Monday, September 2, 2024

Training log - Week ending 9/1/2024

This week was 33 miles of running, 2:30 on the arc-trainer and 9 "miles" of pool-running  plus some walking on trails-- training log is here.

This week was less pool-running and more arc-trainer-ing.  I also really pulled my mileage back at first to let the muscle get a bit less angry before rebuilding.

The good news is that my hip felt good by the weekend (I guess it really was the pool-running that was aggravating it).  The only discomfort I had was some annoying buzzing down my right leg, which I know is just the sciatic nerve taking its time to calm down.  The bad news was that I had very little power in my legs when I tried to run a bit faster on Sunday.  I've got work to do there.

I also realized by the end of the week that, for me at least, the arc-trainer is not a good substitute for an easy run.  This is because I have to work somewhat hard to keep the pedals moving, meaning that any arc-trainer run is always at least a moderate effort (I can reduce the resistance more, but at some point the pedals are just floating around and it becomes difficult to use the machine). Doing a portion of every run on the arc-trainer means that I never get a truly easy day - not good.  So, I'm going to limit my arc-trainer use to the 2-3 days of each week that are dedicated to hard workouts.

Monday: 7 "miles" pool-running and upperbody weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 2 miles very easy on track (9:57) and 60 minutes on the arc-trainer, including a workout of 8x3:00 with 2:15 recovery.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Sports massage in evening.

Wednesday: 4 miles very easy on track (9:31) and 40 minutes on the arc-trainer.  Yoga and foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 40 minutes walking on trails and 40 minutes on the arc-trainer in the morning.  Pilates and foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 6 miles very easy on the track (9:55) and 45 minutes on the arc-trainer with a workout of 20x1:00 very hard/1:00 easy.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 4 miles very easy (9:25) on track, an hour of walking on trails, and upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 6 miles on the track, mostly very easy but with a very casual fartlek to see if I could get my legs moving faster (9:39) and then 45 minutes on the arc-trainer with a workout of 20x1:00 very hard/1:00 easy.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Training log - Week ending 8/25/2024

This week was 33 miles of running, 2:30 on the arc-trainer and 9 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

And of course, just when I thought I'd "turned the corner" my obturator flared up again.  In this case I think the cause was a) being a bit more aggressive with the hill repeats on Friday combined with b) doing a move in Pilates on Saturday that eccentrically stresses the internal rotators.  In any event, my hip was crampy on Sunday morning, and so a planned 10-12 miles became 7 tentative miles plus a shift to the arc-trainer.  So that was annoying.  Two steps forward, one step back...

Regarding the arc-trainer: I used to be a fan of them a decade ago, but had moved away from them - mostly because I didn't have any injuries that required me to use one.  But now that I'm stuck in rehab land (and have been for several weeks) I think I'm going to use it more and limit my pool-running to once a week.  

I've got a few reasons for shifting from pool-running to arc-trainer right now:

1) I'm worried about losing my lower legs' strength and ability to handle impact - while the arc-trainer isn't high impact, it is at least weight-bearing, so it's a bit closer to the impact of land running.

2) One of the causes of my obturator issue seems to be a hypertonic (i.e., always contracted) pelvic floor, and I'm working to break that habit.  I've noticed that I have to contract my pelvic floor and keep it contracted to pool-run, so essentially pool-running forces me to do something I'm trying to practice doing less.

3) Another possible side benefit of the arc-trainer is that it may improve my stride.  One issue I have to manage when I run is that my quads always want to contract and straighten my knee.  This makes it pretty hard to not overstride - I have to focus to bring my foot under me, and as soon as I lose focus, I'm overstriding again.  

Using the arc-trainer at most inclines forces my knee to bend and my foot to land under me.  It feels very awkward, but then again, not overstriding when running feels very awkward also.  I've also noticed that my quads get very fatigued quickly when I'm on the arc-trainer because I'm using them in a different way when I bend my knee more.

My hunch is that because my tendency now is to run with little knee flexion, my quads have become stronger in that position and weaker when I bend my knees.  Which just reinforces my tendency to run with nearly straight legs and overstride.  So...if I can get the legs stronger and more comfortable in moving with a bent knee (and strengthen the quads in that position), perhaps that will improve my running stride.

Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 7 miles very easy (10:02) and upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 3 miles very easy (9:53) and 40 minutes on the arc-trainer, with a workout of 7x4:00 on, 1:12 off.  Followed with leg strengthwork. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 6 miles very easy (9:51).  Pilates and foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 8 miles with 7 careful Iwo Jima hills (2:30 at a moderate effort up a 2% slope with about 3 minutes jogging recovery.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 2 miles very easy (10:02) on track, 40 minutes on arc-trainer and streaming pilates. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 7 miles very easy (10:02), 70 minutes on arc-trainer, and injury prevention work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, August 18, 2024

Training log - Week ending 8/18/2024

This week was 37 miles of running, 30 minutes on the arc-trainer/stairclimber, and 9 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

My overall mileage (land+pool) was a lot lower than I would have liked - in large part because I'm running more and it's very hard to fit in both pool-running and running if I'm not running right by the pool.  This was balanced out by a careful return to faster running and increasing the mileage of my runs, so I was generally happy with the week.

I started testing things on Monday by trying my standard warm-up fartlek (3:00, 4x0:30, and 4x0:10).  Normally I target half-marathon effort, 5k effort, and mile effort for those segments, but this time I settled for "anything faster than easy pace" - I just wanted to test stuff out.  That felt clumsy but safe, so I did a careful hill workout on Friday.  

One frustrating thing about Parkinsons is that I forget physical skills very easily, and running fast is a different skill from running slow.  Because I've continued to run easy over the past few weeks, I remember how to run easy.  But I can tell that I've forgotten how to run fast.  Hills force one to run with good form, and so I'm doing hills for my intervals to relearn fast running mechanics.

I finished off the week with my longest run in a while - 10 miles.  My hip held up very well, so I think I've turned a corner on this.  Now it's a matter of carefully increasing the load each week.

As for the hip injury - I think it might be helpful to outline exactly what it was (and what it wasn't), in case it's ever helpful to someone else.

Essentially, I had an irritated/spasming obturator muscle.  Most people have never heard of this muscle, but you do use it in running.  It's two of the "deep 6" rotator muscles - the most famous of those muscles is the piriformis.  (I say two because there's an obturator internus and an obturator externus - they get treated as one muscle for my purposes).

The obturator is lower on the hip than the piriformis - it wraps around your sit bone (ischial tuberosity) and attaches to the femur.  It stabilizes the femur in the hip socket.  It is also one of the pelvic floor muscles, which is why I was referred to a pelvic floor specialist to get it calmed down.

Obturator issues can be really confusing and hard to diagnose.  For one thing, both the obturator nerve and the sciatic nerve are adjacent to this muscle, so when it spasms it can irritate those nerves and refer pain all over the hip.  

And...because the obturator wraps around the sit bone (where the hamstring attaches) a sore obturator is very easy to confuse with high hamstring tendonitis.  Both cause pain when you flex your hip and stretch your hamstring.  There are two ways to tell the two apart.  

The first way is that the pain of a sore obturator feels horizontal and is most painful on each side of the sit bone. In contrast, high hamstring pain feels more vertical and is centered on and just below the sit bone.  

The second way is pretty easy: do a weighted hamstring curl or reverse plank or something else that contracts the hamstring without flexing at the hip.  If you are completely pain-free while contracting your hamstring against heavy resistance, then your problem is very likely not your hamstring, but another muscle in that sit bone area.  And the obturator is a solid candidate in that case.

At this point, my obturator muscle isn't damaged.  It was just spasming for a while and had several trigger points as a result.  Now that those trigger points have been addressed and it's no longer spasming, there's no real problem with the muscle.  However, my body is still sensitized to that area and hyper-reactive.  The best solution to that is exactly what I am doing - carefully re-introducing stress to the area so that it resets.

Monday: 5 miles mostly very easy (9:20) on the track with a short and careful fartlek and 30 minutes on the arc-trainer with a workout of 5x4 minutes hard with 75 seconds recovery.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 8 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 7 miles very easy (9:50) and upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 4 miles very easy (9:55) and 20 minutes of hiking, followed by upperbody weights/core. Foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 7 miles with 6 careful Iwo Jima hills (2:30 at a moderate effort up a 2% slope with about 3 minutes jogging recovery.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 4 miles very easy (9:50) on track and streaming pilates. (also got my first shingles vaccination). Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 10 miles very easy (10:02), 1 "mile" pool-running, and injury prevention work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Training log - Week ending 8/11/2024

This week was 22 miles of running, 15 minutes of rowing, 1:20 of on eliptical/arc-trainer/stairclimber, and 26 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Another week of mixing running and cross-training.   My hip felt better but still needed work, so I had a second visit with the pelvic floor specialist.  In the meantime, I kept mixing easy running with cross-training volume and some cross-training workouts - shorter intervals on Tuesday and longer intervals on Saturday.

The hip felt better after the second session - since I thought I might have been too aggressive after last Friday's appointment, this time I cross-trained on Saturday before a few cautious miles on Sunday.  My hip was sore for the first mile, and then better.

