Trail Running: From Start to Finish
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About this ebook
The popularity of running has never been greater and with thousands of everyday people taking in conventional 5k, 10k, half-marathon and marathon road running events, there seems to be a natural desire to seek other arguably more challenging forms of running.
Including:
- Information about the importance of specialist running gear required
- Specialist exercises to strengthen stabilising muscles, e.g. glutes, core, to counteract the uneven running surface and prevent injury
- Nutritional requirements, particularly for long distance trail runs and the importance of the correct fluid and food to carry with you
- Common injuries contracted during trail running and how to prevent/treat them
- List of popular trail running events - both national and International
- Examples of training sessions and how certain sessions can help improve the highly specific fitness requirements of off road running
Graeme Hilditch
Graeme Hilditch has been a personal trainer for over 12 years. He has written over 30 race-training guides for leading UK charities and is the author of the bestselling Marathon and Half Marathon, published by Crowood.
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Reviews for Trail Running
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Book preview
Trail Running - Graeme Hilditch
CONTENTS<<
INTRODUCTION
1.TRAIL AND ERROR
A new world
Making the transition
2.KITTING UP FOR THE TRAILS
Quality kit – wise or worthless?
Safety first, looks later
3.STABILITY AND AGILITY: GAIN AN EDGE
Mind vs. body
Trail conditioning
Hip and pelvic stabilisers
Proprioception – the ultimate stabiliser
4.PHYSIOLOGICAL DEMANDS OF TRAIL RUNNING
The human machine
5.RUN WITH THE HEART
Monitoring cardiovascular adaption
Monitoring your training zone
Heart rate and ill health
Environmental influences on heart rate
Let your head rule your heart
6.STRETCHING FOR THE TRAILS
Mobility before stretching
Look after your muscles
The stretches
7.TRAINING FOR THE TRAILS
Training for you
Base training
Building an anaerobic base
Hill training
Intervals and fartlek sessions
8.TRAIL FINDING: LOCATING AND STAYING ON THE TRAILS
Finding the best trails
Map reading
Compass reading
Apps
9.THE ELEMENTS: EXTREME TRAIL-RUNNING CONDITIONS
Trailing in the heat
Trailing in the cold
Trailing at altitude
10.TRAIL-RUNNING NUTRITION
Personalising your nutrition
Carbohydrates – trail fuel
Protein – rebuilding your body
Fats – are they really all that bad?
11.DRINKING FOR THE TRAILS
Overwatered?
Dehydration and performance
Sports drink vs. water
Hypernatremia
12.COMMON TRAIL INJURIES: DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT
Soft tissue injuries
Skin injuries
13.CHOOSING A TRAIL RACE
Your first race
Trail races with a twist
Top trail races around the world
Picture credits
INTRODUCTION <<
"Don’t fight the trail. Take what it gives you. Think easy, light, smooth and fast.
You start with easy, because if that’s all you get, that’s not so bad. Then work on light. Make it effortless, like you don’t [care] how high the hill is or how far you’ve got to go.
When you’ve practised that so long that you forget you’re practising, you work on making it smooooooth. You won’t have to worry about the last one – you get those three, and you’ll be fast."
Micah True, 1954–2012
The passing of any iconic sporting hero is always sad, but the sudden and unexpected death of one of the world’s most iconic trail runners was as much of a shock as it was a tragedy.
An outcast, an enigma and very much a legend of his sport, Micah True’s way of life intrigued thousands of runners and seduced many more to take up the sport of trail running and explore remote parts of countryside. Although he took trail running to the extreme, often running over 50 miles of Mexico’s most remote and unexplored trails without rest, Micah’s passion for the beauty and serenity of the land has inspired many road runners to turn to off-road running and get a taste of the trails, Micah’s lifeblood.
Sadly, it was Micah’s unfailing obsession with extreme trail running that is believed to have ultimately lead to his passing. Although the exact cause is still a mystery, it is believed that a cardiomyopathy, a disease that results in the left ventricle of the heart becoming enlarged, may well have contributed to his death.
Micah set off on a routine 12-mile run from Mexico to Arizona to visit his girlfriend, but never returned from the trail. After a major mountain rescue search his body was eventually discovered, his feet dangling in a stream. One of the people who found him stated there was no obvious sign of injury and that his lifeless body looked at peace, as though he had lain down for a nap and never woken up.
