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RideCamp@endurance.net
Re: RC: Heart Rates
I'm not off the mark then.
My boys are Morgans, which have a tendency to run higher HRs than Arabs. My 11
yo can sure get up there, but then, he comes down very
quickly.
Sometimes, I will keep him
at about 160-165 all the way up the hill to the 3.5 mile mark, then increase the
speed & HR to the top, another 0.6 miles. Fir Top is at 1,324'. The last 0.6
miles is steeper than the first 3.5.
Jeanne
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2001 9:00 AM
Subject: Re: RC: Heart Rates
I play it by ear - starting off with short stretches and using
recovery as a
guide. My rule of thumb is after I come to a walk I'd like to
see the heart rate
drop to about 90 in 3 or 4 minutes. When she could do
that I extended the
distance of the uphill gallops. When the recoveries
were there at that distance,
I exended the distance.
I found three
things by doing this:
a) it was very hard to get the heart rate much above
180 after about 2 months of
this,
b) her ability to dissipate heat was
really improved,
c) her recoveries improved.
T
Jeanne
Slominski wrote:
> From: "Truman Prevatt, PhD" <tprevatt@mindspring.com>
>
Cc: <ridecamp@endurance.net>
>
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2001 8:32 AM
>
> > I started to train
once a week in the FL sand hills - hills
> > with deep sand footing.
Galloping up the hills in deep sand - pushing the
> > heart rate up
heart rate (180 to 200 bpm) for sretches of a mile or so
> > really
seemed to have a positive impact on her ability to cool.
> >
>
> Truman
>
> Any thoughts as to how long one should stay at
these higher HR levels for
> optimum conditioning? Should it be a
distance measure as opposed to a time
> measure?
>
> I
condition in deep sand as well as on some long hills. Hills are 1.5 to
4.1
> miles long.
>
> Jeanne
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