At this point, I think that the remaining pain is mostly nerve pain that needs to be worked through (several nerves, including the sciatic and obturator nerves, touch on the obturator. I tend to protect that hip, which makes it stiff, which irritates the nerve.  So I need to unwind that. 

Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running and upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 6 miles very easy on gentle hills (9:41) and 5 "miles" of pool-running, including a workout of 8x3:00hard with 60 seconds of recovery, followed with leg strengthwork. Massage in evening.

Wednesday: 4 miles very easy on track (9:28) and 6 "miles" of pool-running. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 8 miles very easy on the track (9:35), followed by upperbody weights/core. Foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 15 minutes of rowing intervals.  Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 1 hour on the arc-trainer, including a workout of 4x7:00 hard with 3:00 recovery.  Followed with 20 minutes easy on elliptical and 10 minutes easy on stair-climber (to mix up the stresses on the legs).   Later, did upper body weights/core and foam rolling.

Sunday: 4 miles very easy (9:51) and 6 "miles" pool-running.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, August 4, 2024

Training log - Week ending 8/4/2024

This week was 30 miles of running, 20 minutes of rowing, 1:20 of hiking, and 31 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

I ended up seeing three professionals about my right hip this week - a physical therapist on Tuesday, a neuro PT on Wednesday, and an orthopedist on Thursday. The two PTs both agreed that my hip was actually a pelvic floor issue - specifically the obturator muscle(s) (there's two of them - internus and externus).  The orthopedist spent about 30 seconds moving my hip around before diagnosing high hamstring tendonitis.  I decided to go with the PTs over the ortho, especially since I can perform hamstring curls and reverse planks without pain.

I was referred to a third PT - a pelvic floor specialist - and I saw her on Friday.  She spent about 90 minutes working on my obturator, and confirmed it was knotted up and almost certainly the cause of my hip pain, along with the neighboring ileococcygeus (first time I'd heard of that one).  The obturator nerve goes through the obturator muscle, which explains why the pain was moving all around my hip.

After my 90 minutes was up, the pelvic floor PT instructed me to 1) do a specific adductor stretch three times a day, and 2) keep running and try to "push it a little."  It wouldn't be pain free immediately (though it already felt a bit better) but hopefully it would clear up completely in the next week (if not, I go back for another session).

So..I gently bumped up my mileage this weekend, and also shifted from the track back to asphalt trails and sidewalks.  It's still sore but seems better, so I'm crossing fingers for the next few days.

Separately, I kept up with pool-running intervals to get my heartrate up some.  The pool-running intervals also work my legs very hard - my legs are consistently very shaky when I exit the pool after a workout.  I also did some rowing because it's good for my posterior chain and added in some walking on trails to do some work on dynamic balance and keep my lower legs and feet working.

Hopefully I'll be able to bump my mileage up more soon and reduce some of this cross-training - running is my most time-efficient activity, and so finding the time for all this walking/rowing stuff has been a challenge.

Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running and upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 4 miles very easy on track (9:08) and 4 "miles" of pool-running, including a workout of 4 sets of 5x(30 seconds very hard/30 seconds recovery) with an extra 60 seconds of recovery after each set.  Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 6 miles very easy on track (9:32) and 20 minutes of rowing, followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 25 minutes of walking on trails and 8 "miles" of pool-running in the morning, with 8x3:00 hard with 1:00 recovery. Streaming pilates and foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 6 miles very easy on track (9:33) and 6 "miles" of pool-running.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 6 miles very easy on track and sidewalks (9:30) and 4 "miles" pool-running, including a workout of 6x3:00 hard with 1:00 recovery. Followed with streaming Pilates. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 8 miles very easy (10:04), an hour of walking on trails, and leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Training log - Week ending 7/28/2024

This week was 19 miles of running, 45 minutes of rowing, and 36 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

I added in a bit more careful running, mixing it with cross-training.  I need to start building my volume up in advance of a fall marathon training cycle, but I don't want to increase volume AND switch from cross-training to mostly running at the same time.  So I'm increasing my volume now.  Then, when I'm ready to cut out most of the pool-running, I'll just hold or slightly drop my mileage while shifting back to running.

In the meantime, I've been doing more pool-running workouts - they are very hard, but I know from past experience that they are effective.  I attempted some rowing on Tuesday, but I don't seem to be able to get my heart rate up very high doing that, even after getting some coaching on form.  I suspect this is because of a discrepancy between my general aerobic fitness and rowing-specific fitness.

