| By Helen Jackson It is very difficult to set a training schedule for an adventure racer, especially in this day and age when people seem to work all the time (clearly to pay for all the gear and trips!!)
Anyway, as you have probably guessed it would make sense to train for what you are going to do and preparing yourself for a long expedition race is a lot different from preparing for a short one day sprint.
A lot depends on your level of competitiveness too. If you want to just have a go at a one-day race for fun being able to run for an hour, ride for an hour and having enough general fitness for a few other challenges is enough. (You can choose to miss checkpoints or take a rest if you want you know!)
Having said that the competitive streak is strong in most racers, so here are some rough guidelines to training. (These are only my suggestions, others may think differently!) Weekly for Short RacesRunning 2 x 5 mile runs 1 x speed session
Biking 2 x 10 miles 1 x 20miles
Weights 3 x upper body training session (on alternate days)
Paddling Proficiency in kayak 1 x 1 hour session
Combination 1 x run/bike comboWeekly for Medium Length RacesRunning 2 x 10miles
Mountain biking 70-100 miles
Weights 3 x sessions upper body strength on alternate days
Combination 1 x 6-12 hour session with a big pack, hiking, biking, paddling and some of it in dark if possible
Other Navigation and other skills practiceWeekly for Expedition RacesMinimum 1 hour daily Running Biking Paddling Weight training
1 x long combination session
Monthly Endurance session including all skills and disciplines. Should be 24- 48 hours in length and preferably with members of your team.
[Helen Jackson has represented the UK at Mountain Running and won the Red Bull Mountain Mayhem in 2002, a 24 hour non-stop mountain bike race. Her ambition last year was for Saab Salomon to finish in the top 3 in the X-adventure Raid World Tour, which they did. Helen does a variety of jobs in outdoor sports …. between races.] |