Although the trail-running community will grieve his loss for years to come, many will also be tempted to smile as they look back on his life, his legacy and one particular phrase he will now be remembered for: If I get hurt or die, it’s my own damn fault.
Although you’d be forgiven for thinking that this book is one long obituary to Micah True, this snapshot of his life serves to highlight the passion and freedom that trail running has to offer. The rawness and unparalleled freedom of running along a remote hillside or forest trail has the ability to lift your spirits more than any other running discipline, and it’s this legacy that Micah True would have wanted to pass on to the rest of the running world. Micah True took trail running to its extremes, but the past decade has seen the sport of trail running change – and change very much for the better. Just a decade ago, when the popularity of recreational running began to skyrocket, the term 'trail running' was more closely associated with the likes of Micah – a hardcore brethren of runners who indulged in ultra-long distance, high-altitude running adventures, often in adverse weather conditions. In recent years, however, trail running has evolved into a far more accessible and less extreme form than it was once perceived.
Naturally, trail running purists maintain you’re not a true trail runner until you’ve at least completed your first high altitude, rocky and rugged half marathon (at least) on a trail, but there is now a realisation among event organisers and health-conscious recreational runners that trail running needn’t be extreme – just exhilarating and liberating.
Consequently, trail running has opened its arms to a new market and captured the hearts of new and seasoned road runners, all seeking a fresh endorphin rush from the challenges that off-road running presents. As a spritely 18-year-old, I discovered trail running’s magic for myself and one particular experience will stay with me forever: a trail run in outback Australia as the sun is setting is beautiful in itself, but then I was joined by a dozen kangaroos hopping by my side as the landscape turned deep red, which became something special. I have learnt to really appreciate the memories this form of running can create.
Whatever type of runner you are – fast, slow, frequent or sporadic – you’ll never regret leaving the asphalt and turning to the trails. Although trail running is best enjoyed when you have reached a level of fitness where you think nothing of running for a couple of hours plus, the trails are there to be explored and enjoyed by runners of all abilities.
This book has been written in such a way that you can dip in and out of it as you wish and flip to whichever chapter you need for inspiration and advice. Naturally there are similarities to conventional road running, but you’d be amazed at how just a few specific training and injury prevention tips can enhance your enjoyment of running on remote trail routes.
Trail running is there for every runner to enjoy and irrespective of whether you are new to running or already a seasoned trail runner, I hope this book will inspire you to continue enjoying trail running in nature for many years to come.
01
TRAIL
AND ERROR
Taking your first intrepid steps into the world of trail running is an incredibly exciting time. Leaving the tarmac behind you, the trail paths and landscapes that off-road running can offer are as invigorating to the soul as running is itself. Take your time to embrace your surroundings and learn to appreciate what the trails have to offer.
Like any new sporting pursuit, it is learning from your mistakes, the many hours of practice and the time spent learning from others’ experiences that will ultimately help you master your new discipline.
Trail running can take you from the muddy trails of the English countryside to the arid and rocky trails of California and New Mexico. Every trail you tackle will offer a unique challenge and even now, as a personal trainer and with many years and hundreds of trail miles under my belt, I feel I am still learning from others – and from the mistakes I make. Accept that your transition from road to trail will be a long process. Learning from every run and every type of weather condition Mother Nature can throw at you will make you a better trail runner – so enjoy the learning experience.
A NEW WORLD
Making the transition from road running to running trails can be a bit of shock to the system, so it’s important that you accept it’ll take time to adapt physically. Harder still, you’ll need to learn to adopt a very different mentality to the challenges that trail running presents.
Trail running’s ethos, philosophy and community are very different to those of road running, differences that are essential for you to embrace if you are to get maximum enjoyment from running off road and make a smooth transition into the trail-running community.
MAKING THE TRANSITION
Whatever surface you have spent the bulk of your running years training or competing on, the physiological action of running fundamentally remains the same. Although certain muscles are recruited and fire up at different rates when we jog, run or sprint, running is one of the most primeval movements the human body performs.
LOVE THE ROAD, LOVE THE TRAILS
It’s worth pointing out, if it wasn’t already obvious, that road running and trail running are not mutually exclusive forms of exercise. There is no reason why you can’t combine your love of road running with experiments into the more rugged nature of trail running, but to do both successfully requires accepting that the two disciplines have their own identity – and part of the fun of venturing on to trails is discovering a whole new side to your sport!
