Grog
11-21-2006, 12:06 PM
Hi ladies!
I have noticed a strange and annoying phenomenon, and I'd like to know if others feel the same way.
When I run by myself I have a lot of control on my heart rate, and can keep it, say, between 165 and 170 on flats (my max is 200-something). However, if I'm running the same course with my running partner, I run at the same pace most of the time, yet my heart shoots above 175 quickly and just stays there, and goes back there after taking walking breaks (on 10K+ runs). She and I are similar runners, I'm perhaps a little bit faster, especially going up hills (she's faster on the downhills),
The pace is very similar but the time is usually different: if I run with her it's more likely to be at 7am, while I run by myself towards the end of the day. Could this be the cause? Are we maybe taking a faster start and my body reacts to that negatively? Any ideas?
I find this a little annoying because those 5 to 10 beats per minute make a difference at the end of my workout. Any clues?
I have noticed a strange and annoying phenomenon, and I'd like to know if others feel the same way.
When I run by myself I have a lot of control on my heart rate, and can keep it, say, between 165 and 170 on flats (my max is 200-something). However, if I'm running the same course with my running partner, I run at the same pace most of the time, yet my heart shoots above 175 quickly and just stays there, and goes back there after taking walking breaks (on 10K+ runs). She and I are similar runners, I'm perhaps a little bit faster, especially going up hills (she's faster on the downhills),
The pace is very similar but the time is usually different: if I run with her it's more likely to be at 7am, while I run by myself towards the end of the day. Could this be the cause? Are we maybe taking a faster start and my body reacts to that negatively? Any ideas?
I find this a little annoying because those 5 to 10 beats per minute make a difference at the end of my workout. Any clues?