In the Pursuit of 24: The Plan

Whether you have not completed anything past 26.2 miles, a marathon, one ultra, or you are a distance veteran, now you have decided to tackle an Ultra mile event. Don’t be afraid; you are about to go on a self-learning journey, pushing the limits of what you thought you could do. To start and prepare for an ultramarathon, the planning and training can be fun and a very rewarding experience, even if you do not sign up for an event. For example, my first “Ultra” was a self-imposed challenge to run my age in miles at age 44. (Un-official Ultra)


This is part of a new series of posts regarding how we prepare, plan, and train to complete the 100 miles Ultramarathon Umstead 100: In the Pursuit of 24. For all the ultrarunning series and additional ideas, follow the link. Training for a 100.


Since then, I have been fortunate to have completed multiple Ultra-marathon distance events, including three 100-mile races. My last 100 Mile event was filled with great memories, and although I was unable to reach my main top two goals, it was an enriched experience. This year, I am with a few of this year’s pacers, and other friends will be tackling and training for the same to finish in under 24 hours. Our group comprises veteran marathoners and some ultramarathon runners who have completed 50k-plus events and some also their 1st 100 miler event in 2023.

Our planning process will be very similar regarding how to prepare and map out that initial plan to tackle the event. There are two main areas of the process; the first one is the assessment, in which you will have to be very honest with yourself about your current physical condition as a starting point, the training time available, and the reasons to tackle this distance. The second area is the end goal or target race. Once you have those goals in mind, you can start coming back from that target event and work your way to the starting point. For us, although we have similar distances in preparation, it is going to be a little bit more aggressive on the pace we will be training this time around.

Be aware that after you have this initial plan in place, it will be an initial guidance focusing on endurance to cover the distance. There are other elements that you might want to add to the plan, like speed work, tempo runs, hill repeats, and many more in the initial parts of the plan. This barebone approach will probably serve you as an indicator of the reality of the current state and the reality of a plan.

If you decide that the plan might be too aggressive and time-consuming, you can consider adjusting it to meet your needs. Also, consider instead of doing the target event mileage, you might drop it one notch. About 12 weeks in, you will need a sanity check as it is then that the time commitment and miles are going to take a serious turn. You might consider switching from 100 miles to 100K or 50 miles, or even a 50k. That is fine and okay too. Like the last couple of years’ plans, every week, reaccess any adjustments to the plan, like doing a mini-retrospective and adjusting based on the performance. However, I will keep those changes within small increments or reductions. Unless you are faced with an injury (Like what happened to one of our main runners last year) or presented with big unexpected changes in your life that will require those big changes/reductions, minor changes will be the key. We will talk in a future post more about reviewing your initial goals (A, B, C, and so on) once you have a better understanding of your performance state and time.

Assessment:

The first thing I do when getting ready for an Ultra event, regardless of the distance, is to self-assess the starting point. There are a few questions I consider,

  • What is my current weekly mile base running? This will help me understand the starting running weekly load.
  • What is the current base long run? I look for the past few weeks’ performances, whether there were events, training, or fun runs—the longest on average. If I did a 50k (31 miles), but the rest has been 13 miles, my long run will sit closer to 13 rather than 31. On the other hand, if the other runs have been closing around 17-18 miles consistently, I will have my starting long run a tad closer to those 16 – 19 mile ranges.
  • How is my back-to-back long-runs experience? Have I run a long run followed by at least a 10-mile or longer run the following day? How often? When was the last one?
  • What is my work week’s daily mileage? Whether it’s 2 or 3 times during the work week, how many miles on average?
  • With the current running load, how am I feeling? Can I complete workouts? Long runs? Weekly distance? Am I tired? Do I feel fresh? Minimal soreness?

Using the answers from that list at a bare minimum will help me indicate whether I am ready to start training or need some adjustment, rest weeks, or minimal mileage to recover. But most importantly, answering what will be the starting point for this training season.

Planning:

Now, this is the process I follow to prepare an initial plan; I know it is not going to be perfect, but it will serve as the basis for an initial approach to training,

  • Determine your run week – mine is Monday to Sunday. Others use Saturday to Sunday. Just make sure that for your reference, the below is going to be Mon-Sun, five work day week and two day weekend for each week at the end.
  • Pick an event to tackle; for us, it will be the Umstead 100 in a calendar (electronic, pre-made, or blank paper). Mark the day and race week 0, and start counting the weeks you have left. For us, at the time of publishing this, it is about 27 training weeks.
  • Two to Three weeks before the event will be your peak week.
    • Weeks 4 & 3: Here, you are going to note your preferred peak week plan for the long run. For me, for example, for our 100, I do back to back to back long runs (Fri 10, Sat 31+, Sun 31+)
    • For the work week, an easy 3-6 mile run, no speed or hill workouts.
  • Weeks 2 and 1 are the taper weeks; we are cutting the mileage drastically to let the body recover and get in tip-top shape for the event.
  • For week 2, the day after assessment and planning, use the information from the assessment to populate starting long runs and weekly mileage.
  • From the starting week to week 15, gradually increase the mileage of the longer (Back to back) runs. I want to make steady progress, and it is possible, every two or so weeks of increasing, do a back-off mileage week to allow for better recovery.