As for my stupid hip thing, it is getting better.  Slowly, but I suspect that's due to age.  If I was 20 years old, this would have taken 4 days to clear up.  I just have what feels like a lingering bit of adductor tendonitis combined with an irritated quadratus femoris.  Both feel better when I run a bit - I suspect this is because my gait gets really rough when I take a few days off, which puts more strain on those muscles.  So..a few miles of slow easy running on the track is the recipe for now, gradually building the miles and moving to other surfaces as things improve.

Monday: 2 miles (10:10), 4 "miles" pool-running, and upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 3 miles (9:36), 45 minutes of rowing in the morning.  Streaming yoga and foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 3 miles (9:23) and 4 "miles" pool-running, including a workout of 7x3:00 hard with 1:00 recovery.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Sports massage in evening.

Thursday: 10 "miles" of pool-running in the morning. Streaming pilates and foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 5 miles very easy (9:23) and upperbody strength/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 2 miles very easy (9:56) and 8 "miles" pool-running, including a workout of 8x3:00 hard with 1:00 recovery, and then 6x30 seconds all out with 30 seconds recovery, followed with leg strenthwork. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 4 miles very easy (10:10) and then 10 "miles" of pool-running.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Training log - Week ending 7/21/2024

 This week was 12 miles of running and 37 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

I was hopeful my hip thing was just a blip, but it has persisted.  I intentionally took three days off of running at the start of this week to see what that did.  I then jogged 2 miles on Thursday, with the first mile feeling awful and the second mile feeling better.

Slightly encouraged, I did two sets of 2 miles on Friday (I timed the team tempo workout between the two).  The first 2 miles felt much better, the second set felt like Thursday....  I call that improvement.  And it made me wonder if taking 3 days off had been a bad idea.

To explain - every time a muscle gets tight or I start feeling nerve, muscle, or tendon pain, I have to decide whether this is a) an emerging injury or b) Parkinsons-related pain.  The latter can cause random bouts of nerve pain or tight muscles (which result in tendon pain).  If it's an injury, I need to reduce load and start rehabbing.  But if it's Parkinsons-related, then inactivity and rest will make it worse, and the only answer is to carefully push through.   I suspect that I've got a bit of both going on right now.

Another run on Saturday actually felt decent (admittedly at a very careful pace) until an aggressive cyclist buzzed me in Rock Creek Park.  I flinched, and in doing so aggravated the hip again.  It was ouchy on Sunday morning, so I decided to give it a day and get in the pool.  

Since I haven't really gotten my heart rate up in the past two weeks, I did some hard intervals - my old standard of 3 minutes very hard, 1 minute easy.  I made it through 5 of them and decided that was enough.  The normal workout is 10x3:00 hard/1:00 off, but I'm clearly out of shape right now.

As for what's going on with the hip?  My best guess is a slight psoas strain combined with  "ischio-femoral impingement" - basically the sciatic nerve and the quadratus femoris muscle (same muscle that gave me trouble in January) get pinched between the ischial tuberosity and the femur.  I have discomfort when I really extend my right leg behind me (especially if I internally rotate my leg) or in front of me.  And I also have muscle tightness that moves around, which is characteristic of sciatic involvement. It doesn't seem to have any of the characteristics of a labral tear or femoral stress fracture.

And of course, the muscle tightness from cutting back on my activity level is compounding all this...

Of course, I don't want to rely on my own diagnosis. I'm trying to get in to be seen by a PT I trust (first available appointment is the week after next) and I'm also trying to find an orthopedist I'm comfortable seeing.  My concern there is that many orthopedists are going to see a 50 year old woman with Parkinsons on their list and write me off before they've even examined me.  But...I'm not exactly qualified to diagnose myself, so I need to pick someone and go.

In the meantime, I'll stick with what I've been doing - careful running with the goal of increasing load while maintaining or reducing discomfort, combined with stretching and strengthening.

Monday: Off - just cheering at the track meet and travel.

Tuesday: 9 "miles" of pool-running and upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 7 "miles" of pool-running in morning; streaming yoga and foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 2 miles very easy (10:00) and 5 "miles" of pool-running in the morning. Streaming pilates and foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 2 miles very easy (9:39) followed by another 2 miles very easy (10:09) and then 6 "miles" in the pool.  Leg strengthwork in afternoon.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 6 miles very easy (10:20) plus streaming pilates in morning; foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 10 "miles" of pool-running, including a workout of 3:00 very hard/1:00 easy, followed by leg strengthwork.

