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Evokeendurance
Приєднався 21 вер 2022
The Leaders in Mountain Coaching
Inspiring, educating and empowering mountain athletes to achieve their goals.
Inspiring, educating and empowering mountain athletes to achieve their goals.
#91 Brent Herring: Fastest Known Time On Colorado Trail West Bound
Join Evoke coach Nikki LaRochelle for a discussion with Brent Herring. In summer 2024, Brent achieved the fastest known time on Colorado Trail West Bound, Collegiate West with no outside support. He did so in a time of 10 days 17 hours 38 minutes. Learn about Brent’s training and preparation, and his experiences during this successful FTK attempt.
Details on Brent’s journey:
fastestknowntime.com/fkt/brent-herring-colorado-trail-co-2024-08-22
0:00 Introduction
0:01:08 Brent’s athletic background
0:02:07 Fastest Known Time categories
0:04:17 Brent’s inspiration
0:07:47 Brent’s training approaches
0:11:10 Brent’s training year of training leading up to his FKT attempt
0:14:43 Brent’s fueling, food caching, and hydration strategy
0:19:37 Day-by-day recap of Brent’s experience
1:04:23 Brent’s last day and the emotion of finishing
1:06:25 Brent’s recovery post-FKT
1:08:37 Brent’s take-aways
Details on Brent’s journey:
fastestknowntime.com/fkt/brent-herring-colorado-trail-co-2024-08-22
0:00 Introduction
0:01:08 Brent’s athletic background
0:02:07 Fastest Known Time categories
0:04:17 Brent’s inspiration
0:07:47 Brent’s training approaches
0:11:10 Brent’s training year of training leading up to his FKT attempt
0:14:43 Brent’s fueling, food caching, and hydration strategy
0:19:37 Day-by-day recap of Brent’s experience
1:04:23 Brent’s last day and the emotion of finishing
1:06:25 Brent’s recovery post-FKT
1:08:37 Brent’s take-aways
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Відео
#90 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For October 2024
Переглядів 29114 днів тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our October installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com 0:00 Introduction 0:01:05 How to train aerob...
#89 Art Muir: Aging Gracefully As A Mountain Athlete
Переглядів 21728 днів тому
Join Evoke coach Seth Keena for a conversation with Art Muir. Art, at 78 years old, is an anomaly in the mountaineering world - having summited Mt. Everest at 75 years old along with tackling many other difficult mountain objectives around the globe. Learn about Art’s training, his quest for the Seven-Summits, and he and Seth’s approach to training and personal development through their six-yea...
#88 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For September 2024
Переглядів 266Місяць тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our September installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com 0:00 Introduction 0:33 Success story: 200 ...
#87 Andy Reed On Competing In The 2024 Hard Rock Hundred Mile Endurance Race
Переглядів 91Місяць тому
Join Evoke coaches Kylee Toth, and Andy Reed as they discuss Andy’s experiences training for and competing in the 2024 Hard Rock Hundred Mile Endurance Run. Follow Andy on Instagram: canmoremd 0:00 Introduction 1:15 Andy’s path to competing in ultra running 6:08 The evolution of Andy’s training approach to ultra races 8:47 Favorable physiological adaptations to aerobic base train...
#86 All Things Nutrition For Athletes With Jesse Rich
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Join Evoke coaches Kylee Toth, and Jesse Rich for a discussion about nutrition and fueling for athletes. They cover common mistakes in general nutrition as well as fueling for training, nutrient monitoring, and current thoughts on carbohydrate intake for endurance athletes. Learn more about Jesse here: Nutrition Rundown: www.nutritionrundown.com Follow Jesse's Instagram: @jessetrich 0:00 Introd...
#85 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For August 2024
Переглядів 3072 місяці тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our August installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com 0:00 Introduction 1:11 Aerobic decoupling and...
#84 Coaches Corner: Specific Topics For Female Athletes
Переглядів 743 місяці тому
Join coaches Maya Seckinger, Nikki LaRochelle, and Kylee Toth where they answer female-specific training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com 0:00 Introduction 1:23 How does birth control influ...
#83 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For July 2024
Переглядів 3533 місяці тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our July installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com 0:00 Introduction 1:31 Targeting specific muscl...
