I recently came back to the ice and my condition is pants.
From my skate camp 5 years ago I remember that it is possible to skate and not feel the exhaustion ON THE ICE, even if I could hardly WALK off the ice.
(I think that is part of the skating addiction ;-) )
But I wonder how wise it is to do that now? I skated yesterday at night for 1.5h - including going there by bike and back and some warm-up, that was more than 2 hours exercise at once and today I am really exhausted, I feel every muscle and if I use them they tremble.
Originally I had thought to go back to the ice next morning for public session next week (after the same work-out like yesterday the night before - this week I had no time to do so).
But would that be wise or would it be wiser to wait a day to give the body more time to rest?
The season here stops at the end of March and I am very eager (maybe overeager) to get as much skating as possible done in that time period and might not always be sensible. :angel:
Doing this long time may lead to overtraining.
For a long time, yes. For a few weeks?
Anyway, I decided to cancel every off-ice work-out (except biking because I have no car and go everywhere by bike) and concentrate everything on the on-ice as long as I can. It is only another 5 weeks after all. Sniff.
Stretch well after skating, especially your quadriceps muscles and calves, which get overused. A foam roller or portable roller is also good to use on your outer quads after skating.
I don't know how old you are, but I really need to take a day off between skating days now to let my body recuperate. Otherwise, I pay for it with overuse injuries.
Hedwig, you're older now. Even if you're young five years can make a difference.
thanks for the voices of reason.
I am 38 but not always wise when the skating addiction grabs me. ;-)
I took the day off yesterday (more because I had to for work issues than because I wanted to) and I really feel the difference. I will hit the ice in about an hour and I feel rested and eager and cannot wait. :)