Posts Tagged ‘training’

Great indoor cycling workouts for free

I have been a subscriber to the Cadence Revolution Podcast for awhile now, and I recommend them if you’re having a hard time with boredom during indoor cycling workouts. The soundtracks are made up of independent and world music and a suggested workout accompanies each soundtrack in PDF form that you can print out. The intensity of your riding varies from song to song and is consistent with the tempo of the song. The music is good quality, modern, and works well for pace setting.

I subscribe through iTunes, but you can also subscribe through Zune or the RSS feed if using non-apple MP3 players, sign up to receive download links by email, or simply download the workout tracks and workouts directly from the Cadence Revolution website.  In addition, you can follow Cadence Revolution on Twitter and Facebook.

Sometimes, I enjoy just listening to the tracks.

Title: Great indoor cycling workouts for free

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ChiRunning: Week 5 – Calf Soreness

After 5 weeks of ChiRunning practice, I have begun to make what I think is progress toward the ‘injury-free running’ goal. I had what I think was a breakthrough last week, gaining some insight on aspects of my form that have contributed to my ITBS and how to correct them. The breakthrough took me from having to stop at 3.5 miles of running due to the onset of some ITB twinges during each run, to running nearly 5.4 miles without a twinge at all by last Friday (see previous post). The one problem, which I thought I was finally getting a handle on, but which came back with a vengeance at the end of last week, was soreness in my calves after running. The soreness is deep in the calves (soleus muscles), which makes sense because these muscles are most engaged when flexing the calf with knee’s bent. read more…

Title: ChiRunning: Week 5 – Calf Soreness

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For ITBS try improved biomechanics

Figure 1. Lateral movement of knee and lower leg causing roational force (torque) in the planted leg (from behind runner).

Iliotibial Band Syndrome (ITBS) sucks. I’ve suffered from it recently, and despite lots (weeks) of rest,  diligent stretching and strengthening, found that I just could not shake the problem. That is, until I started to work on improving my running biomechanics. Although there are numerous schools of biomechanics for efficient and injury-free running, from what I have seen they all have several key features in common. As for me, I chose to study ChiRunning to improve my biomechanics, partly because it encourages runners to be mindful of the body when running. Basically, this means taking stock of what is going on in each muscle and joint of your body as you run, to identify where the unnecessary stresses are occurring and to check your form, so you can make corrections as needed. In effect, it allows you to experiment.

Figure 2. knees and lower legs moving inline with direction of running with no lateral drift or torque in the planted leg (from behind runner).

ITBS generally comes on gradually as the sufferer runs until the pain forces them to stop. The somewhat gradual onset provides a window of time in which a mindful runner can experiment with slight variations in their form to see what aggravates the condition and what relieves it. For me, the experimentation has taken place over several weeks, because there are many aspects of running biomechanics that can be varied in subtle ways, and even subtle changes in form and focus can result in big changes in stress and strain on particular joints and muscles. Plus, it can take awhile to develop the sensitivity in your focus to isolate sesnations in specific joints or muscles that can range from none at all, to slight stress or strain, to outright discomfort or pain, so you can identify the differences that result from making changes or corrections in your form.

As I improved aspects of my form, I noticed that I was able to run longer and longer distances. When my ITBS started, I could run little more than a mile, and then I was done due to intense stabbing pain that then got worse for a couple of hours after I ran, before subsiding. Keeping my hips level while running helped a lot, and focusing on just that enabled me to run up to about 3 miles before I started to feel the ITB “twinges.” At first, I would just stop at the first onset of twinges, stretch and then walk or jog lightly back home, but then I began practicing ChiRunning and sensing what was going on in my body and through experimentation made some discoveries. read more…

Title: For ITBS try improved biomechanics

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ChiRunning: Week 3

After my third week of ChiRunning practice, I have a little new progress to report, but my body is still catching up with my form.

