As implied by my last entry, my perfect day of training might entail 12 to 15 laps around Green Lake, with the lap times never varying by more than a few seconds.
For many others, though, that situation would essentially be Hell on Earth. Based on my reading of a few fellow ultramarathoners’ blogs, here’s how they might spend their ideal day of training….
Matt Hart: a few hours of running followed by a few hours of mountain biking, a few hours of skiing, and then perhaps a few hours of kayaking. With a few dozen Clif Shots for sustenance.
Andy Jones-Wilkins: a long run on the Western States course, accompanied by chatty Oregonians. (Has anyone else noticed that 10 of his last 12 posts have mentioned Western States? The man is truly obsessed!)
Anton Krupicka: 30 miles in the morning, at altitude, with lots of climbing, accompanied by Kyle Skaggs (about the only guy who can keep up right now). A quart of ice cream for lunch. And then another mountainous 30-miler in the afternoon.
Brian Morrison: a long run on Chuckanut Mountain followed by several hours of isometric upright posture exercises — i.e., standing around — at a Pearl Jam concert.
If anyone else out there wants to describe his/her own unique formula for achieving a “runner’s high,” please go ahead!
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