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Training log - Week ending 7/14/2024

This week was 23 miles of running, 250 yards of swimming, and 12 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

This week didn't go quite as planned.....  I showed up for the workout on Tuesday having taken a bit too much levodopa (Parkinsons med).  This is easier than it sounds - sometimes I need a tiny bit extra on bad weather days.  However, this time it was too much, and my dystonia flared.  And it flared at just the wrong moment and I pulled several muscles in my right hip (feels like psoas, adductor, and glute med).

I spent the next few days trying to calm things down, with the hope that I'd be able to race at the Hartford Nationals this weekend.  However, I made it about 20m into my first race and realized that pushing things was a bad idea. So that was that.  

I did still have a fun trip (though not without its challenges).  That race report is in progress, but I didn't want to sit on the weekly report any longer.

Monday: 8 miles very easy (9:35) with some grass running + upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 4.5 miles on the track, including some attempted 800s that I bailed on, and then 250 yards of swimming (also bailed).  Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 6 "miles" pool-running and upper body weights/core in morning; sports massage in evening.

Thursday: 3.5 miles very easy (9:46) in the morning Streaming pilates and foam rolling.
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Friday: 6 "miles" pool-running in the morning, foam rolling in evening..

Saturday: 3.5 mile shakeout in afternoon (guess 9:20) plus foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  3 mile shakeout in afternoon (guess 9:20), 800m around 9 pm (4:07).

Sunday, July 7, 2024

Training log - Week ending 7/7/2024

This week was 51 miles of running and 7 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Remarkably, I didn't have a race this week.  Or rather, I could have raced (on Thursday) but I decided not to.  I've run eight races over the last six weeks.  Of course, many of those races were less than a mile, but even so, with four more races on the calendar for next weekend, I decided I didn't need to do an extra 5K.

So I just trained this week.  It was a bit refreshing.  On Tuesday I slept in and missed the team interval workout.  Since it was a nice morning (for July) I decided to swap in a tempo workout instead - going with 3200, 1600 since I hadn't tempoed in a while.  Splitting the tempo up was definitely the right choice as going past four laps felt very hard.  I definitely need to start doing more tempos, but that will come when I transition to marathon training.  

Friday morning is usually a tempo workout, but since the weather was pretty rough (both temperature and dewpoint in the mid-70s) the tempo workout was broken up into miles with a short jog (ideally around 2 minutes) in between.  These felt much easier than the continuous 3200, even though the weather was worse.  Again with that 4 lap thing....I may be lacking mental stamina as much as physical stamina.

Outside of running, I spent a lot of time this week working on vestibular rehab.  Basically a lot of time spent a) either on two feet together, two feet in "tandem stance" (one foot right in front of the other), or balancing on one foot while b) moving my head back and forth or up and down while c) closing my eyes or looking at one focal point or another.  It does seem to be helping, though it's a lot of work each day.

After looking at a video of my running last week (which showed a complete lack of hip and knee extension) and doing some test stretches, I realized that I've been cheating on my quad stretches by arching my back - meaning that I bend my back as much as I stretch the quad.  So now I'm taking extra care to engage my abs before I stretch each quad.  My quads are extremely tight when I stretch them that way, which tells me I have a lot of room for improvement.

Monday: 7 miles very easy (9:43) + upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles on the track, including a tempo workout of 3200, 1600 in 14:14 (7:09/7:05) and 7:02 with 5:30 recovery between the two.  Followed with 2x200m in 50 and 49, and then some leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday: 9 miles very easy on trails (10:19) in the morning; streaming yoga and foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 4 miles very easy (9:51) in the morning before cheering at a 5K, then hitting the gym for upperbody strengthwork and core, plus some foam rolling.
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Friday: 9 miles on the track, including 3x1600 at tempo effort (7:17, 7:05, 7:02) with recoveries of ~2:00 and ~2:30 between the two.  Followed with 2x200m in 51 and 51, and then injury prevention work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 12 miles aerobic (intended to be easy, but HR got out of control because it was hot) (9:29) followed with two hill strides and streaming pilates. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  7 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Training log - Week ending 6/30/2024

This week was 36 miles of running and 18 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

One more placeholder weekly post.  Next week I should be back on track.

Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: Upper body weights/core and 8 miles very easy (9:22) plus drills.  Sports massage in evening.

Wednesday: 7 miles on the track, including 10x200 and 4x100 (all with full recovery).  200s were 49-53 seconds, 100s were 22-24 seconds. Followed with upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 9 miles very easy on trails (9:53) in the morning; streaming pilates and foam rolling in the evening.
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Friday: 6 miles on the track, including 6x100m strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: USATF Regional Track meet, 6 miles including a 1500 in 6:14 and an 800 in 3:18.

Sunday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.