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December 25, 2024

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Location:

Orem,UT,USA

Member Since:

Apr 03, 2006

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

HS/COLLEGE:
mile: 4:56, 2 mile: 10:21 (1978)
marathon: 2:52 (St. George 1982)
OLD MAN (20+ years later):
5K: 19:53 (Nestle/Art City Days 5K 2007)
10K: 39:55 (Spectrum 10K 2008)
half marathon: 1:26 (Hobble Creek 2008)
marathon: 3:07 (St. George 2007)

Short-Term Running Goals:

Get back to a BQ marathon time (currently 3:40).

Long-Term Running Goals:

Have fun running, keep fit, and fight middle age spread. Run consistently and injury free. Maintain a healthy balance between running and other life priorities. Encourage my ever-aging running buddies to keep running so we can continue to share runs on the trail instead of rocking chairs.

Personal:

Blessed to be married to Karen for 30 years. We have six children (4 daughters/2 sons) ages 16 to 30, and one wonderful granddaughter.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Altra Instinct 1.5 Lifetime Miles: 83.50
Altra Lone Peak 1.5 Lifetime Miles: 21.80
Saucony Guide 7 Blue 2 Lifetime Miles: 376.95
Saucony Fastwitch 6 Lifetime Miles: 200.05
Saucony Guide 7 Black 1 Lifetime Miles: 271.15
Easy MilesThreshold MilesMarathon Pace MilesTrack speed mileageHill mileageTotal
6.100.000.000.000.006.10

I explored a new route solo this morning. My goal is to find a 6 mile route that is close to home, well lit, and doesn't cross any busy streets that might be dangerous for Larry's dog Ozzie. Our normal routes into Lindon are too dark this time of year, but Orem streets all have street lights.

I did pretty well for not having studied any maps in advance. The route I ran basically zig zags west through residential streets to 400 West and back for 4 miles, then zig zags east through residential streets to 210 East and back for another 2 miles.

On the blogs of the elite runners I've noticed comments about doing striders during easy runs, and they sound like a good idea, but I've never really done them before. I tried some (8) today during my easy 6 mile run (8:32/mi). I liked being able to focus on form, efficiency, and foot speed without too much worry about overdoing it and getting injured.

Comments
From Tom on Fri, Oct 26, 2007 at 10:08:45

Hey Paul how do you do the striders? Do you just take off for 20-30 seconds then rest about that long and repeat this for however many striders you are doing? Did you do them at the end of the run or in the middle somewhere? If I remember correctly these should be around 5K pace, does that sound right?

I'm wanting to start adding these as well to easy runs. One thing I notice on easy runs is afterward when I do my light stretches I'm still pretty tight whereas after the tempos and faster runs I'm loose and can get a real good stretch afterward. I'm hoping throwing in some striders will help loosen up the legs a bit on the easy days.

From Paul T on Fri, Oct 26, 2007 at 10:37:58

You should probably ask someone else for how striders are supposed to be done. The ones I did this morning weren't very regular or scientific. I did some of them about 30 seconds apart. A few of them I just threw in at random spots where I felt like it.

Here's the math that went through my head as I was running this morning (use at your own risk): As maybe you know, I tend to like to count 1-2-3 1-2-3 when I'm running fast (it helps me keep my feet moving), and at 180 steps/minute that works out to be about 1 second per 1-2-3. I roughly estimated that 60 seconds for one lap (400 meters) was pretty fast (4:00 mile). So to approximate/simulate running 100 meters at 4:00/mi pace I simply ran as fast as I could (focusing on form and efficiency) for 15 1-2-3's (45 steps). I suspect it's somewhat short of 100 meters since I'm probably not running 4:00/mi pace, and my stride rate may have been slightly faster than 180/minute. I'll have to go to the track and find out. I'd prefer counting steps to having to look at my watch, or set it to beep, every 20 or 30 seconds while doing striders.

Sasha has Sasha Science. Maybe I can call my ideas Paul Postulation or Paul Postulates. (A postulate is something taken as being true or factual and used as a starting point for a course of action or reasoning.)

From Sasha Pachev on Fri, Oct 26, 2007 at 11:36:40

They should be no more than 20 seconds. If you do not want to look at your watch, just go fast, with a good knee lift, and feel like you are rolling along, and go until you stop enjoying the speed. Make sure to give yourself enough rest in between.

The idea behind those is to teach your body proper form while running fast, and then carry the momentum of muscle memory into running slow, so the better form while running fast begins to influence your form while running slow. It is also important to keep the strides short enough that you do not have excessive amounts of oxygen debt.

From Paul T on Fri, Oct 26, 2007 at 11:44:40

Thanks, Sasha. I like to understand the principle behind the practice.

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