However, that’s not to say that at a neuromuscular level it isn’t complex or in need of 'tweaking' when you take to the trails, particularly when it comes to extreme ascents and descents. Running uphill or downhill, particularly at pace, does indeed place very different physiological demands on your lungs and legs, a difference that you’ll need to master if you are to get the most out of the trails and your body.
KEEP IT SIMPLE
For such a seemingly basic human movement, and one which most of us have been able to do since the age of just two or younger, the actual (subconscious) physiology of running is incredibly complex, requiring a range of bodily systems to function simultaneously and in synergy to keep us moving, balanced and breathing.
The muscular, skeletal, cardiovascular, endocrine (hormonal) and nervous systems must all work together in harmony and complement each other, to ensure we can keep putting one foot in front of the other, mile after mile, hour after hour.
However, when it comes to running on uneven, muddy and undulating trails, the body has to make constant subtle adjustments in order to react to sudden changes in the texture of the road or to change direction to avoid a tree stump or low-lying branch.
ABOUT ME AND MY RUNNING
I love being outside and I come from a small city in France where the forest is 50 metres from the doorstep. Whenever I needed to clear my mind, or just because I wanted to, I went out there. Being in the countryside makes me happy.
I really got into running when I moved to England two years ago; I needed something to keep fit, a reason to go out, to keep my stress level down. First I was running on road but then I found a park. I noticed that I enjoyed my runs more and could go for longer when I was off road. I like the feeling of freedom it gives me. It’s a time just for me, when anything and everything makes me smile, from the little bird or squirrel to the nice colourful flowers in summer or the sound of the snow under my feet in winter. I just don’t want to stop trail running. All these things are better than chocolate or a piece of cake!
Karrimor Great Trail Challenge was my first trail half marathon. It was really hard, the hills felt like climbing Everest but the feeling of achievement that you get when you cross the finish line is one of the best feelings ever and just for this I would do it again and again! I’m happy with the previous races I’ve done on road, but nothing compares to trail running.
Although it is hard it is definitely worth it!
>> Laura Noailles – trail runner
Although a few trail-running forum posts and articles over the years have tried to convince readers that in order to survive in the rugged world of trail running, you have to make major adjustments to your running gait, I do not believe those starting out in trail running need to become obsessed with dramatically changing their running style. Sure, for anyone who has spent the majority of their running years on pavements, paths or around urban areas, running on trails will certainly give you a very different feeling underfoot and you may need to tweak running elements as you encounter rocks, tree roots and almost vertical inclines/declines. However, the fundamental action of running should remain smooth, balanced, relaxed and controlled – resist the temptation to overthink and make unnecessary changes to your running action.
Despite the simplicity of the running action, you will need to ensure your musculature is able to tolerate mile after mile of undulating and uneven running. Strengthening muscles to help stabilise the pelvis, upper and lower legs as well as the ankles can help to prevent muscle and tendon strains and ultimately maximise your enjoyment of trail running for many years to come. There are a series of vital exercises you should perform on a regular basis to help prevent injury, which will be covered in more detail in Chapter 3.
In the meantime, my advice for your first few weeks of making the transition from the road to the trail is to simply follow Micah True’s quote (see here). For now, all the tweaks you need to think about as you take your first steps off road and onto trails are to Run easy, light and smooth
– the rest will take care of itself. The physical transition from roads to trails, even with these tweaks, is far easier than most runners think it’ll be; it’s the mental transition that many struggle with.
REDUCING STRIDE LENGTH
Perhaps the most important alteration you can make when you take to the trails is to reduce the length of your stride. The more complex and challenging the trail, the more control you need, so the shorter you can make your stride, the better. Most people transitioning from road to trail tend to overstride and find it difficult to negotiate tricky terrain, so keep your centre of gravity over your feet and reduce that stride length.
LEAVE THE SPLITS ON THE ROAD
It doesn’t matter how long you have been running for, anyone who has ever taken part in a race, be it a 5k or marathon, will have been asked the same questions: What was your time?
What were your splits?
or What’s your PB?
The road-running community, rightly or wrongly, seem to have an obsession with speed, irrespective of whether you train for a road race with the view of completing or competing in it.
