From Monte Gordo, Portugal

We arrived Portugal yesterday, after an early flight we had plenty of time for a training session yesterday evening in the beautiful weather and 21 C. A bit longer than planned but when you have training conditions like this it is inspirational to…

just keep on going ๐Ÿ™‚

100 meters outside of the hotel we are staying, there is a forest reserve on both sides of the road providing perfect soft surfaces all through. A mix of cinder and hard packed mud makes it very soft on the legs. It sort of reminds me of Italy last year where we had similar great running conditions. There, I managed to put in probably one of the most consistant training camps in the last few years due to the surface and good training temperature. Hopefully this will be the case this year also.

A huge group of Scandinavian runners will be down here. Just in our hotel we will be over 150 (!) Then there are other hotels with Norwegians around here plus groups from other nations. So it should be close to 250 runners in total. Quite different than Kenya, when I sometimes was the only white man within miles. But is is nice with some change sometimes. Plus, as in South Afria, the living conditions here are excellent. Adds to the total atmosphere..

We will be doing the first quality session down here today. About 15-20 of our group have arrived already, but about ten more will come Monday.

From Monte Gordo, Portugal!

Marius
Photolink should be activated later today

Two days until Portugal!

Not a long time now before leaving the Norwegian winter again ๐Ÿ™‚ This time away from lots of new snow that came yesterday, so ideal timing for travel.

Just hanging in there trainingwise the last few days before going into a very,very hard…

period of training. Plenty of chance for a good training lift when you are in such great training environment.

Soft surfaces, sun, good mileage, rest and 20-25 degrees..

Marius

Getting ready for some warmer weather again:)

Only five days until leaving for Portugal and the training camp there. I will once again travel with the club Vidar, that Henrik runs for and I do some of the trainings together with. We were quite a large group last year in Italy and this year a…

total of around 30 will travel down there – a mix of different distances. I am looking forward to travelling down there, we have had loads of snow up by Sogsvann recently so time for some warm weather and soft surfaces again.

The combination of that is great about Portugal as the Eastern break is early this year. There you will still have 20-25 degrees C while at the same time nice soft running surfaces. That combination is something different than hammering around on the asphalt. It gives you both the training lift needed in itself while at the same time restitution on legs having done miles after miles on hard winter surfaces.

So just keeping the pressure up now until then ๐Ÿ™‚

Marius

Videoanalyzes and testing

After yesterdays test, we will go through some video analyzes the next few days. Leif Olav taped the different testing phases, like many times before and will use the information to evaluate my running pattern this time a year compared to the…

training I have done and prior tests. Plenty of information there, especially if you add to that the lactate taken during the run, the speed run at and the heart rate. At least in Norway this time a year that is as standarized and complete as we can get it. In addition to that, we got a muscular evaluation from Jonny Hรธgseth later that day, probably the physio in Norway who has done the most evaluations on the muscle condtition of top athletes in Norway during the last 20 years. A long but satisfying day.

Hopefully I will get the videoevaluation from Leif later this week. He has incredible analytical skills from many years as a successful sprint coach and this ability is very helpful in the investigation of the running pattern seperate from the other tests. It takes extreme analyzes to coach a (white) runner to 10.08 in the 100 meter so important to take adventage of this..

Very easy running today after yesterday. Climbing up to Holmenkollen this morning, just jogging down again at a comfortable pace ๐Ÿ™‚

All well!

Marius

Easy finetuning

With days like today, running makes sense even in Norway. Easy run going downwards in Oslo earlier today, where you have no snow at all right now – in sunshine and a fresh breeze of winter/spring. Just strolling along. I do not run very long on my…

long runs so I had to leave the rest of the group about halfways, but got a nice progressive climb up to Sogsvann again instead. Getting a good stride up there, to right on the top where I live. Have to be abit careful though, I know I should rest alot post altitude, so gotta be disciplined ๐Ÿ˜‰

The rest of the group up in Dullstrom (of Norwegians, Karl Johan and Bjรธrnar) left today, heading back to western-Norway. It seemed like they had a successful stay down there, as they were building shape week after week. Both with very good training intelligence that will be extremely helpful as they put their system back finetuned again while doing the season buildup. Going injured for a period, altitude training brings you right up there in much shorter time than at sea level providing that you do not go too hard too early after starting up again, so a smart move especially this time a year when you can have snow and ice in Norway.