Body

I talk about ITBS and calf tightness in my updates on ChiRunning practice, but I want to emphasize that I have not perceived them as being a major obstacle to my running since I began ChiRunning Practice. Before ChiRunning practice, my ITBS would become like an ice pick stabbing into the outside of my leg, just above the knee with every step of my left foot. It flared up within 2 miles of the start of my run, and after the run would become several times worse, so that it was difficult to walk and especially to walk down stairs (although by later in the same day, it usually felt back to normal after some icing). The tightness in my right calf also occurred before ChiRunning, so that is also not new. It has not generally been bad enough to force me to stop running, although I find it better to err on the side of caution and stop when my sense of ITB twinges of tightness in my calf pass a certain threshold. I do not try to be a hero. If I feel it and it seems not be improve when I make the recommended and logical adjustments in my form, I cut the run short. I’d rather run less voluntarily than to injure myself and have no real option to run. So, here are the updates on the two types of injuries or physical problems I tend to experience when running that I am hoping ChiRunning will help me eliminate. So far, it seems to have helped me manage the ITBS, but I still have some work to do with regard to my calves. read more…

Title: ChiRunning: Week 3

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Cadence in cycling and running

There is some of evidence that there is an energetically optimal cadence at which athletes can cycle or run that allows for better performance in endurance events.

Cadence became a big deal in cycling with Lance Armstrong’s return to the sport after his battle with cancer. His style involved a lot of “spinning” at higher cadence, particularly on hills. As his performance improved and peaked, other cyclists caught on, and began to work on increasing their cadences as well, and now sustained cadences of 90-110 rpm’s (sometimes more) are common among cyclists in longer races. Less getting up out of the seat and muscling up hills with brute strength of the quads, and more  sitting in the seat and spinning in lower gears.

Cadence is also important to runners. Indeed, cadence is related to running speed, and there has been research showing that trained female runners are most energy efficient when running at about a 9 min/mile pace, while trained male runners are most efficient at about a 7 min/mile pace (on a treadmill). As increasing your running speed requires either a change in stride length or cadence, or both, depending on individual biomechanics, it can be inferred that an optimal cadence is approached in trained runners at these optimal speeds. read more…

Title: Cadence in cycling and running

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ChiRunning: Week 2

Today I completed the last run of my second week of ChiRunning practice, and here’s how I think I’m progressing.

  • posture: check!
  • core engaged, hips level: check!
  • hips rotating back: somewhat; still working on it
  • cadence 85-90: check!
  • upper body relaxed: check!
  • balanced lean from the ankles: check! (well, for the most part)
  • midfoot strike: check!
  • calves/feet relaxed: still working on it

read more…

Title: ChiRunning: Week 2

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Combating boredom during the winter (indoor) cycling season

Cycling on an indoor trainer or stationary bike can be boring, but here are a few things you can try to relieve the boredom of peddling endlessly without the scenery changing:

  • Sign up for a spinning class – much less boring with a spin instructor pushing you to pedal to muscle failure, I hear
  • Training DVD’s - Spinervals, and a variety of other options guide you through changes in resistance, gearing, and riding position, and give you a little something to look at; some are like a video recording of a spinning class, others are more like virtual rides through the countryside.  I’ve tried several of the Spinervals vidoes, and they are sufficient for me
  • Get a handlebar book holder – you can read while you pedal
  • Music - play uplifting music. make your own mixes or playlists of songs that work for you, and change them up often
  • Grow a pair – get some winter cycling gear, and don’t let the cold, crappy weather keep you indoors

Are there other anti-boredome strategies should be on the list? This can’t possibly be an exhaustive list.

Title: Combating boredom during the winter (indoor) cycling season

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Training smart: a few sprints can do much good in the long run

I like to say that we should train smart and not just hard. Mostly what I mean is that we can become fit in less time, if we go about it in the most efficient ways. Conventional wisdom was that you needed to simply work out for long hours to reach the heights many people desire in fitness or athletic performance, but there has been quite a bit of research over the last decade (even longer) that revealed the unexpected. Namely, that depending on one’s fitness and performance goals, we may be able to realize gains more quickly through shorter-duration, higher-intensity workouts, thereby spending less time and seeing greater rates of progress toward our goals.

For example, in an article published in The Journal of Physiology (full text: Gibala et al. 2006), the results suggest that high-intensity (anaerobic) interval training may be as effective as long periods of moderate-intensity (aerobic) for improving exercise performance and resistance to muscle fatigue. Study participants ran either 4-6 high-intensity 30 second sprint intervals on an exercise bicycle with 4 minutes rest between (2.5 hours over 2 weeks), or 90 minute continuous moderate-intensity cycling (10.5 hours over 2 week), but showed similar improvements in performance measured before and after the 2 week study period. With that kind of result, the authors suggest rightfully that ‘lack of time’ may not be a very good excuse for neglecting one’s physical fitness. read more…

Title: Training smart: a few sprints can do much good in the long run

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