How Avery Collins Gets Ready for Summer Running
The ultrarunner and coach shares his best tips for ramping into alpine running season
Many runners have a list of trail runs that they dream of completing, from a wildflower-soiree on Aspen鈥檚 Four Pass Loop or the iconic Enchantments Traverse in Washington State. But the season for these bucket-list runs is short鈥攋ust a few months鈥攕o when the snow starts to melt in the high-alpine, it鈥檚 game on. With such a fleeting window of opportunity, how best to prepare your mind and body ready for epic summer missions?
We tapped professional ultrarunner and coach Avery Collin for his best advice. Collins should know鈥攈e lives in snowy Silverton, Colorado year round while training for 100-mile races (he鈥檚 won the burly HURT 100 and Ouray 100, as well as 50-milers and 50k races)鈥攚hich means he鈥檚 been putting his own advice to the test for years.
Don鈥檛 Go the Distance
鈥淚n the winter my training is a lot less volume oriented,鈥 says Collins, who often logs 90-100 miles per week during peak spring and summer training. He recommends about a 50% reduction in overall volume during the winter. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just not sustainable to be doing what I do in the summer year round. That鈥檚 what leads to burnout.鈥
To combat burnout, ramp up the cross training and don鈥檛 worry about mileage, focusing instead on getting a workout or two done on a weekly or biweekly basis. For Collins, that means running about 40 miles a week and slowly increasing his long run. By late-February he鈥檚 up to a 15-miler (his first race of the year is a 50k at the end of May).
Reprioritize Your Goals聽
Training for long-distance running is time-consuming. Redistribute the free time typically spent logging back-to-back weekend long runs in the summer: reconnect with different hobbies you may have neglected, do that house project, read a few books, or just relax with friends and family. Are you a skier or biker? Spend the winter months focusing on the other activities that you enjoy.
鈥淚 use the off season to relax and reflect on the season,鈥 says Collins. That means he鈥檚 less concerned (and less stressed) about training and diet, and lets himself indulge during the holidays. 鈥淭here鈥檚 an old saying that the heart doesn鈥檛 know what sport you鈥檙e doing. If you want to use your weekends to backcountry ski, that鈥檚 perfectly fine.鈥 Collins is splitboarder and he takes advantage of his access to the plethora of backcountry touring in the San Juan Mountains a few times a week. Beer culture is heavily intertwined with ski culture, and while Collins is a beer guy, alcohol hinders his downhill performance. Instead, he throws a non-alcoholic Athletic Brewing Co. Golden Ale, which is fit for anytime, in his pack.
Focus on Speed & Strength
Speed and strength are often the first to go when you鈥檙e logging high-mileage weeks in the spring and summer, both because it takes longer to recover and it鈥檚 more fun to聽spend your time out on adventurous runs in the alpine. As long as you鈥檙e doing one to two easy runs and one speed workout a week, says Collins, you鈥檙e doing more than enough. In addition to speed work, Collins does three to four days per week of strength training, typically two days with weight and two days without. His go-to moves are pistol squats, wall sits, single leg glute bridges, and side-to-side lunges. Building glute and core strength is critical for mountain running, especially for people who live in the flatlands. Get out the resistance bands and work your feet and ankles for a few minutes a week, too. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really easy to roll an ankle if that鈥檚 not the type of terrain you鈥檙e running on frequently.鈥
Find a Treadmill
鈥淭he first question I ask when I bring on new people to coach is: do you have access to a treadmill?鈥 says Collins. He understands that many folks don鈥檛 love the treadmill, but it鈥檚 a great way to simulate the type of mountain running you鈥檒l be doing once the snow melts. He and his athletes use it once a week for a hill training session. Collins recommends doing sustained grade efforts, starting with 3 minutes at a 3% grade at 50-60% effort with a 3-minute rest period and building on that over time. A treadmill is also a great tool to get miles in when it鈥檚 too cold or snowy outside. If you have early summer goals you鈥檒l need to shift from cross-training to reprioritizing running about 16-20 weeks ahead of time to avoid injury. 鈥淵ou want to have a certain amount of bone density from the pounding of running,鈥 says Collins.
Be Flexible
Collins doesn鈥檛 just mean this physically, though he does practice yoga 3-5 days a week and focuses on whatever is feeling tight or sore (if you鈥檙e a mountain runner, chances are your body is pretty tight). If Collins has a two-hour run planned and a snowstorm hits, he鈥檒l retool his workout and do two hours of strength inside or even go to the sauna. While sitting in the sauna as training sounds too good to be true, it鈥檚 not. 鈥淚t helps prepare for summer in terms of heat training and adaptation,鈥 says Collins. 鈥淎lso, sitting in a sauna works a heart rate zone that鈥檚 very difficult to train (mid-to-high zone 1) because it鈥檚 hard to run slow enough to hit it.鈥 And if you鈥檙e struggling with burnout鈥攏o problem. Collins wants runners to remember that they can train hard without running at all and still maintain a high level of fitness. You can reintroduce running when your motivation returns.
Slow it Down
Have you ever heard of jogging? Embrace it. 鈥淔or long distance runners, especially ultrarunners, it鈥檚 important to be metabolically efficient in low heart rate zones (under 140), so spending 75-90% of your time in those zones is important,鈥 says Collins. If you鈥檙e going fast and doing high-intensity all the time you鈥檒l be ill-prepared to crank out a 50-miler where you鈥檙e spending five-plus hours on your feet at a lower heart rate. Consider this your permission to keep it easy: go to the sauna, go jogging or walking, go dancing, go skiing, and never feel guilty for taking some time to relax with an Athletic Brewing Co. non-alcoholic beer.