jlang wrote: » Usually it's late these days. I'm typically heading out at 10pm or so. I've had a nice lunch hour run window thing going for a few years but working from home and home schooling and feeding kids etc have destroyed that. I occasionally get out at 6/7 in the morning for an easy run or a long run at the weekend but always find it hard to warm up and motivate myself to run well or fast at that time. Late night after the kids settle is what I'm left with and stubbornness gets me out the door. Working out OK actually.
Swashbuckler wrote: » For me I prefer to run weekday sessions at lunchtime. It's a habit at this stage given I run on my work lunchbreak. At the weekends everything works around family. I run when I can. I always find early morning sessions harder but will do them if I have to! The ones where I literally crawl out of bed and onto the road are worse than when I get a bit of a chance to wake up first. I always prefer to get my long run done earlier in the day as its looming over me otherwise. It's a fine balance with the sessions. Too early and my body is still asleep. Too late and I'm weary from the day.
Dubh Geannain wrote: » Edit: Just to clarify I'm more curious about sessions/workouts and not specifically everyday runs or easy runs. But if all you're doing at the moment is easy then select away.
Sacksian wrote: » My preference is the morning, for the same reasons as others have suggested, particularly in the current climate (weather and COVID). I'm just much more likely not to bother if I don't get it done as early as possible. All things being equal, I think you will be slower for the same effort in the morning. And I think it's worth accepting that, particularly if you're doing something fast, otherwise you run the risk of a) missing the intended stimulus or b) doing some damage. Which is another good reason for having effort as the focus. When it comes to racing in the afternoon or late morning, you'll find the same effort will return a faster pace. I just found with evening sessions, especially longer club sessions, that I was wired for a good few hours afterwards, which made it hard to sleep afterwards. Definitely faster than first thing though. I wouldn't worry about pace sessions where you're a couple of seconds off per rep - just presume that, in a race, rested, in good conditions, you'll be ok. The important thing is the consistency + consistency of effort.
Dubh Geannain wrote: » That's the sort of feedback I was hoping for. About missing the intended stimulus. I found it hard to gauge the effort to be honest but I was thinking I was working too hard hence why I bailed on one rep. I'd need to figure out the equivalent pace which might not be an easy exercise because on some rare mornings previously I've felt fresher. I can see the benefits of HR based training here to save taxing my brain too much about what level my effort should be at. But accepting that I will be slower in the mornings is a good place to start.
Dubh Geannain wrote: » I've never had that experience with running a session nice and late. This mornings session though was a whole different story. Couldn't hit the paces needed. Fading during longer reps. Ended up skipping one long rep altogether and walked some recoveries instead of jogging them. It couldn't be fatigue and I've been nailing similar (plus harder) sessions lately and had had 3 unplanned days off. 25 minutes warming up just didn't prove to be enough. Got back home and was fit to sleep. I think I'll try workouts at lunch for a while (if I'm able to get out of the house) but do some early morning easy runs. I might get used to them that way.