Oklahoma Nesties
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

*wendy, kayleeb, other runners*

Please tell me what you think about race-walking. Do you ever do this along with running? Are there a lot of people in races that walk rather than run?

Long story short - I'm still having some pretty bad back problems despite stretches and core work, and am going to see a doctor. I suspect he's going to tell me that high-impact exercise on hard concrete surfaces are not a good idea because of my blasted fusion. I suspect I'm soon going to be relegated to running on rubbery track surfaces only. So, I've decided that in the meantime I'm going to try and speed walk outside. I've done a little bit of research and it looks like a fast clip is about 11 miles per minute, which is actually 30 seconds faster than when I run right now. *blush* Anyway though, do any of you ever do this?    

Re: *wendy, kayleeb, other runners*

  • I am assuming you mean 11 minutes per mile not miles per minute Smile.

    I don't ever do any power walking, and I'm certain that I would not be able to do an 11 minute mile walking, ever! (says the person whose 5k PR is currently a 10:20 pace as of this morning)  I have done an intentional run/walk combo sometimes, but not a complete walk.  

    My biggest piece of advice is to not overestimate how much you can walk at once (particularly at that speed).  You will HURT if you go out and immediately speed-walk the same distance you're up to for running since you use different muscles. 

  • HA! Um, oops. 11 minutes per mile, I meant. 11 miles per minute, sign me up for the Olympics! I always mess that up and say it backwards if I'm not careful. :)

    That's good advice, thanks! I'm really kinda bummed about this running thing. I'm thinking I'm either going to have to join a gym or find some public outdoor track that everyone can use, if such a thing exists, if I want to keep it up.  

     

  • That really stinks.  Running actually helps my lower back pain, a lot.  I can tell if I haven't been running regularly enough because my back kills me.
  • In just about every half I've done I've seen people do this. I've been mixing running and walking while I rehab my foot.
    Baby Birthday Ticker TickerBaby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • We have a training program at the Y for longer races like half marathon and full marathons. I know that quite a few of the participants (as well as one of the leaders) run/walk the races. Would that be an option? I believe they jog for two minutes and then walk for one minute and repeat the process through the entire race. Maybe that would help? 
    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imagepinksprkl:
    We have a training program at the Y for longer races like half marathon and full marathons. I know that quite a few of the participants (as well as one of the leaders) run/walk the races. Would that be an option? I believe they jog for two minutes and then walk for one minute and repeat the process through the entire race. Maybe that would help? 

    I like this idea, a lot. I was kind of playing with an idea like that last night, as my stupid back woke me up for its nightly b*tching, and this may well be the way to go for me. I'm also encouraged by how many people walk in these things - it makes me feel like less of a pansy this way. ;) 

  • That sucks! I don't know much about speedwalking, but I've seen speedwalkers at races I've done. I do, however, run/walk. For races, I usually run for a mile and walk for 30 sec-1 min. And I always see other people taking walk breaks at races. 

    If you're able to run on softer surfaces, what do you think about trail running? I've only done it once, but the surface is a lot softer than concrete. I think Wendy has done some trail running. And they have trail races (although not as many as road races.)

    Also, I've gone to the Norman North track multiple times and it was always open to the public. You might try going there if you're able to run on a track or maybe try a public school close to you. 


    Kaylee & Cole 06.14.08

    8/6/11 First 5k! OG&E Expo Run 34:47
    9/3/11 Brookhaven Run 5k 34:18
    9/17/11 Healthy Sooners Fun Run 5k 33:38
    10/15/11 Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure 33:31
    10/29/11 Monster Dash 5k 32:06 PR!
    11/11/11 Veteran's Day Run 11k in Dallas 1:13:15 Instant PR!
    1/28/12 Texas Half Marathon 2:38:03 Instant PR!
    3/25/12 Earlywine Dash
  • I have done trail races. I like it, but it's not necessarily easier. For another soft running suggestion, you might consider the horse trails at Stanley draper.  Expect your shoes to get dirty though. 

    I definitely take walk breaks during long races. 

Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards