A marathon for little ol me?

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  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
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    This is probably a dumb question but now that my race is in January instead but I'm already starting training now what do I do when my schedule stops lol? Do I keep repeating the last two weeks or something until the race?
  • chris_in_cal
    chris_in_cal Posts: 2,185 Member
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    i am kind of a contrarian here. if you are old 40+ and had a kid or two, you have accomplished many things harder than running a marathon. i am ruggedly built, lucky that way. if you are pretty fit, pretty confident, and not slight or injury prone, you can definitely do it. As they say, don't have a goal time gor your first race, just finish it....and you got it. If it isn't outrageous weather, and it is a well supported race there will be more than enough fuel at the stops yoy won't have to carry your own food/water.
    My poor pooch is 8, and he just doesn't want to do it either. sniffing is more fun than running.
  • DX2JX2
    DX2JX2 Posts: 1,921 Member
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    FL_Hiker wrote: »
    This is probably a dumb question but now that my race is in January instead but I'm already starting training now what do I do when my schedule stops lol? Do I keep repeating the last two weeks or something until the race?

    With the race in January, you're not too far off the timing for an 18 week program. Technically I guess you would want to start that in about a month. For the next few weeks, I would just focus on building yourself up to 25-30 miles per week such that you're ready to jump right into an 18 week training plan when the time is right.
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
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    @FL_Hiker i have not fueled them but i might as i go longer with speed demon. the old girl and i were running casually when we went long. i might bring some dog cookies for speed demon. something that is easy to digest

    the last few weeks of the plan should be a taper (running less) so i plan on doing the few weeks before it on repeat. because i have no idea when i will be running my full
  • Panini911
    Panini911 Posts: 2,325 Member
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    Good for you! I'm training for a 15 and once that is done MAY start increasing to half marathon.

    Question: is increasing the other runs in the week crucial? I am not sure i'll be able to swing 6+km runs the other days of the weekend (I can make time for the long run no problem, and even hill training). More a time constraint issue. Especially if I am not training for a specific race, can my runs stay at 5km or hill training and one long run weekly?
  • DX2JX2
    DX2JX2 Posts: 1,921 Member
    edited August 2018
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    Panini911 wrote: »
    Good for you! I'm training for a 15 and once that is done MAY start increasing to half marathon.

    Question: is increasing the other runs in the week crucial? I am not sure i'll be able to swing 6+km runs the other days of the weekend (I can make time for the long run no problem, and even hill training). More a time constraint issue. Especially if I am not training for a specific race, can my runs stay at 5km or hill training and one long run weekly?

    Not really. Everything does have to move in sync else you'll be placing way too much weight on your long run for conditioning and development. Also, the limited mileage outside of the long run will actually limit the feasible length of that run which, in turn, will limit your feasible maximum weekly volume.

    Conventional wisdom holds that your long run should generally be no more than ~30% of your weekly volume.
  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
    edited August 2018
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    Gotcha I might take a look at the Hal Higdons plan instead then since thats 18 weeks.

    Another potentially dumb question....... What happens if you have to take a week off? Say you are sick? Or I know in December we are going on vacation and I wasn't planning on working out since its going to be in a dangerous place to run (little cabin on the top of a mountain likely there will be a lot of snow and ice).

    And another... in the Hal Higdons Novice 1 plan it says to cross train on Sundays, my question is how intense does that cross training have to be? Does a 30 minute stroll around the block count? Or should I be hitting the weights or swimming more intense?

    Thank you all again for being so helpful!!!!! You guys rock!
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
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    @panini911 my plan has a long run of 10, then the next week is 18, then 12, then 20, etc.
    the weekly runs are between 3-8.
    @FL_Hiker i found this blog/article to be helpful
  • spiriteagle99
    spiriteagle99 Posts: 3,676 Member
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    If you have only an additional week or two before starting the plan, you can go ahead and start the plan, then either repeat a week in the middle or toward the end (but not during taper) or keep it as a flex week in case of illness or travel. If you have a month or more before marathon training would start, then use that time to build your base - i.e. go from 20 to 25 mpw or from 30 to 35.

    Panini911 - the totality of your miles is what has the biggest effect on your ability to run well and race well, not just the length of your long runs. The medium long runs are very important and will make your long runs feel easier, though still not easy. If your long run is 10 miles and your total miles for the week is 15, you're going to struggle. If your long run is 10 miles but your total mileage is 30, it's not that hard. During marathon training, I have one long run (2-3.5 hours) and two runs that last 90 minutes or so, plus two shorter ones for recovery or speedwork. Those 8-10 mile MLRs make the 20 milers possible. Finding/making time to do that much training is one reason some people limit the number of marathons they do and a lot of people decide that one is enough.
  • MeanderingMammal
    MeanderingMammal Posts: 7,866 Member
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    Panini911 wrote: »
    Good for you! I'm training for a 15 and once that is done MAY start increasing to half marathon.

