đ¨Enter to Win a $100 gift card, see details below. đ¨
As we are nearing the end of the year, we looked back at our favorite blog posts this year. In case you missed any of these, we thought you'd enjoy these trail safety tips, running strategies, podcast compilations and more:
- HOW TO TRANSITION FROM ROAD RUNNING TO TRAIL RUNNING?Â
- HOW TO RUN DOWNHILL ON TRAILSÂ
- UPHILL RUNNING AND POWER HIKINGÂ
- TRAIL RUNNING GEAR WITH COACH JIMMY DEAN FREEMANÂ
- 20 WAYS TO IMPROVE YOUR RUNNING
- FAVORITE PODCASTS WE LISTEN TO ON OUR RUNSÂ
- HOW TO PROPERLY FUEL FOR LONG TRAIL RUNSÂ
-
10 SAFETY TIPS FOR TRAIL RUNNING AND HIKINGÂ
- TRAIL SAFETY FOR MOUNTAIN LION ENCOUNTERS AND ATTACKSÂ
- TRAIL SAFETY FOR BEAR ENCOUNTERS AND ATTACKSÂ
- TRAIL SAFETY FOR SNAKE ENCOUNTERS AND SNAKE BITESÂ
đ¨To enter, let us know in the comments below what was 1 thing that you learned as in athlete in 2019? Winner will be announced on our blog. đ¨
COMMENT TO ENTER BELOW
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138 comments
You canât cram for a marathon.
Having patience during recovery from injury is incredibly difficult and yet critical.
Injury, like any other setback, is an opportunity for growth and new perspective on running and life. While all I wanted to do was get back on the trails, eventually I realized that the best thing for me was to take some time off, focus on other things, and figure out how I can come back stronger than before.
Injuries bring opportunity to recharge, refresh and re-evaluate your running. You can still do things to make yourself a better runner, and you can do plenty to make yourself a better person while youâre injured. Being miserable or upset about it only makes you less enjoyable to be around, so put the negative thoughts to rest and look forward to better days.
It is amazing after years of running how much there is still to learn about exercise, nutrition and recovery. The best is yet to come.
Itâs never too late to have build goals!
The trail is always worth carving out time to get there.
Itâs all training⌠Walking the dog with the 3 year old (training), putting together the Christmas swingset (training), eating Christmas cookies (fueling? Maybe notđ).
Top thing I learned is the value of a little hip and glute activation (resistance bands!) before I head out, for injury prevention.
Patience is paramount: with myself, my fitness, training / racing goals, others in my life. The importance of this became clearer & clearer as the year went onâŚand I know itâs something Iâll still be working on well into 2020!
Consistency is key
I need a plan to achieve my goals, but blindly following it is a recipe for trouble. Adjustments on the fly are more than fine.
Injuries provide a chance to come back stronger in a new way.
I can run much farther than I thought.
Taking a day off once in a while is not a terrible idea.
I learned what overtraining felt like, especially after a too-long training block.