VO2 Max/ Zone 5 workout 2
This workout will increase your VO2 max (aerobic capacity) and reduce your chances dying.
Expect it to feel horrible
Warm up/ Tissue prep/ Core
3 mins of gentle cardio pulse raiser, use the same modality you are going to use in the workout.
Core development + Spinal stability training: 3 sets of the Professor McGill's big three – The best core training for stability, injury prevention & pain reduction you can do
10-30s McGill Sit up holds
Max Side Plank e/s https://buff.ly/4bX8u4d
5 x Bird Dog, e/s https://buff.ly/3IuDevZ
Stretch
Jump back on the cardio and build up to zone 3-4 for a couple of minutes. Building up here makes it easier to get to zone 5 quickly when you start your max intervals.
Main Effort: VO2 Max, Zone 5 workout 2:
As hard as you can and hold Zone 5 or 95% of your max HR for that activity
If you can, run. If you can't run, row or bike
1 round is:
3:00 Z5, as hard as you can go /2:00 either active recovery or rest
2:00 Z5, as hard as you can go /1:20 either active recovery or rest
1:00 Z5, as hard as you can go /0.40 either active recovery or rest
0.45 Z5, as hard as you can go /0.30 either active recovery or rest
0.30 Z5, as hard as you can go /0.20 either active recovery or rest
Take a 4 minute rest between rounds
Active recovery means doing the thing you've just done, but very very gently, could be a walk or a slow job for example
Scaling:
If you are new to VO2 max workouts, start with 1 round.
Try to add a round each month until you are at 6 rounds.
If you're experienced at VO2 Max workouts, then repeat until fatigue stops you hitting Zone 5
Top tips:
1. Find a friend to suffer with. Makes it much easier when you can see someone else suffering as much as you are.
2. Know your zone 5 HR range and have your HR visible as you are working. For me, using a watch with a chest strap means I can put the watch where I can see it otherwise I tend to ease off and let my HR drop into Z4.
Warning:
Get checked out by your Doctor before doing any training, especially high intensity training. If you have a heart problem, working at high intensity could kill you.
This is a high intensity workout that will cause considerable fatigue. You have to earn your volume. Start small.
If you are new to this kind of training, push for the highest intensity you can manage, but limit the volume, this will limit the depth of your fatigue.
You need to put this workout into the context of everything else you're trying to train on the subsequent days of the week. If you jump in and do 6 reps without having built up to it, I don't doubt you could do it, but your recovery will likely spank you for a couple of days meaning you should be on zone 1 recovery workouts + yoga until you are fully recovered.
The typical newbie will ignore the need for recovery and just smash straight into the next workout, and the next and the next, gradually degrading themselves until they hit a wall of fatigue at around week 3. Then they stop, get a cough or a cold and feel terrible. Not smart. We've all done it, some of us many times (some of us are slow learners and refuse to believe we're not 21 any more). Modern devices like Garmins will tell you your recovery we strongly suggest you use one.
Be aware that fatigue does not work like a straight multiplier of intensity x duration. It is more like an exponential curve. If you double the volume at a high intensity, you get way more than double the fatigue.
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