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楼主:gary_smith

[综合] 跑步突破四公里,发帖纪念 [复制链接]

发表于 2011-9-7 16:30 |显示全部楼层
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大学缺乏锻炼....唉..荒废了.....
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发表于 2011-9-7 16:41 |显示全部楼层
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三十二分钟六公里,跑步机的成绩,不知道在足迹算什么水平

发表于 2011-9-7 16:46 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 表特否 于 2011-9-7 15:41 发表
三十二分钟六公里,跑步机的成绩,不知道在足迹算什么水平

很正常的成绩啊,5分多一点一公里.

发表于 2011-9-7 17:07 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 表特否 于 2011-9-7 15:41 发表
三十二分钟六公里,跑步机的成绩,不知道在足迹算什么水平


看年龄了,如果25岁以下,正常;30以下属于很不错;30以上的,能保持每小时12公里算相当的好了。估计35以上的,就找不到这样水平了
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发表于 2011-9-7 17:12 |显示全部楼层
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不是说12 分钟跑效果更好吗?

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发表于 2011-9-7 17:15 |显示全部楼层

回复 linjun70 34# 帖子

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不至于吧.这是一个相当轻松的成绩来的,如果有练习跑步的话.
年纪大了灵活性还有爆炸力减弱,但是这种匀速跑的能力不会降低的很快的.

这里只是用6公里成绩来计算哦.
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发表于 2011-9-7 19:08 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 linjun70 于 2011-9-7 12:43 发表
很矛盾,户外跑容易伤膝盖,跑步机确实保护膝盖但是比较省力.长期跑步,膝盖是个问题,我曾经在大概15年里面每周跑25-30km,但是膝盖越来越不行了,现在不敢跑了,改每周游泳5km。人很是矛盾,不锻炼不行,锻炼也不是十全十美,烦。


若为保护膝盖,最好游泳,或用跑步机。不过我是在标准塑胶场地跑的,很舒服

发表于 2011-9-7 19:12 |显示全部楼层
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每周5次,每次跑5公里28分钟+走1.5公里12分钟。
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发表于 2011-9-7 19:14 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 hsqhugh 于 2011-9-7 07:18 发表

和朋友走时有做.最长一次10公里,累死.


在学校里和同学从植物园从樱桃沟绕道香山后面到达八大处,最后坐索道下来,不知多少公里

发表于 2011-9-7 21:09 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 gary_smith 于 2011-9-7 18:14 发表


在学校里和同学从植物园从樱桃沟绕道香山后面到达八大处,最后坐索道下来,不知多少公里


大概花了多少时间?
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发表于 2011-9-7 21:15 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 linjun70 于 2011-9-7 20:09 发表


大概花了多少时间?



5-6个小时
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发表于 2011-9-7 21:24 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 gary_smith 于 2011-9-7 20:15 发表



5-6个小时


有机会我去试一试。上次一直走到樱桃沟的那个元宝石和石上松,前面好像没路了,是不是继续往前走?

发表于 2011-9-7 21:27 |显示全部楼层
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恭喜恭喜!! 周末我去布利斯班,gold coast, byron bay。 一个星期没跑。 今天跑了7公里有点累
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发表于 2011-9-7 21:27 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 linjun70 于 2011-9-7 20:24 发表


有机会我去试一试。上次一直走到樱桃沟的那个元宝石和石上松,前面好像没路了,是不是继续往前走?


有个什么寺,名字现在忘记了,然后往前走,需要走些小路,走到公路上,沿着公路走就行了,可以看到香山的后墙。现在有GPS,应该更容易些。
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发表于 2011-9-7 21:40 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 yoyyo2000 于 2011-9-7 20:27 发表
恭喜恭喜!! 周末我去布利斯班,gold coast, byron bay。 一个星期没跑。 今天跑了7公里有点累


你应该练铁人了,跑步对你不太够

http://www.youtube.com/v/ckFvoGRPiCU&feature=youtu.be

发表于 2011-9-7 21:43 |显示全部楼层
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铁人。。。我游泳在只学会几年。游泳不了很快。。

不过你跑得比我快多了。 我30分钟只能跑5公里


原帖由 gary_smith 于 2011-9-7 20:40 发表


你应该练铁人了,跑步对你不太够

http://www.youtube.com/v/ckFvoGRPiCU&feature=youtu.be
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发表于 2011-9-8 13:02 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 gary_smith 于 2011-9-7 20:27 发表


有个什么寺,名字现在忘记了,然后往前走,需要走些小路,走到公路上,沿着公路走就行了,可以看到香山的后墙。现在有GPS,应该更容易些。


嗯,考虑买一个GPS手表

发表于 2011-9-8 15:24 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 表特否 于 2011-9-7 15:41 发表
三十二分钟六公里,跑步机的成绩,不知道在足迹算什么水平


