Keeping ego in check, this spoke to me.
Thanks to strava that’s harder and harder to do.
Keeping ego in check, this spoke to me.
Thanks to strava that’s harder and harder to do.
moanswers wrote:
You need to know your max HR and use the chest strap in order to really use HR correctly. Garmin is setting your zones based on age
Garmin does that initially but it changes your zones when you reach your max heartrate. When I got my watch I didn't run flat out for a few months and it had my zones slightly lower than they are now - after I have ran a 5k race and max HR of 196 during the race. Before it was probably estimating my max HR as 188 (based on my 220 minus my age).
There's a big advocate of MAF on Youtube called Floris Gierman so if low HR training is something you want to pursue he has lots of interviews on there of people who tried it. It appears to be several months to pay off. From my experience most running things where you're actually trying for a physiological change need a minimum of 6 weeks to show but you can improve in technique and resilience before that.
Once you've found your AeT, your zone 2 will be a thin range up to that AeT. The closer you are to AeT without crossing it, the more productive your aerobic training will be.