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RideCamp@endurance.net
Re: 4 oz GL
In a message dated 2/8/00 2:43:28 PM Pacific Standard Time,
sbrown@wamedes.com writes:
<< Brief bouts...what kind of time frames are you talking about? >
Depends on the intensity. 30 second to one minute bursts if you're talking
about heartrates in excess of 180--190. Multiples of these with full recovery
rest periods between--hills are the best approach here. Down in the 150 HR
area, you can go for long stretches--maybe an hour at a time with a fit
horse. In the 130s, hours and hours. In the 120s, all day. With a fit
horse--kids don't try this at home! Everything has to be introduced gradually
and zeroed in on the individual's current capabilities. If you always finish
with horse left, then you always have room to do more next time. Watch the
body weight--it will tell you a lot about how close you're getting to the
edge of trouble. Bloodwork will come in handy, if you can afford it.
>I'm assuming
that the bouts would start small and increase with time and condition...>
Actually, it's safer to start with longer slower works and sneak down to
shorter, faster works.
>at
what point would you not consider extending the length of time?>
If you have one "intense" day and one long day per week, the length of your
long day should determine the volume of your intense day. Essentially, you do
what the horse is happy to do, and keep trying to move forward, very
gradually.
> Also, I'm
assuming here that the pulse rate at which you hit the anaerobic threshold
increases with conditioning.>
Well, kind of. What you find it that it's hearder and hearder to make that
pulse rate approach the levels of anaerobic threshold. But, yes, there will
come a time when a 190 will not represent high lactate production.
>..at what point would you not consider
additional increase?>
Each week--a little.
> Would you use recovery time immediately afterward as
your indicator?>
That certainly is a good way to stay out of trouble--but better information
might come from body weight rebound, muscle enzyme activity, attitude, eating
habits, bowel consistency--all the things you're already looking at, but now,
charted as a recovery curve.
> Is this significantly different than the fartlek style of
conditioning?>
From intensity to LSD, the exercise types are: Sprints (maximal speed, long
recoveries), repetitions (longer distances, slower speeds, extended
recoveries), intervals (strong "pace" speeds, partial recoveries), fartlek
(extended on and off works with semi-recoveries between bursts of
speed--horse stays on gait throughout), LSD (long continuous distance, no
recovery periods). All of these can be mixed together in a conditioning plan,
depending on what your perception is of the horse's needs. On the LSD side of
the seesaw you get endurnace but not much power or stamina. At the other end,
you're heading toward firepower. In the middle is where all the good
cardiovascular things happen.
Sue >>
Tom
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