    Question: is increasing the other runs in the week crucial? I am not sure i'll be able to swing 6+km runs the other days of the weekend (I can make time for the long run no problem, and even hill training). More a time constraint issue. Especially if I am not training for a specific race, can my runs stay at 5km or hill training and one long run weekly?

    In terms of general principles for designing a training plan I veer towards the long run being 20-25% of total weekly volume. You get different physiological effects from the different types of run and if you're having towards the LSR you're losing musculoskeletal development gains.

  • DX2JX2
    DX2JX2 Posts: 1,921 Member
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    The training plan is really about the whole. Not so much about an individual workout or week. That said, if you'll be taking off within a month or so before the race, chances are it'll be one of the weeks with a 20 miler in it. That run is critical and you should make sure you get that week's schedule into your training plan.

    To make up the loss of a week, I would do a hybrid of the last two weeks before race week (that is, split the difference between the scheduled mileage for weeks 16 and 17) since those weeks tend to be a gradual taper. Do race week as prescribed in the program.

    If you'll be away for week 17, then just pick up with the race week schedule as prescribed. No need to do anything different or to make up the workout from that week.

    Cross training can be whatever you want it to be as long as it doesn't involve running. Any light exercise is fine.
  • TavistockToad
    TavistockToad Posts: 35,719 Member
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    Panini911 wrote: »
    Good for you! I'm training for a 15 and once that is done MAY start increasing to half marathon.

    Question: is increasing the other runs in the week crucial? I am not sure i'll be able to swing 6+km runs the other days of the weekend (I can make time for the long run no problem, and even hill training). More a time constraint issue. Especially if I am not training for a specific race, can my runs stay at 5km or hill training and one long run weekly?

    i sometimes end up with shorter runs through the week and a long run at the weekend. its not ideal, but it is manageable for half distance in my opinion.

    could i get faster if i did longer week day runs to make my long run less of my overall running volume? probably. do longer runs during the week fit into my plans most weeks? no, which is why i don't do it.

    i love running, i wont make it a chore for myself though.
  • TavistockToad
    TavistockToad Posts: 35,719 Member
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    Panini911 - the totality of your miles is what has the biggest effect on your ability to run well and race well, not just the length of your long runs. The medium long runs are very important and will make your long runs feel easier, though still not easy. If your long run is 10 miles and your total miles for the week is 15, you're going to struggle. If your long run is 10 miles but your total mileage is 30, it's not that hard. During marathon training, I have one long run (2-3.5 hours) and two runs that last 90 minutes or so, plus two shorter ones for recovery or speedwork. Those 8-10 mile MLRs make the 20 milers possible. Finding/making time to do that much training is one reason some people limit the number of marathons they do and a lot of people decide that one is enough.

    and this is exactly why i always think i want to do a marathon, until i consider the reality of the training! :laugh:
  • Panini911
    Panini911 Posts: 2,325 Member
    edited August 2018
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    Great info! I will see what I can do to keep the long run within 30% of weekly total. Since i'm not actually training for a race I can just cap my long run if I don't have time to add to my runs.

    ETA: shoot! this is ALREADY an issue for my plan over the next few weeks til my 15k!! :o looks like I need to change my plan.


    Sorry for hijacking the treat FL_hiker! Lots of great info (I am not training for a martahon, maybe a half at most, but teh info is stellar for any increase in distance).
  • FL_Hiker
    FL_Hiker Posts: 919 Member
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    I'm still having trouble picking exactly which race to run lol, I want to make sure i'm counting the weeks right and will end up on the correct days.. So since i started Week 1 this week, would a half marathon on Septemer 23 and the marathon on December 15 be ideal? I wouldn't have to take a week off if I did the race before janurary and I think if I counted right that would be 18 weeks. Here is the plan.. https://www.halhigdon.com/training-programs/marathon-training/novice-1-marathon/
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
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    i think i would just keep repeating the weeks after the half and the few weeks before the race follow the last few weeks of the plan
    imo, but i've never done this before but it was what i was advised to do
  • Duck_Puddle
    Duck_Puddle Posts: 3,224 Member
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    Panini911 - the totality of your miles is what has the biggest effect on your ability to run well and race well, not just the length of your long runs. The medium long runs are very important and will make your long runs feel easier, though still not easy. If your long run is 10 miles and your total miles for the week is 15, you're going to struggle. If your long run is 10 miles but your total mileage is 30, it's not that hard. During marathon training, I have one long run (2-3.5 hours) and two runs that last 90 minutes or so, plus two shorter ones for recovery or speedwork. Those 8-10 mile MLRs make the 20 milers possible. Finding/making time to do that much training is one reason some people limit the number of marathons they do and a lot of people decide that one is enough.

    and this is exactly why i always think i want to do a marathon, until i consider the reality of the training! :laugh:

    Amen! I knew it but I didn’t KNOW it until I got up to my eyeballs and it got very real. I’m really feeling like I’m going to be a one and done kind of a girl. My runs are a bit longer than @spiriteagle99. I’m on team “marathons are like mullets: the party is in the back”.

