This is what I wrote in my BT training log today…

Very sore and tired after yesterday’s trainer ride. My Level 6 HIM plan says “Choose this plan if you are willing to work very hard to achieve a great half-Ironman performance.” Am I cut out for this?

Then one of my cycling buddies reminded me that I moved my rest day around, and maybe that wasn’t such a good idea. That was exactly right!

Training Calendaryellow.PNGYellow Square Days are Rest Days

I usually do my long bike on Saturday; my long run on Sunday; and have a rest day on Monday. This is how my plan is set up. When I messed with that formula, it left me tanked! Here are the details…

  • My cycling buddies were riding on Sunday instead of Saturday. I like to run the day after riding in order to train my body to run on tired legs. So, I moved my rest day to Saturday, biked on Sunday, and ran on Monday.
  • Sunday’s workout was a killer 50 miles on rolling hills at 19.9 mph. Even though I was drafting the whole time, it was hard work keeping that pace. My plan called for a brick, so I ran 4 miles after getting off the bike. I was completely exhausted the rest of the day.
  • Monday my legs were dead, and I was still so tired, but I ran 8 miles. I am HTFU girl, right?
  • Tuesday I was still feeling tired, but forced myself to do a bike workout on the trainer. It consisted of 6 x 3:00 at VO2max on 3:00 rest. I also added 20 minutes of climbing simulation. Total trainer time 1:15.
  • Wednesday morning I was completely wiped out, and feeling like maybe I can’t do this Level 6 plan. Which led me to write about that in my BT blog…

Lesson Learned: Don’t move your rest day around! It belongs after your hard long weekend workouts!