Heading into a week of steady increase of workload, with the first test on Wednesday. On the treadmill of course. Not only for the standarization of the test, but also to get a sharp toe off in the running stride after spending time at altitude (where I did lots of mileage, at good intensity) I believe that this is one of the keys to the Africans, their ability to get an extremely short time on the group, almost bouncing forward. Alot of that has to do with the way they are built (look at their calf muscles) but also with years on walking barefoot, running barefoot as children. And ; when they get older they have this extreme strength in their legs. For those that disagree, see the link below – some mzungos take it to the extreme ๐Ÿ™‚

Well, time for some rest now!

Marius

Home sweet home

We had the coldest day so far this year in Norway (almost -20 C this morning in Oslo), while at the same time the hottest day in Dullstrom (30 degrees C) yesterday. So quite a shock as I got off the plane in Norway wearing sandals ๐Ÿ™‚

But as…

long as the roads are ok to run on I really do not mind that much. I will go into a period of easy training now and so the speed on the long runs should not limit the progress.

Spoke to Stรฅle Jan today after arrival home and we discussed the dates for the testing regime after arrival home. Since he lives in Tรธnsberg, about 1 hr 20 minutes from Oslo we have to book those tests a bit in advance. But hopefully next week and at least the week after that we will do the standarized testing with the team. Very important but also very inspirational to push the progress, you cannot hide during those tests.

Maybe some track strides the coming week to freshen up the legs abit after the altitude stay. A while ago since last time and not much track work in Dullstrom, as the track there got stolen a few years ago (only in Africa! The grass track actually got stolen piece by piece by the locals a few years ago as the grass made good building parts for their houses) But if I really wanted to I could have gone to Belfast, only 15 minutes drive for the nice grass track down there. Back here though, plenty of options, either in the Ekeberg indoor hall, the Top athletics center or at the College of Sports nearby. We will see, taking it day by day..

From Oslo!

Marius

Enjoying the last few days here

Tomorrow will be the last full training day up here in Dullstrom, before returning to Norway for some useful rest after a period of very hard training.

I have done my best to get as many as possible high end quality sessions in here recently…

to ensure highest possible stress on the system before going home. Seems like it is working, it took me almost an hour to get out of bed this morning ๐Ÿ™‚ That is how it should be at the end of these stays ; in control but ready for rest in the post-altitude period. Ask Henrik about those days in Kenya, when at the most extreme we could barely walk out of the door those last training days just waiting to rest on the plane and get home. Not from the very hard intensity (anaerobic work) but because of the total work load in a relative short period of time.

We still have great weather here 25-27 degrees C mid-day – cool in the morning, something that is nice but also important in terms of getting training done. Because the thunderstorms can be very dangerous up here. We had one a few days ago (in the evening only); you get the loud sirens going though the hills, warning people about going outside. Then, usually about half an hour later you can see thunder and lightening all over. Like the information paper we receive on arrival here says : “Please do not run outside during the thunderstorms. This is not a joke – it is not uncommon with deaths from lightening here”. Something a Norwegian orienteering athlete got en experience with a couple of weeks ago. Ignoring the sirens, just going for “a few more reps”, the thunderstorm came upon him suddenly and as he counted it coming closer, down from 4-3-2-1 seconds before lightening was all around him in the forest. So he dove down flat only to see lightening hit 20 meters in front of him. Better be careful ๐Ÿ™‚

Nice weekend up here now – it is a typical weekend, holiday place so the streets are more crowded than usual with people arriving from the cities around. I can understand them, getting away from the hot, humid city areas up to cooler higher altitude with the fresh mountain air it can provide.

Well, time for another run ๐Ÿ™‚

Marius

On rest and training, more pics from here

Just home from the first run of the day now, up in the hilly areas just right 5 minutes jog above where we live. There, you have the most beautiful scenario stretching miles and miles of running paths. Makes the minutes go by quickly ๐Ÿ™‚ Very quiet…

and peaceful. I did parts of the run with Karl Johan only as Bjรถrnar and got out a bit later. Easy and comfortable, just for recovery.