这个......如果是经常锻炼的, 这个算慢的, 因为是在跑步机上, 如果你实地跑也可以这个速度的话就还算正常, 不过一般你实地跑不到跑步机上的速度的
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发表于 2011-9-8 16:21 |显示全部楼层
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如果经常跑步,而且跑时间长的都需要吃关节素这种保健品,保护关节。。
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发表于 2011-9-10 13:06 |显示全部楼层

我刚开始锻炼的时候,在跑步机上连跑40分钟,10公里,时速15公里每小时。后来改hiit的cardio training

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效果更好,而且后来主要在cross trainer上训练,对全身关节伤害降到最小小。
hiit对烧脂肪,提升心脏血管能力非常有好处。

另外你在野外跑步最好在草地上,这样膝盖伤害小点,水泥的硬地面对膝盖冲击最大。

最好去gym出钱让人告诉该怎么做。我从在学校gym起,就是这么做的。
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发表于 2011-9-10 14:29 |显示全部楼层

Top 10 Running Surfaces

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Top 10 Running Surfaces

(Ratings are out of 10.)
1. Grass
At its best, the grassland of parks, golf courses and football pitches provides the purest, most natural surface for running. Areas where sheep graze are often home to fine, close-cropped turf, too.
Pros: While grass is soft and easy on the legs in terms of impact, it actually makes your muscles work hard. This builds strength and means you’ll notice the difference when you return to the road. When it’s flat, it provides an excellent speedwork surface (spikes may be necessary in wetter conditions) and, unlike a track, can give you space to run whole repetitions without having to make tight turns.
Cons: Most grassland is uneven and can be dangerous for runners with unstable ankles. It can also be slippery when wet, runners with allergies may suffer more symptoms when running on it, and its softness can tire legs surprisingly quickly. Finally, of course, while the very best grass for running is often found on bowling greens and golf courses, the owners are not always happy to discover runners on their hallowed turf.
Conclusion: If you can find a flat, even stretch of it, grass is the best training surface for most runners, especially as you get older.
Rating: 9.5

2. Woodland Trails
For a run that mixes constantly-changing surroundings with near-ideal running surfaces, head for your local woodland. Soft peat is God’s gift to runners, trails are usually quite level, and in some forests they go on for miles. They can sometimes be rather muddy, though.
Pros: Usually easy on the legs and located in scenic areas that make you keen to return.
Cons: Unless you’re lucky enough to find wood chips or well-drained peat, woodland trails can be muddy and slippery. Tree roots can be a hazard for unwary runners.
Conclusion: Woodland trails can be a bit of a mixed bag in terms of quality, though the odds are usually in your favour. A wood-chip trail through a huge forest is the ultimate runner’s treat, though these are found in greater abundance in Finland than in Britain.
Rating: 9

3. Earth
This heading covers a wide spectrum of trails, from the worn-out routes across playing fields to the winding tracks heading out into the back of beyond. There’s a point at which an ideal trail becomes too muddy or too hard-baked to be of much real benefit, but in practical terms, you can’t go far wrong with good old accessible dirt.
Pros: The medium to soft surfaces decrease the risk of overuse injuries and reduce impact on downhills. Bare earth trails are often in inspirational settings with shade in the summer.
Cons: Wet, slippery mud is very hard to run on and increases your risk of injury – especially to calves and Achilles tendons. Also, as you get further away from civilisation, the surfaces are likely to become rougher, making twisted ankles more likely.
Conclusion: One of the best surfaces to run on, though sometimes difficult for the city-based runner to find.
Rating: 8

4. Cinders
This gritty composition of fine rock, carbon, ash and slag made up the running tracks of the pre-synthetic era. A few of them are still around, and you can also find cinder paths in some town parks.
Pros: Cinders are much easier on the legs than roads are. If they’re well-maintained, they can provide a good, even surface, and a track has the obvious advantage of being of an exactly-measured distance.
Cons: Cinders certainly don’t provide an all-weather surface! In the heat they become loose and slippery, and in the rain they can turn into a quagmire. Loose cinders can also create slight slippage underfoot.
Conclusion: As all-weather surfaces grow in popularity, cinder tracks are few and far between. If they’re well-kept, though, they’re still one of the most comfortable surfaces to run on.
Rating: 7.5

5. Synthetic Track
Nowadays, almost all British tracks are made of modern synthetic materials. While most people think of them purely as fast surfaces for fast runners, they’re more versatile than that.
Pros: Synthetic tracks provide a reasonably forgiving surface and, being exactly 400 metres around, make measuring distances and timing sessions easy.
Cons: With two long curves on every lap, ankles, knees and hips are put under more stress than usual. Longer runs also become very tedious.
Conclusion: Tracks are ideal for speedwork, but you have to be dedicated to use them for anything else.
Rating: 7