After filling out your plan, take a step back and look at the whole picture. This should serve as a reality check. Honesty with yourself is a must. If after this, you know this will push all your mental, physical, and will limits. As I mentioned earlier in the planning section, if your starting point is the couch or a 5k distance and you want to tackle 100 miles, you might have to reaccess the current short-term goal and length of the training plan. It is not that you can’t do it; it is that you will have to add longer time preparation. Safety and reducing the chance of injury are key, and even though it is not going to be easy, it should be doable. My base mile is decent and coming from a month of solid back-to-back runs and multiple events, followed by a 10+ mile back-to-back long run last month, giving me a great starting point.

The Initial Plan:

Week Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Total
27 Sept 25 – Oct 1Rest/
Cross
333Rest161035
26 Oct 2 – 8Rest/
Cross
333Rest181037
25 Oct 9 – 15Rest/
Cross
333RestRest 15 24
24 Oct 16 – 22Rest/
Cross
354Rest201042
23 Oct 23 – 29Rest/
Cross
354Rest151037
22 Oct 30 – Nov 5Rest/
Cross
454RestRest 26 39
21 Nov 6 – 12Rest/
Cross
354Rest151643
20 Nov 13 – 19Rest/
Cross
356Rest151542
19 Nov 20 – 26Rest/
Cross
Rest5 15 Rest 31 Rest51
18 Nov 27 – Dec 3Rest/
Cross
354Rest 15 1845
17 Dec 4 – 10 Rest/
Cross
656Rest 40 Rest57
16 Dec 11 – 17Rest/
Cross
653Rest151140
15 Dec 18 – 24Rest/
Cross
354Rest102446
14 Dec 25 – Jan 1Rest/
Cross
656Rest161649
13 Jan 2 – 7Rest/
Cross
356Rest161647
12 Jan 8 – 14Rest/
Cross
456Rest152656
11 Jan 15 – 21Rest/
Cross
65Rest6142455
10 Jan 22 – 28Rest/
Cross
654Rest162657
9 Jan 29 – Feb 4Rest/
Cross
55Rest8162458
8 Feb 5 – 11Rest/
Cross
656Rest202663
7 Feb 12 – 18Rest/
Cross
55Rest10162662
6 Feb 19 – 25Rest/
Cross
655Rest162658
5 Feb 26 – March 3Rest/
Cross
35Rest12203070
4 March 4 – 10Rest/
Cross
656Rest242061
3 March 11 – 17Rest/
Cross
3RestRest1032 32 77
2 March 18 – 24Rest/
Cross
353Rest151037
1 March 25 – 31Rest/
Cross
353Rest61330
Race Week – April 1 – 6Rest53RestRestRace100108

Blue – Headlamp ready runs

Race – Push the pace

Rest – Basically, no running; walks are ok

Grey – Build Block Weeks: increase endurance

Pink – Ultra-Prep Block Weeks: practice event simulation

Orange – Taper Block Weeks: Focus on recovery, sleep, and mental freshness


How is the plan going:

The workweek mileage was very decent to start training, with a total of 50 miles week. Here are some highlights,

Monday: Rest

Tuesday: Easy 4 miles. Unfortunately, our dog Noodles went to dog heaven today.

Wednesday: InsaneRunning group run; Bianca joined us for this one as she visited us for a few days.

Thursday: Eight easy miles; finally, the weather is turning toward fresher morning temperatures.

Friday: Rest day

Saturday: Met with Ranga in the morning, who is training for NYC Marathon and needed to do a longer long run. I’m glad I ran with him and extended what was supposed to be a 15-mile run to a 21-mile long run. Excellent easy pace, tackling a few hills.

Sunday: Great weather this morning; after a good night’s sleep, I headed out for a ten miler. 5x on-off mile repeats at race pace.

This week’s actual numbers:

Week 27MonTueWedThurFriSatSunTotal
PlanStretches
& Rolling
333Rest161035
ActualRest658Rest211050

Next Week Plan:

Week 26MonTueWedThurFriSatSunTotal
PlanStretches
& Rolling
333Rest 181037