#82 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For June 2024
Переглядів 3004 місяці тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our June installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com 0:00 Introduction 1:01 Integrating zone 3 and 4...
#81 Melissa Arnot Reid
Переглядів 2164 місяці тому
Join Evoke coach Larry Goldie for a conversation with Melissa Arnot Reid. Melissa is a professional mountaineer, and guide, who has climbed extensively throughout the globe. She has summited Mount Everest six times, including a 2016 ascent without supplemental oxygen. Show Notes: juniperfund.org 0:00 Introduction 1:37 Melissa’s time and history on Mount Everest 9:48 Melissa’s attempts at climbi...
#80 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For May 2024
Переглядів 3915 місяців тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our May installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com Time Stamps: 0:00 Introduction 0:58 Does glycoge...
#79 Roxanne Vogel On Cross-Adaptations Between Heat Stress & Hypoxia In Endurance Training
Переглядів 1965 місяців тому
Join Scott Johnston for a chat with Roxanne Vogel. Roxanne is a doctoral candidate with a decade of R&D experience in the sports nutrition industry. Currently exploring interventions to improve physical and cognitive performance and adaptation to physiological challenges presented by extreme environments and prolonged exertion. An adventurer and high-altitude athlete who applied a novel pre-acc...
#78 Ask Evoke: Athlete-Submitted Questions For April 2024
Переглядів 4745 місяців тому
Join coaches Scott Johnston and Kylee Toth for our April installment of Ask Evoke, where they answer training questions submitted by members of the Evoke Endurance community. To submit your own training questions for our coaches, send us a direct message on Instagram: evokeendurance Or email your questions to coach@evokeendurance.com Time Stamps 0:00 Introduction 1:20 How do you ...
#77 Understanding Internal Vs External Training Load
Переглядів 4266 місяців тому
Join coach Scott Johnston for a discussion on internal vs. external training loads. Learn how to quantify and qualify the training stress that your body is subject to through methods that are tailored to your individual internal physiological state. The main topics covered, and their timestamps: 0:00 Introduction 0:41 External Versus Internal Load Definitions 2:35 External Training Load Example...
A Qualitative Look at the Physiology of the Zone Intensity System
Переглядів 1,9 тис.7 місяців тому
A Qualitative Look at the Physiology of the Zone Intensity System
Coach Corner: Climbing The Seven Summits
Переглядів 2818 місяців тому
Coach Corner: Climbing The Seven Summits
Coach Corner January 2024: Skiing And Skimo Q&A
Переглядів 2529 місяців тому
Coach Corner January 2024: Skiing And Skimo Q&A
Evoke Endurance Book Club Chapters 7 & 8: General And Specific Strength; Assessment And Programming
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Evoke Endurance Book Club Chapters 7 & 8: General And Specific Strength; Assessment And Programming
Evoke Endurance Book Club Chapter 6: Training Strength And Power
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Evoke Endurance Book Club Chapter 6: Training Strength And Power
Evoke Endurance Book Club #5 Part 3: High Intensity Training And VO2 Max
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Evoke Endurance Book Club #5 Part 3: High Intensity Training And VO2 Max
Evoke Endurance Book Club #5 Part 2: Application - Where Strength, Power, And Endurance Merge.
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Evoke Endurance Book Club #5 Part 2: Application - Where Strength, Power, And Endurance Merge.
Evoke Endurance Book Club #5: Application - Where Theory Meets Reality (Part 1)
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Evoke Endurance Book Club #5: Application - Where Theory Meets Reality (Part 1)
Evoke Endurance Book Club #4: Monitoring Your Training
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Evoke Endurance Book Club #4: Monitoring Your Training
Evoke Endurance Masterclass: Use The Heart Rate Drift Test To Maximize Your Aerobic Training.
Переглядів 3,6 тис.Рік тому
Evoke Endurance Masterclass: Use The Heart Rate Drift Test To Maximize Your Aerobic Training.
Evoke Endurance Book Club: Training For The Uphill Athlete; Chapter 3
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Evoke Endurance Book Club: Training For The Uphill Athlete; Chapter 3
Luke Nelson Shares His Experiences Competing In The Snowman Race 2022, In The Mountains Of Bhutan.
