RACE INFO

RACE INFO
Gobi March Blogs 2010
6
PostsGobi March (2010) blog posts from Arjan Roukema
19 June 2010 04:32 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Tomorrow will do some final test run with full equipment and see if some additional food can be added. Believe I stripped the rest already to its bare minimum.
Read some last blogs on slippers and this may indeed be a good idea. Food wise its about 10 freeze dried meals, oatmeal breakfast, raisins, some gels and Nuun, muesli bars, cup a soups, jelly beans. Anyway will be a long day flying and looking forward to meet the fellow competitors.
13 April 2010 12:19 pm (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
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27 February 2010 04:13 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Over the last weekend had a friend over, a militairy man. he just did 6 months in Afghanistan managing mobile hospitals. With a lot of experience in long marches in the heat he gave some, own experience based tips. Dry socks, pretty essential, preventive taping another one but try what works in training. Do some sessions with more weights but shorter and add gym work and pilatus to the routine to prevent injuries and increase strenght.
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13 December 2009 04:24 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
After a time of rest, doing other things and chasing other interests it feels good to get back into the rhytme. The first weeks tend to be "bumpy" as ones quickly adopted lifestyle to these "other things in life" will have to make way for the schedule. Typically disciplined, fixed workouts on fixed times: the only way to combine things with family first and foremost and work. I tend to pencil everything for the coming week in the family diary so everybody knows where I am, doing what and I can plan things around the activities of the rest of the team. This has worked very well. I have noticed that a "schedule" can be quite addictive and missing on planned workouts at some stage feels like dissaster struck. It takes some time to realise this is hardly the case.
The current schedule is a combination of 8 fixed sessions and 3 flexible. A week will typically look like this:
monday morning: 1 hr swimming
monday evening: strenght esp core
tuesday morning: flexible ( mostly bike ride of 2 hrs)
tuesday evening: short run up to 1 hour
wednesday morning: 1 hr swimming
wednesday evening: flexible (mostly running up to 90 mins)
thursday morning: bike ride
thursday evening: flexible
friday: strength
saturday: long bike (up to 5 hrs)
sunday: lond run (up to 3 hrs)
saturday or sunday: recovery swim
Running is at this stage evenly distributed with the rest. Tend to increase this when we move into February. Almost all sessions are at low intensity with a main focus on building endurance and strengthening the body.
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26 November 2009 09:36 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
So finally after couple weeks of waiting i got cleared and commenced the schedule. I use the ironman China as a endurance builder up to Gobi. This includes clearly next to running biking and swimming. I have always found this an excellent way to enhance general endurance capability and at the same time avoid injuries. Especially the swimming is excellent and can be used as a powerfull recovery tool for lots of running. So we move into the coming weeks with about 3 runs a week, 2 swims and 2 bikes. Keep the long run limited at 2 hours for now but do it offroad through the jungle up here. Everything is low heart rate though. Just getting in the miles.
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09 November 2009 04:55 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Living and racing in Singapore now for 2 years, one thing worries me most: the heat. On multiple occassions is ended up dehydrated, one time so severe an IV was needed to get the engine going again. I have "consulted" many experienced and seasoned athletes, some nutritionists and done tonnes of reading on the subject. The matter remains that for bigger athletes like myself (1.92 or 6.3 ft and between 81 and 85 kg) it is still a challenge. The sweat rate is higher and if the heartrate rises above certain levels it goes downhill even faster. So an extra case of salttablets and electrolytes are a must. I hope to get some insight info from past participants on their experience.
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