Which is better.....
I am currently walking every other day approx 3.2 miles in under an hour (finally!) I have been able to bring my time down from 22min/mile to 17/18min mile. I do not have a treadmill, this is all outside. My goals is a 5K in October, hopefully jogging a bit, but I would love to do it in a 15min/mile. I was wondering the following things:
How long does it take you after you begin your walk/run does it take you to get to your regular pace time? It takes me about a 1/2 a mile to get to my average pace.
Would I be better walking 2 miles a day 5-6 days a week and try to work on my pace as well and jogging?
I really enjoy the longer walk, but I am fairly fatigued at the end of the day. I am also trying to make sure in my effort to get in shape I dont get injured.
My goal is eventually to jog/run. My current weight is 250 and I am approx 7 weeks out from surgery. I do plan on adding weights to my regimine as soon as I can afford a bench.
Thanks in advance for all your help. I am actually enjoying myself while I exercise now.....what an amazing thing to experience again!!!!
Kat
How long does it take you after you begin your walk/run does it take you to get to your regular pace time? It takes me about a 1/2 a mile to get to my average pace.
Would I be better walking 2 miles a day 5-6 days a week and try to work on my pace as well and jogging?
I really enjoy the longer walk, but I am fairly fatigued at the end of the day. I am also trying to make sure in my effort to get in shape I dont get injured.
My goal is eventually to jog/run. My current weight is 250 and I am approx 7 weeks out from surgery. I do plan on adding weights to my regimine as soon as I can afford a bench.
Thanks in advance for all your help. I am actually enjoying myself while I exercise now.....what an amazing thing to experience again!!!!
Kat
Congrats on the quickening pace!!!
most of us here learned to run/jog through a program called "couch to 5K", or something similar. What the program does is starts you walking, and then adding short intervals of running/jogging in the midst of your walk. It's a self-paced program, so that if you aren't ready to move up after a week, repeat that week again. Everyone is different.
I personally would not walk less to walk faster. I would actually walk MORE if possible. Maybe one or 2 days a week walk 3.5, or work your way up to 4 miles. Then, when you walk that 3.2, you will be strong that you will be going faster because you don't have to save up that energy for the last .8 mile.
When I run or walk, it does take me a while to get into a rhythm. For me it often depends on WHERE I am... if I'm running on a path or in the country, maybe a 1/2 mile before I settle into a comfortable pace. When I'm on the sidewalk in the city - takes a lot longer since there are intersections to deal with, traffic, etc.
most of us here learned to run/jog through a program called "couch to 5K", or something similar. What the program does is starts you walking, and then adding short intervals of running/jogging in the midst of your walk. It's a self-paced program, so that if you aren't ready to move up after a week, repeat that week again. Everyone is different.
I personally would not walk less to walk faster. I would actually walk MORE if possible. Maybe one or 2 days a week walk 3.5, or work your way up to 4 miles. Then, when you walk that 3.2, you will be strong that you will be going faster because you don't have to save up that energy for the last .8 mile.
When I run or walk, it does take me a while to get into a rhythm. For me it often depends on WHERE I am... if I'm running on a path or in the country, maybe a 1/2 mile before I settle into a comfortable pace. When I'm on the sidewalk in the city - takes a lot longer since there are intersections to deal with, traffic, etc.
Read my blog, BARIATHLETE I run because I can.
First 5K race October 4, 2009 (34.59) PR 5/22/11 (27:26)
First 5 Mile: January 1, 2011 (50:30)
First 10K: July 4, 2010 (1:03.26) New PR 4/10/11 (1:01.14)
First 10 Mile: April 11, 2010 (1:46.15)
First 1/2 marathon: June 13, 2010 (2:22.21) PR: 5/1/11 (2:17.30)
First Marathon: October 16, 2011: 5:47:20
Goofy Challenge: January 7-8, 2012
If you think you can, you can. If you think you can't, you're right. - Mary Kay Ash
First 5K race October 4, 2009 (34.59) PR 5/22/11 (27:26)
First 5 Mile: January 1, 2011 (50:30)
First 10K: July 4, 2010 (1:03.26) New PR 4/10/11 (1:01.14)
First 10 Mile: April 11, 2010 (1:46.15)
First 1/2 marathon: June 13, 2010 (2:22.21) PR: 5/1/11 (2:17.30)
First Marathon: October 16, 2011: 5:47:20
Goofy Challenge: January 7-8, 2012
If you think you can, you can. If you think you can't, you're right. - Mary Kay Ash
I don't think there is an absolute "better". It depends on your goals and what you like. Some people would rather walk longer but not as briskly. I prefer to run so I'd rather run for a short time than walk a long time.
I started with Couch-to-5K and once I could run 5k, I switched to all running and I did it 3x a week, one time a long slower run, one time a shorter faster run and one time doing my club's track workout (intervals). Each type of workout has a different purpose and they all work together.
I started with Couch-to-5K and once I could run 5k, I switched to all running and I did it 3x a week, one time a long slower run, one time a shorter faster run and one time doing my club's track workout (intervals). Each type of workout has a different purpose and they all work together.
HW - 225 SW - 191 GW - 132 CW - 122
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I agree with the other posters...I didn't know about C25K when I started but I used the same principle. I have a 4 mile round trip path in my home town that I do most of my running on....I'd set short goals (like run to the next tunnel****il I got to where I could run 2 miles uninterrupted. I still to this day (2+ years later) combine walking with mostly running because I have arthritis in my knees and long distance running really takes a toll.
I was doing high intensity intervals for a while but found my legs were getting bigger (due to muscle growth) which made the legs of all my shorts/pants get tighter....once I backed off some it got better so now I don't do it very often.
Bottom line-find a rhythm that works for you that you enjoy and gets your heart rate up. If you like it, you'll keep doing it.
BTW, I find if I'm running in a "new" place, like at the beach, I'm slower because I'm busy checking out my surroundings.
Kim
I was doing high intensity intervals for a while but found my legs were getting bigger (due to muscle growth) which made the legs of all my shorts/pants get tighter....once I backed off some it got better so now I don't do it very often.
Bottom line-find a rhythm that works for you that you enjoy and gets your heart rate up. If you like it, you'll keep doing it.
BTW, I find if I'm running in a "new" place, like at the beach, I'm slower because I'm busy checking out my surroundings.
Kim