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šŸ“£ Our community has moved!

After several years of incredible discussions, we've moved our community to a new home on Reddit where we can better serve our growing family of mountain and endurance athletes.

Join us at our new subreddit forum /r/evokeendurance for:

  • Training advice from our coaching team
  • Peer support and motivation
  • Gear discussions and recommendations
  • Trip reports and inspiration

This forum will remain archived so you can still access all the valuable content and conversations from over the years. However, all new discussions and coaching support now happen on Reddit.

Join us on Reddit
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
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  • #133245
    croe
    Participant

    Scott….just listened to your aging (aged) athlete Evokecast…..Thanks! from me who is one year younger and one less knee replacement than you and still ski touring passion….you mentioned still doing intervals as an old guy, though the idea that they are still icing on the cake of endurance training…..my question is anything “different” to recommend for intervals for an older (70ish) but not much injured guy….ie length of time (of active vs rest in between etc), intensity, multiples compared to your recommendations for typical/younger endurance training intervals?? formulas to Do or Not Do?? Thanks, Chet Roe

    #133247
    Avatar photoScott Johnston
    Keymaster

    Chet:

    Most of the same guidelines apply for older adults as younger ones. Ā Don’t do so much volume at high intensity or such high intensity that you are forced to decrease your aerobic base training by more than 5-10%. Ā  Ā Rest as long as you need so that you can complete the desired training. Ā If you are doing these in Z3 the rest time even after a 10min effort should be not more than a couple of minutes. Ā If you need longer you probably went too hard. If up into Z4 then roughly equal rest to work. Ā  Active rest will always be better than stopping completely. Ā There are no formulas for this. If you don’t see in improvement in performance week on week of this sort of training, you might be doing too much or going too hard in these sessions or going too hard in your easy days.

    Scott

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • The forum ‘Training Theory/Methodology’ is closed to new topics and replies.