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Luke Nelson Shares His Experiences Competing In The Snowman Race 2022, In The Mountains Of Bhutan.
Interesting, I've backpacked the Sierra section of the PCT 3 times in the last 5 years but never tried a fast time because I'm 70 years old. Next year I want to try for Kennedy Meadows to Mammoth without a resupply, a distance of 205'ish miles. It should be about 10 days for me. I did 300 miles this summer but I usually do more than that. My base-weight is 14 pounds with all the accoutrements including a two man tent and a bear canister which is mandatory in most of that Sierra section I've never taken a HR monitor but I plan taking it next time. I love backpacking and plan on hiking sections of the PCT every year till I'm too old.
The problem with nose breathing is that everyone has different abilities to do that. I cannot because my nose opening are just too narrow so they collapse when I inhale hard. I can barely SLEEP breathing through my nose when I'm not in good shape.
Ever inspired by you Art! The training you do is important, but as we all know it is the mental strength and way you so graciously and incredibly handle yourself in every adventure you take on that ensures that no matter the outcome you have truly reached a summit of experience.
Not your typical Evoke podcast . . . I was hoping to learn a lot more about his training being that I'm also in my 70's but almost nothing after listening for an hour. A big fat nothing burger. Oh . . . and now at the very end you promise a FUTURE video about the training?
Great series. Just my 2 cents.. 44:05.....agreed nutrition during competition is very individual but the energy expended during exercise should include total energy not just energy from CHO. The body uses more energy converting fat into fuel vs glycogen or glucose. Current recommendations suggest 100g/hr or more of CHO for long duration endurance events and, as mentioned, to train the gut to absorb the higher intake. CHO should come from a range of sources such as glucose, fructose, multodextrin and sucrose to aid absorption capability. Obviously fats (energy dense and change of taste) and proteins (e.g.glutamine in the hydration pack) can be consumed as and when practical, but exogenous CHO is what's most readily available for energy. At 85 kg I'm burning between 700 and 800 cal hourly during longer duration events (incl. 88 cal/hr as RMR) , so I'll always be working in a deficit.
For me, a high HR but low RPE means I'm too rested and lost too much fitness, if I'm over trained I struggle to get my HR up and RPE is high. So 18:00 ish is a bit confusing to me.
As a tactical athlete (definitely not many people in my space who are into this type of training), the scroll in the background is so cool to me. Hoping to compete at best ranger this year
I wouldn't class a croissant as ultra processed! A difficult and time consuming process, but not 'ultra processed' in this context. They're just flour, sugar, butter and eggs.
Do you have the link to the video on more details of the heart drift test you mentioned at beginning of video ?
Great content again. With regard to fueling and aerobic threshold from my personal experience (having done probably 20 drift test this summer) is that ingesting carbs pre test has a significant impact on my cardiac drift. Since I started to do the drift test fasted, I have a higher HR threshold and pace per km than when I was doing it 2 hours after breakfast. My guess is that having higher blood glucose would make the body prefer glycolysis than burning fat. For me, carbs might affect me since I am a fast twitch athlete.
Excellent lecture! Thank you!
Overeating is a thing as well . . . So just how do we get to the correct weigh for optimal performance for the type of sport we are in.
Glycogen depletion stimulated muscle hypertrophy so can we talk about that and how often it should be done? What's the RISK? As far as GI issues . . . when I go on long distance backpacking trips (like section hiking the PCT) sugar seem to give me GI issues that high fat fueling does not cause. I tried more sugar and glucose this year and had this problem. I never had *stomach* issues, it was lower down with gas and bowel movements that was the problem. This year I was using carb/electrolyte supplements whereas before I never used stuff like GU or Liquid IV but only used table salt and no pure sugars at all. More of a keto diet with just a couple of Cliff type bars a day. Liquid IV is one packet per 16 oz of water but I was using it in one liter of water every couple of hours or on the steep uphill sections
Another big cause of Haglund’s is high arched rigid feet. I found significant relief after improving foot mobility! Highly recommend in addition to the shoe considerations.
What if you never get DOMS?
