
Originally Posted by
velogirl
My first advice is that if you're trying to maintain your road schedule (or more if you've also added in weights and running), you should cut back. Most cross racers do one or two interval sessions during the week (one set of short intervals 15-60 seconds; one set of 2 x 20s) -- that's it (in addition to racing). Other miles are considered junk miles.
If you take a short break you won't lose fitness. You'll gain freshness. The secret is timing this right so you peak for nationals in five weeks.
One observation I've had racing cross for the past four years (and coaching cross racers) is that we tend to peter out in November. Because most of us aren't doing high-volume low-intensity aerobic work, we begin to lose that aerobic base. It's more evident with the longer races (men). So, one option for you is to only do easy, aerobic riding the next couple of weeks and then ramp up your intensity again. This will strengthen your base and also give you a bit of freshness. Or take a week off completely, do one very low-intensity race, and then jump back into low-volume, high-intensity training.
Cross is a crazy sport. Most coaches frown on road racers racing cross. It completely changes your training calendar. You don't get the traditional down time or base-building in the fall so you have to do that in the early part of the year while all your training buddies/teammates are already adding in some intensity This also delays your road racing season until at least March or April (not a problem in the northeast). I personally couldn't imagine a fall without cross. If done right, you'll maintain and improve fitness (and your mind will be happy too).