As a heart rate monitor beginner, is it true your pace is slow in the beginning and then gets faster as you train with a consistent HR (145 bpm)?
Posted 4 November 2008
Not exactly, but you are on the right “track.” The following logic should help.
- Training at a steady state heart rate is the best way to begin a running program. There are a number of ways to accomplish this. You may need to walk/run or slow the pace in order to keep the heart rate consistent.
- Your pace is slower in the beginning for a number of reasons- cardiovascular conditioning, muscle conditioning, technique, muscle recruitment, etc
- In the beginning, your pace is usually slower and the heart rate tends to fluctuate higher than you want. Thus, you should constantly work to keep the heart rate steady.
- The heart rate number, 145, is not meaningful unless you put the number in context. Suggestion: Perform the Easy, Moderate, Hard test. Here’s a quick version: run 2 minutes at each level and record heart rate. Select the Moderate number as the target “steady state” heart rate.
- Perform a training session with the target steady state heart rate. Evaluate pace, time, distance.
- As you condition, your heart rate will lower and your pace will increase or stay the same. This is improvement.
- Consider hiring a coach that is knowledgeable about heart rate. Not all coaches understand heart rate. I suggest that a good training plan balances distance, heart rate, and speed.
Good luck and stay on “track.”
Coach Alinda
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