Starts at 8:00, before that is just waffle (sorry)
Your web page is too *fancy* with too many moving parts, It's hard too to find what we need to see because it's more about the page programmer trying to display his skills rather than give us a simple resource to find what we need . . . it's a trend I never liked in web design. Why does anyone need moving text?
At 18:55 . . . I train on local trails with HR monitors but I backpack without one. I just use my watch and count on occasion to see how I'm doing. I was going over a 13,000 foot pass last week and I thought my HR was way too high because I could feel it pounding but it but it was only 137 which I can train at all day. The issue was the 13,000 feet which I was not acclimated to so I cold only go up hill at about 1.3 MPH (average). If I was wearing a monitor I might have worried about it. Going from training at sea level to the High Sierras my resting HR stayed up at 90-95 almost all night till about 3am when it finally dropped back to the 70's . . . it took a week of high elevation before my HR dropped withing a reasonable time at the end of the day. When I do get adapted my resting HR will be in the high 50's. It's taking longer than normal because I was off with a foot injury for 5 months and as soon as it was healed I grabbed my backpack and hit the trail so I have to do my training "on the job" I'm also 70 years old and by the time I get in 200 miles I think I'll be able to hand with the 30 year old hikers. I just came home for the 4th of July and will return to the Sierras in a few days.
Thanks for this, a really great podcast
Super helpful! You discuss the importance of keeping the speed the same when testing on a treadmill. If testing outdoors how critical is it to keep a consistent pace?
I’m not religious (quite the opposite) but this was an epiphany for me. Brilliantly explained.
Amazing resume, wow
Is it important to get glycogen stores back up? I ask because I'm also on a ketogenic diet and often hike trails for 6 hrs a day for training while also being 12-15 hrs fasted. Some days I do only one hour of hill runs (burning 950 kcal/hr) and other days I'm taking it easy for 6hr hikes burning 700 kcal/hr. Right now I'm 15 lbs overweight because of a foot injury I got CROSS TRAINING back in February.
I LOVE this channel I read that: *AMPK activation/responsiveness decreases with age, resulting in reduced autophagic clearance of unnecessary products, an increase in oxidative stress. a decrease resistance to cellular stress.* So as a 70 year old trail runner and long distance backpacker how should I interpret this? Just how much of a decrease is it and should I ignore it and train fasted anyway? Is there a workaround?
thanks and excellent as always
What a gem of a presentation for anyone doing endurance work. Bookmarked. Thank you.
Hey guys I love your content!
Its a great series. Thanks for it. I'm not buying into single leg *strength* exercises being more specific to team sports, sprinting, you name it. The fact that you are on one leg means nothing. Those exercises do not have the same motor patterns, time pressure is vastly different, they do not have the same joint angles, they do not recruit the muscles in the same muscular work regimes, and they are not done in the same energetic regime compared to the competitive actions. The fact that you are on one leg is irrelevant. And every-time I see a one leg RDL with the non-working leg raised behind, I ask myself "what are those people after"? The weight of the leg extended behind and the monstrous moment arm at hip it has destroys any chance of efficiently loading that exercise. It becomes more of a weird balancing exercise than a strength exercise. Just load a RDL bilaterally and reap the benefits. Or if you want a unilateral exercise, use a reverse leg press. It can be properly loaded. Beats the living daylights of that 1 leg RDL bastard.
Wonderful presentation, probably the best training video I’ve seen for anybody that is interested in improving their endurance. Thank you!
This is absolutely perfect. If one was to go through and watch all of your videos, I’d wager to say that they’d be more knowledgeable than an exercise science undergrad.
Had a few years with poor fitting ski boots and twenty years later my haglins deformity has not changed in shape. I’ve done shockwave (focused) to eliminate pain. Always had to modify my boots and shoes since. Good advice on that!
*haglund’s. Yeah never heard of that until now.
This page needs more promotion
Would be cool to just have a video of random stories from your climbing or training in particular lightbulb moments. I’m sure you’ve had so many satisfying realizations throughout the years.
I really want to buy a lactate meter now. Not that I need 100% accuracy as I am a beginner athlete and I’m sure your tests are plenty accurate. It would just be fascinating.
