think you meant a marathon. That is 26.2 miles. Most marathons have an age restriction of at least 18 years old. So I doubt your 10 year old son did one through his school. Do you mean a 5K or a mile fun run?earth_echo wrote: »It seems to me *starting* at 3 miles 3 times a week would be tough for someone starting from scratch. Most newbie running programs take 8-10 weeks to get to 3 miles.
They did say they at one time ran a 5 miles, so I assume 3 miles should be an OK place to start over at.
If 3 miles is not doable, then the OP needs to go out for a trial run and see how far they can run at a conversational easy pace, then come back here and report.
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I think it's very realistic. Start building up your weekly mileage now. Start with 3 miles 3x a week and gradually build it up by adding a mile to one of your runs (and eventually you can add 10% of your weekly mileage). Run all your miles at an easy conversational pace. One of your runs will become your long run (it will be your longest run of the week and should become 13 miles 2 weeks before your race). This long run should at any time represent only 25-35% of your weekly mileage so you build up the miles of all your runs together.
Make sure you get at least a days rest in between runs in the beginning. You may add a fourth day of running later on. If you don't feel recovered by your next run then insert a cut back week where you subtract about 20-30% of your weekly mileage for only a week to give your body some extra rest. You will want to plan a cutback week exery 3 or 4 weeks anyway.
Send me a message if you have any questions about making a training plan or adapting an existing plan that you found online.
Great info! I messaged you in hopes that you could help me set a goal for January!0 -
Good luck! 6 months should be enough time, as long as you keep up with your training, avoid any over strenuous cross training (no stair machine etc). There are a lot of great running training guides out there that can help you set a schedule and time line. The most difficult part is sticking with it! You can do it!0
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I would say that's more than realistic! Make sure you build up your milage gently, and be realistic about your goal for the half (e.g. it might be your aim just to get round rather than do it in a certain time). I went from couch to half a couple of years ago using a 'couch to 5km' programme then an 18 week half marathon programme that built up slowly and that was perfect. Use Google or Pinterest to find one that works for you and your schedule, then go for it!0
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@Stoshew71 is a wealth of good information.
I think it should be fine barring injury or underlying condition. What he suggested is a great plan.
make sure your shoes are up to the task
make sure you go slow
make sure you take rest days0 -
Assuming complete novice status; Amazon has; Personal Running Trainer:
4 weeks to one mile
8 weeks to 5K and
10 weeks to half marathon.
A total of 22 weeks couch to half marathon. 6 months is doable. I believe you will be able to shave a week or two, or so, off due to some overlap.0 -
Assuming complete novice status; Amazon has; Personal Running Trainer:
4 weeks to one mile
8 weeks to 5K and
10 weeks to half marathon.
A total of 22 weeks couch to half marathon. 6 months is doable. I believe you will be able to shave a week or two, or so, off due to some overlap.
I signed up today and have 25 weeks until race day. This sounds realistic to me. Thanks!0 -
Good luck. Keep us involved.0
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Assuming complete novice status; Amazon has; Personal Running Trainer:
4 weeks to one mile
8 weeks to 5K and
10 weeks to half marathon.
A total of 22 weeks couch to half marathon. 6 months is doable. I believe you will be able to shave a week or two, or so, off due to some overlap.
The average complete novice will get nowhere close to a 5k in 8 weeks. Most c25k style programs will have you running for 30 minutes in 8 weeks, assuming you are not completely out of shape when starting (i.e. no health issues). But it is very unlikely the average person will be running 5K in 30 minutes in this period.
Not saying OP should not start running, just that she needs to understand that a c25K 8 week program has a misleading name, and that the average person will not be running a 5k in 8 weeks. Especially when there is a lot of weight to lose to begin with.
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deniseteas wrote: »So happy to hear this I also want to do a marathon this year in May with my son who is 10 and ran one last year with his school.
A 10 year old ran a marathon with school????0 -
aggelikik
No one says that she'd be running the 5K in 30 minutes, just that by the end of the 8 week program, she'd be able to run a 5K. The program I suggested, also, has her getting to 5 K, from novice status, in 12 weeks, starting with 4 weeks to a mile. Say what you will. It worked for me when I was 60. Granted I ran in high school, college and USMC but it had been decades since. Started the mile program, did the 8 weeks to 5 K and got my 5K in just about 30. But it was a split time as my runs were 4.5, 4 miles in 44 minutes with a half mile walking cool down. If the program is followed, you'll get to 5K. I haven't tried the HM program, I top my runs at 6+miles.0 -
try the c25k NHS programme which is free that takes 9 weeks then has a programme for after it, the app is free and lets you listen to music in the background or download the podcast, however make sure you always properly stretch before exercise! I got up to week 5 before an injury (not running related) and therefore could complete it - and according to my physio will likely never run for a long period of time
I think a half is a achievable - often its the stamina required most of all0 -
Check out Hal Higdon's novice half-marathon training plan. It has a fairly gentle progression and the goal is to finish rather than worrying about time.
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You've got this, Girl! Proud of you for signing up and committing to do the half.0
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BrianSharpe wrote: »Check out Hal Higdon's novice half-marathon training plan. It has a fairly gentle progression and the goal is to finish rather than worrying about time.
Time is not a concern for me in this. I just want to finish the race. I'll give this plan a look...thank you.0 -
maureented wrote: »You've got this, Girl! Proud of you for signing up and committing to do the half.
Thank you!0 -
aggelikik
No one says that she'd be running the 5K in 30 minutes, just that by the end of the 8 week program, she'd be able to run a 5K. The program I suggested, also, has her getting to 5 K, from novice status, in 12 weeks, starting with 4 weeks to a mile. Say what you will. It worked for me when I was 60. Granted I ran in high school, college and USMC but it had been decades since. Started the mile program, did the 8 weeks to 5 K and got my 5K in just about 30. But it was a split time as my runs were 4.5, 4 miles in 44 minutes with a half mile walking cool down. If the program is followed, you'll get to 5K. I haven't tried the HM program, I top my runs at 6+miles.
Thanks again. I'm not looking to be doing 5k in thirty minutes right now. I think this sounds reasonable for the goals I have in mind. I'm not really expecting to qualify for the Olympics or anything0
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