RM, your man is one cool dude to do a 24hr SOLO!!!!I bow down to anyone that can do a 12hr or 24hr event solo.
I wish him the best in his journey & may he achieve the goals he wants!
Wow!![]()
RM, your man is one cool dude to do a 24hr SOLO!!!!I bow down to anyone that can do a 12hr or 24hr event solo.
I wish him the best in his journey & may he achieve the goals he wants!
Wow!![]()
I just finished a 24-hour solo race. For the second year in a row, I followed the 24-hour Personal Best plan from http://lwcoaching.com/ Coach Lynda is wonderful, and her plans are tough, but do-able while working fulltime, and she gets results. Both years, I won the overall female division. She'll answer questions about your training by email, and she'll help you adapt the plan to your life.
For example, I have a business trip that falls in the wrong week of my plan - she helped me rearrange the plan to work around it.
I know, without a doubt, that I couldn't have won without her training behind me.
PW
For 3 days, I get to part of a thousand other journeys.
oooh, another vote for Lynda Wallenfels.
http://lwcoaching.com/
I am on a second plan from her. While I don't race, I found her training very helpful. She actually WROTE a plan for me last year when I couldn't find what I needed. After almost a year and a half of very little riding, I needed to just get a base back over the winter. She then took a different plan and modified it for me.
I love the daily emails that tell me exactly what I am to do that day.
I guess I should add the before her plans, I was SLOW. I mean, painfully slow. Always the one my friends would wait for. My whole team is impressed with the results I got from Coach Lynda's plans. I'm not fast, but faster than I was, and certainly faster than I could have gotten just by riding.
I think the pre-built plans are very reasonable for the results you get, plus the ability to ask her advice and know you'll get a personalized response.
http://lwcoaching.com/?page_id=87
For 3 days, I get to part of a thousand other journeys.
Very cool that your husband is going for a 24 hr solo.
I did my first one 2 years ago (hey pedal wrench, where do you race?) and became addicted.
To train for 24 hr races i work with a coach but can offer the following advice:
- Figure out your nutrition strategy. I love hammer nutrition -- and their endurance group (free email group you can join) has really helped me in this aspect. Aside from fitness and endurance this will have the biggest impact on race results.
- do longer (4 - 8 hr) race sims. This will ensure you test your endurance and your nutrition plan. Eat like you will in the race (can't stress that one enough - a huge part of these races is (for me) keeping your stomach happy). If you have races available to you for these 'race sims' - even better.
- do some longer rides on the road (endurance) but most on the trails - you need to get used to the beating that your body will take over all the logs, rocks, roots, and etc. no amount of fitness can compensate if your upper body can't handle it. I like to train on the hardest course around - the one that offers loads of hard climbs, a mix of single-track and double-track, and that beats up my body (technical skills required). This prepares me well for the harder 24hr solos. For a first-timer i'd try to pick something that simulates the race you are aiming at ... for me my A race (24solo) is worlds so I pick the hardest routes around to train on.
- not everyone does this but I like to do a bit of running up really steep stuff for cross training. in 24hr events you often get off your bike ... if you are fit and can run up the hills or have no problem with walking fast you can pass competitors.
my 0.02