Some rain and mud – but no problem :)

When I walked back from the Supermarket yesterday, just suddenly (and very unexpected) the rain started to absolutely pour down….and for some reason (probably because they knew something I did not…) all the Kenyans around me had umbrellas with…

them. So for the next 5 minutes, I found myself running through the mud, extremely wet and to the laugh of all the Kenyans with their umbrellas. Guess the rainseason came back and the mzungo did not expect it πŸ™‚

But in the morning today, most of it had dried up, and it was no problem to run. It was actually better, because the roads were nice and soft. They say it will rain again this evening again, so I will soon head for the Supermarket and train before it starts again. My concept of rain and being wet for some reason changed yesterday….

I am training well. Sessions are abit faster and shorter, but I keep my general training principles never too far away. I think the timing is perfect for an altitude stay now. When I get back to Norway again, I can finally run in the forest reserves there on the soft cinder. Excellent for resitutition.

All well – Marius

Briefly in Eldoret

I went down to Eldoret today to get some things done. The rural areas around here are…….simply rural…if you want to have anything done or want to buy something, the only place really to do so is Eldoret. So I will stay here today and tomorrow….

Tomorrow, they show the London Marathon here – with Paul Tergat making a debute at the distance, so I want to watch that.

Then I also need some muscle treatment to soften up hard worked running muscles. I have a Kenyan in Eldoret I use for that, who helps the Kenyan runners avoid injuries. He is actually quite good, throught many hours of doing it (no schooling).

I am well into training now, after a week down here. My breathing is just as at sea level, the only real difference is that the pace I can train at is just slightly slower. But is is getting so close to regular sea level speed that it really is marginal. That is what happens with a string of stays in altitude – you adapt almost fully to it.

Time to go downtown to get some food. Being one of very few whites here, it used to feel sort of strange to walk around downtown here – it is a very crowded, noicy place (only one main street in Eldoret, even though it lives 800 000 people here). But now it is fine – you get used to being a mzungo πŸ™‚

Marius

Moving up to the mountains – webpage updated for 2001 season

Tomorrow I will leave for higher altitude. The rest of the team will leave for Norway, and I will move up there with Michael Dyke, a Norwegian/American athlete. I will also stay in close touch with the Kenyan Philemon Boit, who is employed full time…

by Frank, to give me muscle treatment and fix things in general. So it will be absolutely no problem at all.

On Monday we went to the Clique here in Eldoret, to watch the Boston Marathon. They have a big TV screen there (the only one in Eldoret), and showed the race. The Kenyans watching were certain a Kenyan would win the mens race……but when the South Korean winner and the Ecuadorian Guerra pulled away the whole place got dead silent. Until a Kenyan athlete burst out in shock : “What ?? Not a Kenyan winning ? It is not possible….and not even an Ethiopian beating them ? Where did these mzungos come from ? The Kenyans must be very, very injured today….” :))

The mb.com webpage has been updated for the 2001 season. Check out the new competition schedules/world statistics for 2001 etc.etc. And also there are links to future championships below “sportserver” and “news links” at the top of the page.

Gotta go run now. Running conditions are beautiful. For some reason, the rain season stopped, and is is perfect to run. Hope it will last for another 2 weeks πŸ™‚

Marius

Well into training in Kenya

I am done with the two first training days here in Eldoret. I can of course feel the altitude, but because of all my previous stays I am running comfortable from day one now. No problem at all – even the sleeping pattern (usually you sleep lighter…

at altitude) is like at sea level.

I feared the rainy season a bit before coming here – it started in late March. But it turned out to be just fine – it rains during the night only, and the air is nice and fresh on the morning run, plus the surface is perfectly soft.

The rest of the group were here when I came down, and the same relaxing feeling I usually have down here, was there immediately. Things do so slow in the daily life here, and you just kind of follow along….nothing like back home…

I am spacing some of the hard sessions a bit more now, as the quality of the sessions is higher the closer I get to racing. I have to be careful, so that the adaption to (more) faster work goes easily. But I think the perfect place to do this adaption is down here – on red hard packed mud roads, in 30 degrees C and lots of rest between the training…..

So everything well with me in Eldoret,

Marius

Leaving for Kenya tomorrow !

I am packed and ready for Kenya now. I am looking forward to it, as always, but I have to admit that I would also have liked to stay a bit longer in Norway now……the spring has come and it is great for running right now….

But it is still…

not as warm as in Kenya, and not as high (Sandefjord is right by the sea at 7 meters altitude πŸ™‚ ) Plus no runners to train with. So I guess going down there is just a thing to do. And I will only stay for 2 weeks now. Then I will continue the altitude stay somewhere in Europe. Is it more convenient, as the season gets closer. Then I need some track work, and in Kenya the only tracks are in Nairobi.

I will bring with me some work, so that this web page is ready and fixed for a new season. By the visiting numbers, I can see that the season is getting closer. We have a monthly growth of around 20 %, which is nice. So far this year, we have had around 1 million hits, but we are getting close to half a million every month now.

Frank Evertsen left for Kenya yesterday. He wanted to check with Susanne and Henrik (he is the coach of both) that everything is ok. It should be – in their second year with altitude training, and a good system of testing, they are hitting the right intensity on almost all intervalls in a session.

