Hello Reader,
Welcome back to The Endure EQ.
The next 4 editions of The Endure EQ are going to dive into each of the major aspects of building your endurance engine.
Together we will dive into each of the major zones, why they are important and give you some workout examples to use in your training.
We will start at the bottom and build it up from there.
Before diving into this you might want to look back how you can test your fitness and define your zones and what they mean.
Let’s dive in to building your aerobic base.
Building your aerobic base is one of the best ways to ensure sustainable triathlon performance.
Here’s why:
Let’s go deeper.
The reason this type of training is called your aerobic base is because it serves as the foundation for all other training zones.
Without a strong foundation the rest of the training will not be as impactful.
The main adaptation we are looking for from tempo and easy training is your resistance to fatigue. Ultimately as endurance athletes we want to be able to sustain race pace for as long as possible. This works by increasing the ability of your slow twitch fibres to perform work for longer durations.
Additionally, Tempo training stays below your lactate threshold which limits the need for extra recovery. Which means you can add a ton of it into your program.
Don’t neglect the Z1-2 work in your overall training.
Aside from the benefits to your other training zones Z1-2 work also provides incredible general health benefits.
This includes:
As a sustainable athlete use your training not just for race gains but for overall health benefits.
Easy training is the easiest way to maintain and build sustainable endurance fitness.
Easy endurance work is fun.
There is no better way to explore your local community on foot, bike or skis.
Because most athletes train too hard. They sometimes miss the enjoyment factor in easy endurance training.
Reset your perceptions and focus on the base work for a little bit.
Here is my simple framework for building aerobic fitness:
Let’s break each one down a little bit more.
The first thing you will want to do is test your zones so that you have some benchmarks for where the domains are.
Endurance work includes all the easy and moderate domains of fitness.
There are 2 zones included in this domain: easy training (Z1) and steady training (Z2).
Easy training covers your recovery ride, runs and swims. It’s also your warm-ups and cool-downs.
Your steady, endurance training will be the big driver to develop your base and increase fatigue resistance in the muscles and body.
When starting to train in this domain you can use many different metrics to guide effort including pace, power, and HR.
But you should anchor those with your internal metrics and RPE.
You can use this combined with HR, pace and power to determine how hard you are working.
Having an internal gauge makes easy endurance work more enjoyable as you don’t need ‘strict’ zones that you need to maintain.
Ask yourself the question, “how hard am I working?” if under a 4 you are good to go.
Plan to spend a lot of time training in the moderate domain of fitness.
There is 3 major buckets for this:
Each bucket falls into the easy and moderate domains and will ultimately improve your aerobic base.
Tempo and endurance sessions are not typically demanding enough to require a ton of recovery so you can include a lot of it in your training week.
This keeps things sustainable.
But you have to resist the urge to spike your effort just because you feel good during these sessions. Smashing some hills, accelerating or jumping into threshold pace might feel good but it’s not achieving what we want.
You can certainly combine sessions but try to have those as a specific decision not an everyday occurrence with endurance training.
It comes down to the simple idea of “keeping your easy training easy and your hard training hard”.
Here are some key sessions we use at Excel Endurance:
Thank you for being here!
- Chandler
Read Chandler's Blog
Follow Chandler's Instagram
Follow Chandler's Twitter
Join the Free Excel Endurance Community
Fuel the newsletter: Buy me a coffee
Did you find this edition of The Endure EQ Helpful? Click one of the links below to let me know!
😃 Super helpful - thanks! | 🙂 - It was OK! | 🙁 - Not really!