    I will second (third?) that the longer mid-week runs makes an enormous difference in making the long runs more manageable. Anything 16+ hits me like a brick if I don’t have the longer mid-week runs to support that. Although the double-digit mid week runs have turned runger into an every 3 day event, and it takes a lot of planning to fit that kind of time into a workday on a regular basis, I don’t think I could be doing the 16-20 mile long runs without those longer mid-week runs.
  • spiriteagle99
    spiriteagle99 Posts: 3,676 Member
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    FL_Hiker wrote: »
    I'm still having trouble picking exactly which race to run lol, I want to make sure i'm counting the weeks right and will end up on the correct days.. So since i started Week 1 this week, would a half marathon on Septemer 23 and the marathon on December 15 be ideal? I wouldn't have to take a week off if I did the race before janurary and I think if I counted right that would be 18 weeks. Here is the plan.. https://www.halhigdon.com/training-programs/marathon-training/novice-1-marathon/

    The longer you wait to do your marathon, the more time you have to build your base, and the stronger you will feel on race day. If you do a race in January or February, you could train for a half in September or October and then do a higher mileage plan than the Novice 1 schedule.

    Really it depends on which race you want to do. Each marathon is different, with a different atmosphere and organizational style, different scenery and participants. You need to think about whether you want to do a big race or a small one, one close to home or one you would travel to and enjoy a few days holiday before or after, rural or urban, etc.

    I wanted one close to home for my first, so I could sleep in my own bed, eat familiar food, and not have the pressure of dealing with a strange place when I was already stressed about the race. So I ran a race in a town about an hour from home. I was very glad I did it that way since I was able to train on the course and race day logistics were a breeze.

    It really is up to you which race would be 'ideal' for you.
  • TavistockToad
    TavistockToad Posts: 35,719 Member
    edited August 2018
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    Panini911 - the totality of your miles is what has the biggest effect on your ability to run well and race well, not just the length of your long runs. The medium long runs are very important and will make your long runs feel easier, though still not easy. If your long run is 10 miles and your total miles for the week is 15, you're going to struggle. If your long run is 10 miles but your total mileage is 30, it's not that hard. During marathon training, I have one long run (2-3.5 hours) and two runs that last 90 minutes or so, plus two shorter ones for recovery or speedwork. Those 8-10 mile MLRs make the 20 milers possible. Finding/making time to do that much training is one reason some people limit the number of marathons they do and a lot of people decide that one is enough.

    and this is exactly why i always think i want to do a marathon, until i consider the reality of the training! :laugh:

    Amen! I knew it but I didn’t KNOW it until I got up to my eyeballs and it got very real. I’m really feeling like I’m going to be a one and done kind of a girl. My runs are a bit longer than @spiriteagle99. I’m on team “marathons are like mullets: the party is in the back”.

    I will second (third?) that the longer mid-week runs makes an enormous difference in making the long runs more manageable. Anything 16+ hits me like a brick if I don’t have the longer mid-week runs to support that. Although the double-digit mid week runs have turned runger into an every 3 day event, and it takes a lot of planning to fit that kind of time into a workday on a regular basis, I don’t think I could be doing the 16-20 mile long runs without those longer mid-week runs.

    That's my other issue... unless I am super careful I gain on a half.... I can't imagine how much I would put on training for a full. :laugh:
  • Duck_Puddle
    Duck_Puddle Posts: 3,224 Member
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    Panini911 - the totality of your miles is what has the biggest effect on your ability to run well and race well, not just the length of your long runs. The medium long runs are very important and will make your long runs feel easier, though still not easy. If your long run is 10 miles and your total miles for the week is 15, you're going to struggle. If your long run is 10 miles but your total mileage is 30, it's not that hard. During marathon training, I have one long run (2-3.5 hours) and two runs that last 90 minutes or so, plus two shorter ones for recovery or speedwork. Those 8-10 mile MLRs make the 20 milers possible. Finding/making time to do that much training is one reason some people limit the number of marathons they do and a lot of people decide that one is enough.

    and this is exactly why i always think i want to do a marathon, until i consider the reality of the training! :laugh:

    Amen! I knew it but I didn’t KNOW it until I got up to my eyeballs and it got very real. I’m really feeling like I’m going to be a one and done kind of a girl. My runs are a bit longer than @spiriteagle99. I’m on team “marathons are like mullets: the party is in the back”.

    I will second (third?) that the longer mid-week runs makes an enormous difference in making the long runs more manageable. Anything 16+ hits me like a brick if I don’t have the longer mid-week runs to support that. Although the double-digit mid week runs have turned runger into an every 3 day event, and it takes a lot of planning to fit that kind of time into a workday on a regular basis, I don’t think I could be doing the 16-20 mile long runs without those longer mid-week runs.

    That's my other issue... unless I am super careful I gain on a half.... I can't imagine how much I would put on training for a full. :laugh:

    Ha! I was doing ok sticking with a deficit right up until the mid-week longer Run crossed into double digits. Then It was all over. I feel like a meme. Now maintenance feels like a deficit lol.