Time for me to go. Have to remember everything for tomorrow πŸ™‚

Marius

Back on top – and dates for Kenya trip III set

A weekend of easy running, and I am right there again like usual. I felt nice and light on todays hard training session – just striding out and floating. It is this feeling you need, if you want the most out of every training. It is ok to feel tired…

in a workout or two, but it has to be the right kind of tiredness (from hard but “right” training)- not simply running on a flat battery because you feel like you “need” to.

I am back in Sandefjord, my “hometown”, for Eastern break. So I am running the same paths and routes like I have been doing since I was a little kid. Quite nice……and fun to run them faster every year πŸ™‚ I just wonder how many miles and hours I have spent in the forest area here….it is quite small, but has nice variety, and I have my regular 8/12/16 km routes to go on.

I have also planned Kenya trip III…..I will leave on this coming Friday, and down to Eldoret once again. The first week I will have Norwegians around me (Frank, Susanne, Henrik, Anita and Frank/Anitas children) …..but the second week I will be all by myself….but it will be fine, I have so many good Kenyan friends down there. It will just give me some real time to plan training, write articles and relax. Then I will be back in Norway in time to prepare for the season. I just feel like I finished the 2000 season, and the 2001 is soon coming up ! Guess it is because the Olympics were so late.

All well with me.

Marius

The training of WR holder El Guerrouj/Moroccan training out on the web

The “training corner” has once again been expanded. Now it also contains a long article on the training of Hicham El Guerrouj and the Maroccan team. It is quite in depth and interesting. It is a combination of an article written by Marco VeledΓ­az…

with comments made by myself. Hopefully it will give you even more insight into the training of world class athletes. That is the intension of the training corner, anyways.

All is still well. I am enjoying fast times in practice, and at the same time looking forward to going back to Kenya again. It has been raining alot lately, and I can just feel my thoughts bringing me back to sunny, quiet Kenya πŸ™‚ But only a bit over a week now, and I will be down there.

All well, Marius

I love day 15-19 after altitude !!

I am now into my “magic period” after altitude stays. It never goes wrong…..I feel crappy from day 1 to 6 after altitude ok from day 7 to day 14 after I arrive, and then BOOM, at day 15 building up to a peak at day 17 (tomorrow πŸ™‚ ) my heart rate…

drops by almost 10 seconds at the same intensity (in just a little over 24 hours) and my lactic acid curve becomes almost “flat”. It is kind of fascinating how my body responds that way – all the processes in my body working the same way time after time. That also reminds me of how important periodization between hard work and easy work in the training is – your body is like a sophisticated computer. If you know how to work with it, it will give you great benefits and results back….if not, you only get errors and are stuck at the same place.

Before I have been in bed with the flu after altitude for 5 days….or training hard almost every day until day 15…..still it is the same – it just hits in and you feel nothing but great. Your muscles, your breathing, your lactate acid, your will to push. It sort of all comes together. I have talked to many other elite athletes, and they all say the same – they have their “special days”. Studies show that most athletes (about 80 % according to Popov) perform their best from day 15 to 21 after altitude. Pretty interesting.

I will leave for Kenya again in either about a week, or in about two weeks. Depends on what feedback I get from my body. I have the freedom to do so, and Frank Evertsen is sort of “stand by” to go whenever I feel ready πŸ™‚

From Oslo,

Marius

FINALLY ! Pictures from Kenya out on the web.

We have now added a new section on the left side menue called “pictures”. Here I will post pictures from places I go and training sessions I do. Right now Kenya pictures from my last stay are out. This first time, some of the pictures are a bit…

blurry, because it was the first time I used the camera, and I had to do some testing. It is a “quickcam” with medium resolution – but I wanted it that way, so that I can send pictures through email over mobile phones later. With higher resolution it would be too heavy for the network. I will also start posting short 10 second video clips, when I have figured out how to πŸ™‚ Plus the news I post will contain photoes at a regular basis.

I was hoping to send pictures home from Kenya on my last stay, but my CD rom crashed, so I could not install the software until now. But from now on, I will send pictures from my Kenya trips and races over email to one of the editors of this page, so that you can follow things not only by text, but also visual. I hope you will like it.

Training well – and feeling good πŸ™‚

Marius

A string of good tests after altitude

The testing after altitude is well under way, and I am very satisfied with the results. This year I am much more consistant – and able to copy great tests time after time. It has to do with more training, more experience and an even better feeling…

for the hard altitude training.

It is now only 2 months after my first competition of the year, which will probably be in FlorΓΈ, late May and a 2000 meter race. I cannot wait to race again !!! Just the feeling of entering the stadium of a competition, and your body fully alert and concentrated. It is a feeling of anxiety and human strength at the same time. I feel the winter has moved by in no time……

It is also under 3 weeks until I am in Kenya again. Back to the perfect running conditions, friendly people and the total mental rest from all stress. There is nothing like it – and loads a tired running body with energy. After trying it last winter, I cannot picture another one without it.

Tomorrow is another of my treadmill tests. With Frank Evertsen, of course, doing the lactate testing. He is just a big smile these days, with all the great results he gets from the testing. It is good for me also, to see that a person that works so hard for you day after day, is satisfied with what you do πŸ™‚

All well from me,

Marius