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Sunday Run



So we can increase our running together in a Covid-19 safe and secure way, we must comply with both English Athletics and Government guidelines. We are asking members to pre-register for Wednesday club runs, which you can do on this page. You can book from the Monday morning at 8am for the following Sunday, and book for one week in advance only.

Please sign up below for Sunday runs for Sunday 17 November 2024

If the leader would like to amend the run details, they should simply re-add themselves, amending the run details in the process.


1. Please select a Sunday Run

2. Are you the lead runner?

If you are the lead runner, please add key details

Start Location:


Start Time:


Distance:


Pace/Terrain:


Other:


3. Please either add or remove yourself


4. Please enter your email address






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ELR Sunday Runs

The club organises a variety of runs on Sundays, usually in the morning. The runs are arranged by individual club members, so the events will vary from week to week, but often include social trail runs at an easy pace, long runs at various paces (especially during peak marathon training season), and sometimes runs with a particular focus such as hill training.

We encourage anyone to organise a Sunday. It can be from any starting point, any distance, at any pace, on any terrain. You just need to put the details (including meeting time and place, distance, approximate pace and terrain) on this page.

While we are running under Covid rules, it is important that you sign up in advance to join a Sunday run.

- Please arrive on time.
- Please let the run organiser know if you need to leave the run early. In return, you can expect not to be left behind (unless you've told the organiser that's OK).

If you have any questions, or have any suggestions on how to improve our Sunday Run offering, please let me know.

Catriona Hoult
Sunday Run Coordinator


Spring Marathon Training - Plan To Succeed

The Christmas holiday period is for spending time with loved ones, eating merrily, catching up on your favourite TV, and...putting your marathon training plan together, right?

Well, maybe not for everyone. But it is true for many runners planning to take on a spring marathon that thoughts can inevitably turn to the weeks of training ahead.
And this can be quite a daunting prospect, particularly for those new to marathon running. There are so many bits of differing advice out there that can make it difficult to know where to begin. No matter what your ability, some plans favour a heavier workload, some espouse the benefits of cross training, and some limit the length of the long runs.

Every individual is different and so there is no definitive right or wrong answer on what will work. Therefore you may decide to create your own plan and this can work very effectively. If doing this I would say the basics are these:

You should give yourself 12-16 weeks in total. The long run mileage should build up gradually and the focus of this should primarily be "time on feet" rather than speed. During the training block you should have a couple of quieter weeks to allow for recovery and reduce risk of injury. Include a variety of different workouts in addition to the long runs - tempo runs, interval sessions and short recovery runs. Target a race during your training such as a half marathon to test progress and allow you to determine a race pace for the day. And ease off gradually (tapering) during the last few weeks before the race to ensure you both retain your fitness but are also fresh on race day.

So with that in mind, take out your diary and put together a plan that fits with your schedule. If you have a holiday booked or a particularly busy week of other commitments ahead, make that your quieter week for running. If Sundays work best for your long run but one big Saturday night out looms, maybe switch your long run to the Saturday morning for that week. If struggling to find time, even an hour window somewhere can be good for an easy recovery run. And remember if you are a regular at club training on Monday and Wednesday nights that can be your interval and tempo sessions ticked off right there.

Check out the race entries page on the club website for some ideas for build-up races over the next few months and also there will be plenty of people arranging weekend long runs over a variety of paces if you're looking for company. And come and talk to any of the regulars at the club if you're looking for training advice or even help in compiling a plan.


The Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Running Your First Marathon

In this beginner's guide to running your first marathon we cover everything from choosing the right race to training methods. You'll also learn how to prepare the night before and what gear you'll need.

hobbyhelp.com/marathon-running/


Marathon Training Tips - Tapering And Preparation



Hi. So we are near the end of the road for your spring marathon training. Well done for getting here.

For your tapering my best piece of advice is not to try and make up for any missed training by doing a long run close to your marathon. It will only tire you out and you will effectively have run your marathon before your marathon. Allow for a day per mile to recover from any hard running before your marathon to recover properly. There isn’t one magic run that will get you fitter, it's the accumulative mileage over the training period which will get through your marathon.

For race day, practice taking your gels/nutrition before the race. Decide on your race plan and stick to it as best as you can. Make sure your gear is all packed the day before and allow plenty of time on race day to avoid stress. Focus on your pace and enjoying your race. You deserve that.

Have a fab day and I can't wait to hear all about it but no longer than 30 seconds please!

