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Hi, I'm Dave Campbell, I've been competing in endurance sports for thirty years and triathlon
for ten of those years and we are going to talk today about the off-road triathlon, how
to do one, how to participate, how to train. The most basic thing to remember is you are
an endurance athlete, you are a triathlete and so you need to train like a swimmer, like
a cyclist, and like a runner but not at the same volume. You can't compare yourself to
the local guy from the running club who is training for the marathon, mileage-wise he
is going to be doing a lot more miles then you are. So make what you do count. Make it
quality training, where ever you can make it specific to the demands of an off-road
triathlon do so. Run as much as you can on trails. The soft surfaces will be more forgiving
to your joints and additionally you'll get those additional challenges, like additional
climbing and descending demands and the stabilizing that your core needs to do and all those different
things that a trail runs require that road running does not. Same with a mountain bike,
do as many mountain-specific workouts as you can. But most triathletes are full time employees,
they have families so you are not going to be doing the volume that cyclist and runners
and single sport athletes do. But you can take bits of those activities and incorporate
them in. Don't think of yourself as just a triathlete but try to take the best parts
of the training aspects of each of the three sports and apply them to what you do. And
use your local resources. If you can do local mountain bike races, do them. You are going
to develop better handling skills, you are going to be challenged from those riders,
and if you can do an open water swim in your area or trail runs all those things will help
you. And sometimes you can use those as fitness tests, you can use them as speed work, and
you can make them specific to what you are doing. Bring your running shoes to that mountain
bike race and once the race is over, go to your car, change into the shoes and do a quick
twenty, thirty minute run right after the race. And make it a Brick workout. So use
what's available to you but make what you do count and emphasis quality over quantity.
Now we'll talk a little bit more about structuring your year round training program for the off-road
triathlon.