Justin Daerr Elite Triathlete
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Archive for February, 2009

Indoor training

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

It seems fitting to chat about indoor trainer workouts on a day like today. I am staring out at several inches of freshly fallen snow here in Boulder, Colorado and I doubt my bike will be leaving the living room today.

 

I grew up in South Texas so using a wind/fluid/compu trainer was not really part of my training protocol. I think the only winter gear I owned in college was a pair of arm warmers. I have since moved northwards to the hills of Colorado and adapting to a new winter climate has forced me to change the way I train. When I lived in warm winters, it was never a challenge to fit in a normal training load on the bike in February; so when I moved to Colorado several winters ago I was confused with how to handle my training.

 

Initially, I figured that I would just do what I normally did; just inside staring at the wall instead of outside in the sun. Well, that did not work out too well so I had to rewrite my training plan. I knew that the weather would turn favorable in March and April so I simply wanted to come up with a few sessions that help make the transition to normal training easier for me. After a trial and error period, I eventually settled on three weekly indoor sessions (none of them long) that I felt would accomplish this goal.

 

The first session I came up with is what I call the “One Minute” session. This session is fairly straight forward: I ride one minute repeats at a solid effort with 2-4 minutes of easy spinning in between. When I lived in warmer climates, I would ride along easily on my base rides, but there was always a hill, a traffic light, or some variable that forced short bouts of higher power output. When I just sat on a trainer spinning aimlessly, I felt that I was missing this fartlek training. I always build my effort throughout each repeat (and each workout) all while allowing myself as much recovery as needed. The first session I do usually includes 4-5 repeats with 4 minutes of recovery. Over 4-6 weeks, I build to 8-10 x 1 minute on 2 minute recoveries. (Note: I would advise against attempting a new one minute power PB each week. Do that in a bike race.)

 

The second session of the week is what I call the “Over Under.” This workout is found in nearly all of the indoor training plans I have seen (so we’re either all right or all wrong). It involves doing repeats with a gear that yields a cadence of 55-65 at a moderately hard intensity. I typically begin by doing 4 x 5 minutes of BIG gear work (typically 53 x 13-11 gearing) with 2 minutes of recovery in between intervals. I eventually build to doing 5 x 8 minutes (two minute recoveries) over the course of 4-6 weeks. That takes care of the “Under.” The “Over” component is accomplished at the end of the session when I ride continuously at a cadence of 100-110 in an easy gear for 10-20 minutes. With a session like this, I have trained ‘over’ and ‘under’ my comfortable cadence.

 

The final session of the week is the “90/30” session. You can do this session based on feel or with power (I use power). Heart rate is less relevant since the efforts are short(er). In this workout, I ride 90 seconds ‘on’ and 30 seconds ‘off’ continuously 4-6 times through, coupled by 3-5 minutes of easy spinning in between each 90/30 set. I repeat the 90/30 set 3-4 more times as I progress over 4-6 weeks. For the 90 seconds ‘on’ I typically start around 80-85% of the previous season’s FTP (Functional Threshold Power; or 40K power) and I gradually lift the power to FTP as fitness returns. This session allows me to accumulate a fair amount of time at (or near) FTP, but it does not involve a lot of time with a high heart rate.

 

When I first began to train through ‘real’ winters, I always feared that I was behind the rest of the triathlon world. However, what I have since found is that I begin to come on form at right time of year and I do not require a major midseason break like I used to. This time of year can cause a lot of anxiety because we all want to be fit, but patience and persistence will pay off nicely when it counts.

A week in the hills

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

The Swedes were way ahead of the X Games: 1996

That video still impresses me even by today’s standards. These days the X Games builds Halfpipes with walls as high as that 1996 Quarter in Sweden. Nevertheless, watching Ingemar hit that after a snowmobile tow was pretty fantastic. It was on the cover of every snowboard mag at the time (we didn’t have youtube and the net was young) and it set a new standard for going big.

Terje hit a quarter in Norway some years later that was huge:

terje going off

That’s about all I have for today.

jd

Offseason….

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

Most folks are beginning to start thinking about this season. I, on the other hand, have shut everything down for the time being. I’m currently in the third (of 3) week of my offseason. One primary difference from this offseason to year’s past is the complete absence of exercise. I have done little more than walk over the last 17 days or so. I wanted to allow my body a good break after making it run through 3 Ironmans in 21 weeks. I actually finished the last race without feeling mentally taxed, but I won’t be racing until the summer. “You have to rest some time.”

I have not committed to any races for this coming season just yet. If I can avoid the hiccups of last May and June then I should appear in more events than 2008. In the short term, I’m focused on directing a training camp for long course triathletes in late March/early April. We have a couple slots still open so if you want to jump start your fitness this Spring then check out the link below:

Tucson Camp

I’m headed to the mountains this week for a couple different reasons and when I get back I might just go for a jog.

Until then,

jd