Had an interesting talk with race-walker Trond Nymark yesterday. I have respect for the kind of work the world class 50km walkers are doing, both in terms of total volume (250+ km weeks..) and intensity (long, 20-30 km threshold trainings). It gives you perspective of what is needed in general to reach top level. One things that re-occur time after time when you speak to top endurance athletes like him, regardless of sport ; the ability to to a very, very high training load over time – while at the same time having incredible focus on resititution. It is not a matter of how much you wish to be training, it is only a matter of how many hours you have a day and how much training you optimize within that time frame. This double focus – realizing that training is merely a matter of breaking down (training) and building up (resting) is so simple in theory but very hard to to practically. It is a double edge sword. Do one too much of one of them and you will not achieve the results you wish. While at the same time small adjustments in one of the two can trigger massive improvement in the other. So interestingly, speaking to others at elite level – you spend more time discussion restitution than one would think, as oppose to pure training talk.

Speaking of rest between trainings, right before I left Norway I incidentally bumped into Eirik Hansen, a Norwegian runner who has in the 13.30s 5k and 7.40s 3k in the 1980s. I have met almost all of the 13.20-40 Norwegian runners but with him I have only seen his name in the record books. There again, you get the balance ; how he managed to balance the rest and the training ; while doing “160-180 km weekly, all easy runs at 3.20-30/km plus hard intervalls” – and how his running career really ended once he could not keep up that balance anymore because of other commitments. Good to have these things in mind when you spend the days resting through long morning at the training camps ๐Ÿ˜‰

Another long run this evening. Maybe a bit progressive, depending of how my legs are feeling.

I have linked to some more pictures from here (link should be activated later today). The first pics, up the the “Dullstrom sign” is from Potch the rest from here.

All well from here,
Marius

In Potchefstroom!

I have just arrived Potchefstroom and started training here now.
Got right into it the day of arrival with some long intervalls. Even though we have slight altitude here plus the long travel it is smart to get the system fined tuned very early…

in the stay. With some testing done through the session the internal stress will therefore be the same as later in the stay (though the speed is slower) so quite controlled to ensure proper recovery after the travel..

We live only about 5 minutes jog from the grass fields and running paths in the area. Quite good location (something others have found out also, we live only 200 meters from Kelly Holmes house up here ๐Ÿ™‚ ), you get a warm up down there before going hard either on the roads or the grass.

I had to spend the first run of the day looking for cinder roads to run on, as the rest of the Norwegian group here consists of throwers and sprinters. But having spent lots of time in Afria I had an idea on where to look : you always find nice, non-asphalt roads going parallell to the railroad tracks in Africa so I just look (and listen ๐Ÿ™‚ ) for the railroad tracks and right there of course miles after miles with soft nice running surfaces.. a good change for tired legs having logged lots of asphalt miles back in Norway in between training stays now.

We are a group of six athlets from Norway here, the Olympic javelin champ Thorkildsen plus another 84 meters javelin thrower, a good discus thrower (65+ meters) plus two sprinters 20.40s 200/ 50,400 hurdles). So the whole “elite” team of the Norwegian federation (four athletes) are here. Plus some coaches of course to follow it all.

Then there are plenty of international top athletes here, especially middle distance runners and throwers. It has to be the perfect place for middle distance running : moderate altitude, nice temperature (25+), a mix of grass field tracks, regular tracks, cinder roads and huge grass fields. No wonder this has been a base of so many top runners the last years (Holmes, Mutola, Sepeng, Bucher etc.etc).. quite inspirational to be in such place, just like St Moritz is in the summer. You see others in your situation, working towards the summer with the goals and ambitions. A good way to break up the training winter.

The link below will be activated a bit later in the day. Just a few pictures from the first day here. We had an evening shower in the evening, other than that excellent training/resting temperature and sun..

From S-Africa –

Marius

Packing and getting ready :)

I am just getting ready for Fridays trip to South Africa now. A small jog this afternoon and two tomorrow, then off I go ๐Ÿ™‚ Will be perfect to travel now, to the other Norwegians training there. First to Potchefstroom where you have some of the best…

Norwegians in other events, then up to Dullstrom where some of the other Nordic middle/long distance runners have their camp for the winter.

Next update from there..

Marius