Grant Conway



Marathon Training - Update By Grant Conway

Hopefully you will all be around the 3/4 point in your training by now. Well done! Give yourself a pat on the back. Marathon training is tough but the end is in sight.

Have you missed a bit of training? Don't worry, all the miles you have been putting in are in your legs. There is no single magic training run which will make a difference come marathon day. The accumulative effect of the training will get you round your marathon. Therefore, try to resist the tendency to over train to make up for any lost sessions as all that will do is tire you out for marathon day and increase your chances of getting injured. After all, you don't want to waste all that training by not being able to run come marathon day do you? It's better to look at revising your time estimate if necessary so you can enjoy the day and be fit to run.

Give yourself a chance to taper properly pre marathon. Doing a 22 miler 2 weeks before won't make you fitter it will just make you fatigued come marathon day.

Have you got a niggle? Don't worry it's common. Take a few days off in the week if necessary and get treatment if it's needed. Your long runs are the most important.

Please come along to a marathon tapering, preparation and race strategy clinic at the Manor House Pub, Wanstread High Street on 14th March 2018 to discuss anything you like about your running and your marathon.

Please feel free to contact me on social media or on the webmaster e.mail.

Watch out for a further update next month


Marathon Training - The Early Weeks by Grant Conway

I have been asked to follow up from the clinic we had at the Manor House Pub the other week regarding our marathon/endurance training.

Marathon training is a subjective thing. What's good for some is no good for others.

The most important thing is not to go too mad from the outset and get injured. If you get to the start line with some decent training you can still enjoy your marathon and adjust your time target if you need to.

Don't increase your weekly mileage by more than 10% and every 3 to 4 weeks drop your mileage down, perhaps with a race or fast parkrun at the end of the easier week to see where you are.

Long runs are the key part of your training. Increase the time on your feet each week on your long runs by about 10/15 minutes. Don't worry about covering precise mileage. Long runs should be done at around 30 to 60 seconds below your target marathon pace so you don't burn out and/or get injured.

If possible, in order of importance try and do these sessions each week (apart from easy weeks).

1. Long run
2. Track/speed work
3. Tempo run
4. Hill training
5. Easy runs if you have the time/energy!

Try and do some of your long runs off road if possible.


Work out a plan but be prepared to adapt it if you need to. Try not to obsess too much! Enjoy your marathon journey.

I can help with a plan if you wish. Please feel free to contact me on social media or via the webmaster e.mail address.


Marathon Tips from some local Experts!

http://leytonsportsmassage.com/news-articles/marathon-tips/






Nat Dye from 26 to 100 in a year.

Hi all,

For the one or two people interested, here are my notes from last night’s ultra marathon talk. Like everything I do, it took ages so apologies for any boredom caused!!

From 26 to 100 miles in a year: Training for and running an ultra

How can I start?
If you’ve run a marathon, you can run an ultra. A 50k is just 5 miles more than a marathon! Most marathon runners could expect to finish - just take the whole thing at easy (conversational) pace!

First ultra ideas:
Stort 30
Dawn til dusk
Spitfire scramble
Twilight ultra

A 2-6 mile loop race might be boring but you don’t have to carry a pack and however far you run, you’ve succeeded.

How about something longer?
50 miles and up...

Mindset/motivation - forget how fast you’re going. Do you have the motivation to build towards this for 6 months plus?
Make sure you really want to do this!
My motivations:
See what you’re body can do
Prove a point to yourself
Achieve something unachievable
Mental test
Be a roll model

You’re unlikely to want to put yourself through all of this unless you’re intrinsically motivated

This is a selfish decision and that’s ok!

Training your body to run long
Difference between endurance and stamina. Build the aerobic system: higher fat burn/about 60% of max HR - easy miles. Fasted runs/Fat adapted??? Makes sense in theory but carbs are still important.

Strength training? 1-2 body weight/Pilates a week. This is as much to avoid injury as strengthen muscles. Include core as usual but also upper body - arms get as tired as legs on a long ultra! I consider a really hilly run to be the equivalent of a strength session.
Flexibility? I stretch after EVERY run - 5-10 mins.

What does ultra training look like?
[see training plan]

Approx. 3 weeks building, 1 week easy/consolidating
Not all miles are created equally, so consider training by time

Long runs:
2 per week - back to back to simulate running on tired legs. No physiological gain after about 2 1/2-3 hours of running - have a reason to go further, e.g. nutrition, hydration, mental, practise race

Easy runs -
2-3 per week eg commutes etc. - getting used to ultra pace - help recover + build aerobic system. 5-7 miles for me.

