Tuesday, August 5, 2014

vertical

Vertical ascent is one of my new favorite training metrics.  You don't get much vertical running in the suburbs!  The streets in my neighborhood do roll up and down, but my new Garmin reports I get just 400 feet of vertical climb on a typical 5.5 mile loop I run a lot.  The biggest hill near my house - Powhatan Hill - rises 110 feet over .4 miles and seems like a grind every time I run up it.

Looking at the elevation profile of the JFK50, there is a vertical climb of 1200 feet in the first 5 miles.  That's a bit daunting if I equate it to running up my own Powhatan Hill ten times in a row, and then still having 45 mile run to go.  Last weekend I took my water bottle to the base of Powhatan Hill and ran it ten times just for the vertical.  I now track my total vertical ascent, and plan to add more climbing to my workouts every where I can.

So with my new interest in tracking vertical, the list of things I watch or try to include week-to-week to manage my training includes:
- my total mileage as a sliding 7-day sum
- long runs
- intervals (long intervals up grade or on hills, but I still enjoy running 400's on the treadmill)
- vertical ascent
- heart rate data, to track TRIMP / ATL / CTL as used in SportTracks Training Load software

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