Recent years have seen huge advances in navigational technology, which has allowed time-obsessed road runners to make use of personal GPS systems and stride sensors to get real-time feedback of their pace, speed, mile/km splits, etc. As useful as this feedback can be when running on a consistent smooth surface, it becomes somewhat irrelevant and largely unnecessary when you take to the trails, and it’s this very aspect that many new trail runners find difficult to get their heads around.
Naturally, as in any sport, there are plenty of opportunities to be competitive in trail running. When you feel ready there are a wide range of races, which allow you to test your off-road running skills against other runners. However, in the early days of your transition, racing and speed should not be at the forefront of your mind. Leave the splits on the road, keep your GPS device in your drawer and hit the trails with a very different mindset to the one you would take if you were pounding the pavements. Trail running is a far more spiritual experience than road running will ever be, so why obsess about how fast you can run to get off the trail, when you should be far more interested in spending as much time on it as possible?
TIME-BASED TRAILS
As a new trail runner, shifting your focus away from distance-based training runs to time-based sessions can be incredibly difficult and takes some getting used to, but it’s vital you understand the reasons behind this change in approach.
Firstly, every trail is different, so comparing the time it takes you to run one 10-mile trail route to another is pointless. If you obsess over beating your PB on every 10-mile trail you run, you’ll soon become despondent, which totally misses the point of the trail-running experience. Trail running should be more about the environment you run in than the speed at which you can run through it, so slow down, forget about distance and enjoy the beauty of the trail and its surroundings.
Secondly, accurately measuring a trail route is incredibly difficult, bordering on impossible. Not only can GPS systems become next to worthless due to overhanging trees and dense undergrowth blocking the signal, thereby giving inaccurate measurements, the same trail route can vary greatly from month to month. Felled trees, flood water and the racing line you take over a long trail route can change every time you run it, meaning you cannot rely on recorded times over an assumed set distance.
Think time – not distance.
EMBRACE YOUR SURROUNDINGS
For all the feel-good endorphins that a fast 10k road race can give you, nothing will be able to get close to the feeling you get running through stunning off-road scenery. You might find your first few runs frustrating as you mourn the absence of your Polar/ Garmin GPS watch, but the stunning trails more than make up for the (lack of) view of your mile splits on your GPS watch. Although you’ll spend a certain amount of time fixated on the route ahead so as to successfully navigate around foliage, tree stumps, muddy bogs and rocks, there will be times when the landscape will open up to a vista that will take your breath away. Absorb it and reflect upon it. Incredible views are not exclusive to trail runners (I’ve seen many while road running), but there is a wider expectation and acceptance in trail-running circles that you stop and cherish the view before you – after all, it’s not as though it’ll affect your splits. Developing a love and appreciation of the landscape is part of what the sport of trail running is all about and there are a number of websites where you can post photos of your runs, allowing you to share your experiences with other trail runners all over the world.
SHARE YOUR EXPERIENCES
If you think your local trails boast some of the best scenery a trail runner could possibly ask for, why not show it off to the world? The following places are ideal for sharing your trail-running images and experiences.
•Twitter – There are plenty of people and organisations to follow on Twitter where you can exchange ideas and share experiences. The following people are certainly worth checking out.
— @TrailRunningMag
— @TrailRunMag
— @TrailRunningDay
— @TrailRunningtv
— @ScottJurek
Start tweeting your pictures and you might even see fellow running enthusiasts from all over the world retweeting them.
•Facebook – By being an active member of a group, uploading your pictures on to Facebook is a great way to get comments from others and engage with fellow trail runners. The following Facebook pages might be worth 'liking'
— Trail Running magazine UK
— Trail running
— Trail Running, from Runner’s World
— TRAIL & ULTRA TRAIL RUNNING
•Magazines – Most trail-running magazines are easy to contact (certainly by using Twitter and Facebook) and will be more than happy for you to send in your photos. If your images are good enough, they might even make it to print.
PLANNING YOUR ROUTE
Until you get the real trail-running bug and start travelling long distances to seek out the best trails, most of your training runs are likely to be on your doorstep.
Most of you will know of a forest trail, bridle path or foothill nearby where you can begin experimenting with trail running, but even on familiar routes close to home it is essential you plan your route and tell