Tempo/hills/intervals -
1-2 per week - help leg speed and running economy. I find if I miss these, I get slower.
Try not to spend long in the anaerobic zone if at all.

Rest days -
1-2 per week - this is the hardest for me! Important to let body recover and react to training! Try to avoid physical and mental stresses - this looks different for everyone. However...

Things that don’t count as rest:
An easy 5k fun
Strength training
2 hours of commute cycling
A long hilly walk
A stressful day at work

Watch out for overtraining:
Listen to your body - it really is ok to take an extra rest day even if it’s not on the plan!! (I’m still working on this)
If you’re getting slower, but working harder, cut down and take an easy week.
I find a speed session takes as much recovery time as a long run - just because it was short doesn’t mean it wasn’t hard!
More serious:
Tired all the time
Craving sugar
Poor sleep

Specificity

hills - e.g. Epping Forest - get used to either walking or running easy up and controlling on way down. You don’t really need poles in the UK but in some mountain ultras, they’re almost obligingly!

heat - practise in the heat of the day. Some people go even further - sauna/hot yoga or extra layers.
Cooling down:
Sun cream, no t-shirt, soak a T-shirt
Mud - practise running a long way in mud claws!

Trails - train on a variety of surface types - I was undone by narrow single track on the Ridgeway!
altitude - advice is to be at altitude a week in advance and drink more water

what’s going to be hard about your race? - prepare for that!

Run/walk strategies - needed more the further you go. Walk only up hills? Set time? When you feel like it?
A 5:1 ratio is common.
This is the main thing I wish I’d spent longer practising! At least 1/4 of a long ultra is likely to be walking.

Nutrition - before, during, after - there are conflicting arguments!

Before:
Good breakfast 2-3 hours before is ideal

During :
Eat real food on the run - test this on long runs - what can you stomach? High carb, low fat for me! I put this trial and error down to not yet having vomited on a run - this is a common thing.

After:
Golden window! Eat a high protein/carb snack within 20 mins

Self care after long runs
Stretch and eat ASAP
Good balanced meal
Compression tights - whether or not they help much, they feel great!
Magnesium bath or spray
Feet up/nap!

Self care in general:
A nutritious, balanced diet is really important. Have an approx idea of how many extra calories you’re burning and put these back.
Whole food vegan works well for me but that’s a whole different discussion!
Sleep!!!
Don’t let it completely take over your life!

Hydration - Work out how much water you need to carry as you run further. Conditions are important. Zero tablets - replace electrolytes.
You can’t train the body to run dehydrated!
Sun screen - your skin can get dehydrated too.

Gear - most ultras have a mandatory list.
Appropriate shoes
Sun hat
Sun screen
Rain jacket
Hydration pack/vest
Head torch
(Nipple plasters!!!)

Monitoring stats
Heart rate can help but don’t get obsessed like I did! On the trails, many normal metrics are unreliable.

Mental strategies
Find out what works and practise it on longer runs, e.g.
break the run down into 45 min snack intervals or pit stop to pit stop
count to 100 like Radcliffe
positive self talk
remember you’ve trained for it.
Smile!

Question: What do you think about when you run?
In short - everything and nothing!
When full of energy, concentrating on form and how fast etc.
Constant troubleshooting ‘I feel ____ so I need to ____’
A run for me is a good opportunity to break down the thoughts and anxieties that have built through the day/week.
I get into a meditative state once all the thoughts have finished bouncing round my head.

Question:
How did you keep going at spitfire with no end in sight?
Break it up - mentally celebrate small landmarks eg marathon, 50k, 50 miles, 100k, furthest you’ve ever run
At spitfire, meeting team mates every lap REALLY helped.
I had a goal of 100 miles and life was simple. That included acknowledging the pain, but not letting it stop me. Think back to why you wanted to do it.
Acknowledge the pain and suffering and how hard it is. There will be peaks and troughs e.g. I dip at marathon pace
Inexplicably, it will feel easier later.
Everyone can go further than they thought they could!

Question: At the end of every race, I feel like I can go no further - how did you keep going?

This was true for me - after 100 miles, I definitely could have run another lap and had time. I had no desire to do so what do ever!

Race day
Start sloooooow
Ditch the ego - don’t try to overtake those you think should be slower.
Don’t hang around water station buffets too long and don’t eat too much at a time
It really helped me to stop and stretch!!
Don’t stop moving!

Something will go wrong that you haven’t prepared for - most of the ultra is primarily a test of problem solving.
Night time is lonely.
Dawn is spectacular.
All the pain disappears when you finish.