Training for a Triathlon?
We have a free gym at work with treadmills and bikes. No pool though. There is also an enormous park next to our office building with bike trails and walking/jogging trails.
HW - 225 SW - 191 GW - 132 CW - 122
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Find a good plan and see what's good for you. I like to stay close to the potty, so I train almost exclusively at the gym. I do running events sometimes so I'm used to running on the ground, but nearly everything else I do at the gym. Chances are good that I'll do some biking outdoors next summer since I want to do a half iron (and finally have a bike), but I don't swim anywhere but a pool. I'm not that great a swimmer and am going to take some lessons soon, so I feel safer in the pool.
The area that you're the weakest in is probably what you should try to do the most of. I'm really a runner first, but when I'm tri training, I swim 3 times a week, run 3-4 times a week, and bike twice. I also get at least one brick in a week, usually two.
There's a lot of knowledgeable folks on this board who are happy to help anytime.
Good luck with your training!
Linn
OKay, what does that mean?
HW - 225 SW - 191 GW - 132 CW - 122
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Bricks are when you do two legs back-to-back, to practice transitions, like swim-to-bike or bike-to-run. The order of the Tri events are Swim, bike, run. Each uses some different muscles to the brick helps train the muscles for the change.
Good luck!
Donna
"Pain is temporary. It may last a minute, or an hour or a day, or a year, but eventually it will subside and something else will take its place. If I quit, however, it lasts forever." Lance Armstrong
There is 2 ways to think of it.
B(bike)R(run)ICK(how your legs feel), hence BRICK
Or that your legs feel like bricks when you run after hopping off the bike.
Bricks aren't bad for me anymore. The only time they hurt is when I hop off the bike after 100+ miles and then go run. I run well off the bike usually, but it took a lot of work.
Even now my times on my swim miles are 21 minutes and I can pace about 18-22 miles an hour on 40 miles of a moderate course on bike, but I can't go out and run ten miles. I'm only sharing this with you to show how gaps in your training can affect you long-term. So the comment about focusing on your weakest events is so important. I have also found my body adapting and giving you a false sense of security thinking that becuase you are fast in other events, you can make up time and then willingly surrender time on events you are weak in. It is such a bad cycle to get into.
The main thing I think is to determine what type of traithalete you want to be. Do you want to do sprint events or olympic or 70.3's. Once you determine what your goals are, you can develop a plan accordingly. I hope to see you posting months from now on your progress / events you have done. Best of luck.
Jeff
I'm training for this particular event in May as it seems to be the first one in my area that has a Sprint event:
http://www.tricalifornia.com/index.cfm/Wildflower2008-course_descriptions_mountain_bike.htm
I like to Mountain Bike. Biking on the roads scares me a bit. But I'm assuming most Triathalons don't have mountain biking and I'm not sure I want to own two bikes. It seems excessive.
I think I can already do the swim distance or close to it, but I have to find a pool and try it out.
I assume I have to be able to do more than distance than required by the course in each event when training at home since I'm not doing all 3 events each day I train, right? What's a good length to shoot for in each event if you are training for a Sprint? What about cross training, such as pilates? How much does it help?
I'm only 5 weeks out from my surgery so there are some things I can't do yet. But I should be fully healed by the end of the year and able to do anything I need to.