Tuesday 17 February 2015

Bulwell/Top Valley Beginners - Week 4

Evening ladies,
 
Hope your all feeling wonderfully proud of yourself, 1.65 miles running, some managed 2 miles, think how far you've all come. Makes my tummy tickle.
 
Please remember to bring your medication e.g Inhalers. With the cold weather you just never know. As an asthmatic myself, I know I have started a run feeling fine and got 10 minutes in and had to stop. I want you out of breath for the right reasons.
 
Nottingham City Homes.
We have been asked to provide information on how our group is impacting on areas.
If your a Nottingham City Homes tenant could you please let us know. Just so we collect numbers. Thank you.
 
Week 4 plan
So... onto this week's plan...
 
Begin with a brisk five-minute walk, then three minutes of running, 90 seconds of walking, five minutes of running, two-and-a-half minutes of walking, three minutes of running, 90 seconds of walking and five minutes of running.
4 blocks of running = 16 mins of running
Do this 3 times during week 4.  If you're finding that you're taking a while to recover after today's run, just scale back the runs to 3 minutes each and do a pattern of 3 minutes running, 90 seconds walking and repeat it five times during your run.  You'll be doing approximately the same amount of running in total, but not quite putting the same amount of pressure on yourself.  However, do try to complete another lot of running for 5 minutes.  I know you can do it and hopefully after Mondays run... *you* know you can do it too!
 

 
Activity
Duration
Total time
 
Brisk walk
5 minutes
5 mins
1
Running
3 minutes
8 mins
 
Brisk walk
90 seconds
9.5 mins
2
Running
5 minutes
14.5 mins
 
Brisk walk
2.5 minutes
17 mins
3
Running
3 minutes
20 mins

 
Brisk walk
90 seconds
21.5 mins
4
Running
5 minutes
25.5 mins

 
Cool down walk
5 minutes
30.5 mins
 
Nottingham Light Night
Since you've all proved that you can run for a mile... what about joining us on Friday 6th of February, lighting up a run into the city as part of Light Night? Full details are here: http://www.nottinghamcity.gov.uk/lightnight#Run - I'll be leading the run from Sneinton with Sarah. We're happy to run-walk it and pace doesn't matter... looking lit up, glowing and amazing is where it's at! If you'd like to come along, meet us at the Greenway Centre (NG2 4DF) in Sneinton at 6:30 on Friday and we'll be handing out glow kit ready to run for 7! The route itself is straightforward and a smidge over 1 mile long.
 
Stretches and injury prevention
As we're increasing the distance we're running, it's also increasingly important to take care of how you're running and how much you're running to prevent injury. A few tips for you:
 
1. Stretch after your run - http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/c25k/Pages/how-to-stretch-after-a-run.aspx has some good clear pictures of stretches to add to the ones I sent out a couple of weeks ago.
 
2. ... but don't stretch to the point where it really hurts! You're after stretching the muscle so that you can feel the stretch and possibly feel some discomfort... but if it's hurting... stop!
 
3. When you're running, think about your form. Try to 'run tall' - imagine that you have a piece of string attached to the top of your head and it's pulling you upright. Think about how your feet hit the floor. If you're 'heel striking' (hitting the ground with your heel first) it often means that your foot is landing in front of your body - which puts extra strain on your legs / joints. Try to land more in the mid-foot area and your foot will naturally land more underneath your body, reducing the risk of pains and strains!
 
4. If you run listening to music, try it without every so often. Instead, listen to your feet on the pavement - light and fast feet are better than heavy and slow. Lots of runners try to run faster by increasing their stride length, but you're better concentrating on shortening your stride slightly and increasing your cadence so that you do more steps per minute. It's a much more efficient way of running and will put less strain on your body as you get used to it. Either way, run without music from time to time and concentrate on *how* you're running, how your breathing feels, how you feel. And enjoy the head space!
 
5. Take those rest days! Once you get bitten by the running bug, the temptation to do more - run further, run more often etc - can rear its head. Ignore it! Build up slowly and you're far less likely to end up suffering from things like shin splints which can stop you from running.
 
6. Make sure you're wearing decent trainers. You can get what's called a 'gait analysis' done for free at places like Sweatshop (at the Virgin Active Gym near the railway station in town) and at least understand what sort of shoes you need to buy, with no obligation to buy any!
 
7. Get some running socks! As we up our distance, you might find that you're getting more blisters and rubbing on your feet. Look for specialist running socks - they're not that expensive, but what you're after is the twin skin sort which will help to prevent blisters and give you happier tootsies!

Have a fabulous run week.

 
Zoe

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