I'm a new subscriber and loving your content! This said, I'm having trouble wrapping my mind around how it is that (at the cellular level) in the first few seconds to minutes of exercise the energy utilization process (with increasing intensity) is anaerobic to aerobic, YET, as shown in your slides, during an easy jog, the energy utilization process is the opposite, going from aerobic to anaerobic. I fully understand your presentation and believe it to be 100% accurate. I'm just not clear as to the how and why of the switch. Thank you!
In the first 5-10 seconds of maximal intensity exercise, your body is using creatine phosphate to anaerobically produce ATP (think very short max effort sprint or strength training). Your CP stores are very limited though, so this energy supply drops off a cliff after this short period of time and your body will need to transition to a more aerobic pathway. So essentially this is a different kind of anaerobic energy pathway than glycolysis.
In zone 3, does a well-developed lactate shuttle also handle H+ accumulation as a consequence of lactate utilization or even via a secondary mechanism, or is acidic accumulation similar to a non-aerobically trained athelete, just at a higher pace or power? Have longer zone 3 intervals versus shorter zone 4 or 5 intervals contrasted for their ability to stimulate improvements in lactate shuttling? If zone 2 benefits are exhausted, can AeT be "pulled" up by zone 3 training?
Why is this resolution at 360P ?
UA-cam takes a while to process new videos at different resolutions. It starts at the lowest and works its way up the resolutions. So 360p will be quick and first. Higher resolutions will come later
Jack Kuenzle got strong by lifting heavy weights, specifically Wendlers 531. If anything he is a case study for why strength training is a good idea. The stress required to maintain an adaptation is much less than that required to acquire it. The fact that he was able to maintain his strength could just as easily be a function of his elite level genetics rather than him doing hill sprints.
I'm a PhD electrical engineer who has done consulting for some major beacon manufacturers. My opinion is that a watch, phone, or heart rate strap is an extremely low risk. Just be sure to put your beacon in its own pocket or chest carrying system.
If you have time, can you add timestamps or chapters to all questions?
As an age group state triathlon champion (Queensland Australia) I noticed consistent results came when I dramatically increased my aerobic distances. I can physically feel in threshold interval sessions that it started to feel like I was running faster speeds breathing aerobically without knowing how this extra aerobic distance was doing this. This video answers the questions I’ve had for so long. The main reason I believe most amateurs don’t do this is time restrictions, laziness or both. Going slow for long is both boring and time consuming, but you will never reach your endurance sport potential without spending the majority of your training doing this.
Brilliant series, absolute gold! Regarding power, we have a strength-speed continuum with power in the middle. I’d postulate that you can train strength and speed individually and these will help power. So, doing weights, irrelevant of speed of lift, will increase muscle mass as well as strength, in turn this will result in potential for higher power output with speed training, but you might only lift weights in the offseason while building your base. Of course, we wouldn’t increase strength and size of muscles that aren’t specific to the task, for example, for endurance running and cycling I wouldn’t recommend any upper body strength conditioning, it’s just adding dead weight to the athlete. Thanks for sharing this great series with everyone.
What are your thoughts on the Norwegian double threshold training, used by Jakob Ingebrigtsen and his brothers?
Most often I'm hearing aerobic threshold called LT1 and anaerobic threshold called LT2
thats what he said
Note to self: Too much HIIT . . . talked about @54:42
This just perfectly planned today's leg day - thank ya!!
It seems like this video is obsessed with maxVO2 . . . You're belaboring the point.
The brain can function with ketones. Only the liver does not use ketone bodies because it lacks the necessary enzyme beta ketoacyl-CoA transferase so it is the only organ that needs glucose but gluconeogenesis occurs in the liver so it has it's own supply. But it takes time to be fat adapted so you will feel bad if you are not fat adapted but *trained* endurance athlete are fat adapted by definition. And who does not carry a gel or two with them so it's not really an issue. At least that's how I have come to understand it over the years.
One question I would ask is just how much discomfort is good and how much is bad? If it hurts two days later did you over do it or what?
Just how do you *recover* ? Is it with days off or with low effort or low volume or what? This is one topic that's not well explained. Is it quantifiable? I'm training for hiking and a little trail running at 68 years old. Ive been training for 5 years so I'm not exactly NEW at it but I'm increasing my volume and intensity. What I have to recover from is peak bagging with 5,000 foot elevation gain day once a week (summer only)