6. Treadmill
When the weather’s bad, a treadmill is the best indoor running option for most runners (well, it beats running on the spot in your living room). Most treadmills have monitors that display incline, pace, heart rate, calories burned and other data. The hardness of the running surface varies between machines – some are far softer than others.
Pros: The smooth surface is generally easy on the legs, and hitting a desired pace is simply a matter of adjusting the machine (as long as you can keep up!). Additionally, you don’t have to worry about external factors such as dogs, wind and bad weather. The precise level of control makes a treadmill ideal for speedwork.
Cons: Effectively running on the spot isn’t very exciting, and if you don’t concentrate on keeping up your pace, you could be unceremoniously dumped behind the machine. Without the benefit of a natural breeze, treadmill runners tend to sweat profusely. The machines are too expensive for most individual runners, and gym membership may be uneconomical if you just go there to run.
Conclusion: Not everyone’s cup of tea, but fine if you live in an inner-city area with few trails, little grass and freezing weather. Also good for rural runners when the days are short, and for runners who find it hard to keep up a steady pace.
Rating: 6.5

7. Asphalt
Asphalt is the mixture of gravel, tar and crushed rock that makes up 95 per cent of Britain’s roads. It isn’t the softest surface around, but it’s difficult to avoid and it’s better than concrete.
Pros: As all road-runners know, asphalt is one of the fastest surfaces you can find, it’s easy to measure distances on it, and it’s simple to keep up a steady rhythm. While it’s rather solid, it’s a predictable, even surface that puts less strain on the Achilles tendon than softer or uneven terrains.
Cons: You face cambers, pot-holes, traffic and a pretty unforgiving surface that does put a strain on the body.
Conclusion: Though it’s a hard surface to run on, asphalt is also one that’s hard to stay away from. If you intend to race on it, some training (but not much) on it is advisable.
Rating: 6

8. Sand
Sand offers a run with a real difference. If it’s dry and deep, you can give your calf muscles the work-out of their life without risking any impact damage to your joints. If you’re on the beach, you get the sea breeze and the surroundings as a bonus, and if you don’t fancy the dunes, you can choose the relatively firm strip by the water’s edge as a brisker alternative.
Pros: Sand gives an opportunity to run barefoot in an pleasant environment. Running through dunes provides good resistance training and strengthens the legs.
Cons: Despite being great for building leg strength, the softness of the sand means a higher risk of Achilles tendon injury. Also, though the sand is firmer at the water’s edge, the tilt of the surface puts uneven stresses on the body. And while it’s tempting to run barefoot, watch out for blisters.
Conclusion: Flat, firm sand can be a near-perfect running surface, but most beaches have cambers and any uneven footing can overstress muscles. It’s probably best to limit runs on sand to shorter distances.
Rating: 6

9. Concrete
Concrete is primarily made up of cement (crushed rock), and it’s what most pavements and five per cent of roads are constructed from. It delivers the most shock of any surface to a runner’s legs.
Pros: Concrete surfaces tend to be easily accessible and very flat, and if you stick to pavements, you can avoid traffic.
Cons: The combination of a hard surface (reckoned to be 10 times as hard as asphalt), kerbs, and the need to sidestep pedestrians, can lead to injury.
Conclusion: City dwellers probably have little choice but to do a large proportion of their running on concrete. If you get the slightest opportunity, though, look for softer surfaces.
Rating: 2.5

10. Snow
If you live in Britain, you won’t generally have many opportunities to run on snow. That’s just as well, for where there’s snow, there’s usually ice too.
Pros: Snow can convert a drab park into a winter wonderland, giving you a sense of adventure as you tread through a freshly fallen snowfall. It also forces a slow pace, which is excellent for muscles recovering from injury.
Cons: Once broken, snow can be slippery, and slush, ice and frozen footprints make the going even more unpredictable. Snow can hide dangerous objects and cause muscle fatigue, and as well as increasing your risk of injury, it’s also bad for your shoes.
Conclusion: Initially a pleasant change, but the feeling doesn’t usually last.
Rating: 2
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发表于 2011-9-10 18:44 |显示全部楼层
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原帖由 gifox 于 2011-9-7 15:13 发表

yes,价格还很好.赶紧买了,这型号不出的了.

绝对可以记录你跑了多少,不然就不是GPS 手表了,还会显示你当时的速度.自动计算卡路里消耗等.

我比较喜欢的是它的auto lap功能,自动记录你每圈或者每公里速度.还有virtual partner让你和过往自己的记录"赛跑".


今天去了才知道,我看的是美国的网站。

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