
Charlotte Young Bowens had an epiphany while competing – and now she helps bigger people feel confident outdoors

A place those of us who enjoy the long, long runs can chat about; ultras, food, gear, race reports, health, injury, techniques, training, training plans, etc., etc., etc.
You get the point.
This is just a start, so if you have suggestions about the overall vibe and setup, please let me know. I hope we can grow this into a place we can call home.
She got fit to avoid early death. Now a runner makes gear for others with larger bodies
Charlotte Young Bowens had an epiphany while competing – and now she helps bigger people feel confident outdoors
Russ Cook to run the full length of New Zealand
Russ Cook, aka Hardest Geezer, is to run the length of New Zealand on the 3,000km Te Araroa Trail.
Ramping up to 30 miles
I started running back in March and so far I've completed a few trail 5ks and a road 10k. I'm currently doing half marathon training with about 6 weeks left in the program with my big goal to run a trail 30 miler next September. Does that seem attainable?
After completing the half marathon training I'm planning on taking a few weeks rest and then starting a marathon training program.
How to increase your walking efficiency.
I've tried to incorporate some form of semi-speed walking into my race strategy, both from necessity and just trying to reach my target miles.
I know this is an older article, but its still pretty relevant. I always feel odd doing the whole hip thing and generally revert to just walking fast if that makes sense.
Do you all practice any particular walking techniques you can recommend?
Welcome runners, let me share my story.
I'm in the twilight of my ultrarunning for sure, but still love getting outside and finding that place where your body and mind just flow over the ground while your moving forwards.
I'm a slow runner, never felt speed was what did it for me. But I always enjoyed just running for hours.
I started with 5/10K's back in the 80's, I think the Perrier 10K in Central park was my first race. Again I knew I would never be in the top, but just enjoyed the challenge.
Trained for my 1st marathon, remember this was pre-web days so a lot was done so wrong. But finished it. Ran a few a year, then life, kids, but when I turned 31 I did a 50K and loved it. Of course when I turned 50 I had to do a 50 miler, 12 hours later I was done and loved it.
Attempted my 1st 100 miler when I turned 60, ok I know I'm aging myself, and come down with some freak structural issue and had to bail at 72 miles. But I worked it out and was able to complete my 100 miles 8 months later and have run a few more in the