6/08/2018

Smart Hiking (5) ~ Heart rate base training

Running Watch (device) with GPS and Heart Rate Monitor

I wrote about relationship between elevation and heart rate in the previous post.   Today, I am talking about heart rate base training in running world.  This is slightly different topic from hiking, but it is better to know the concept of heart rate training.

Running device

Many runners use a running device which has GPS, heart rate monitor and other nice function nowadays.  It is really convenient to track all activities with a lot of data during the activities such as where they ran, distance of running, pace, heart rate and etc.  It also help to tell actual pace when they run in real time.

Since such device is getting very popular in running world, many people using the device to manage running pace and training.  There are so many training menu using heart rate since depending on what performance people try to improve, the intensity of the training is different.   For example to burn fat in the body, the intensity should not be high.  Low intensity with longer time of running would be much more efficient to burn body fat.  However to improve speed and lactate threshold, it usually require high intensity like interval training.  To set a target, "pace" was used in old days, something like 6 minutes per mile x 5.  However, it is hard to set a right pace for many people who is not really serious athletes.  Then the strength / intensity might be too high and it is due to an injury.  Or it is too easy to improve the performance old days.
Now many training many using "target heart rate" instead of "target pace".   It is much easier for many people to set a reasonable goal based on heart rate.

Heart rate zone
To set a target heart rate, there is a definition called "heart rate zone" which is a range of heart rates based on the maximum heart rate, sometime maximum heart rate with the resting (minimum) heart rate.  As long as people knows the maximum (and resting ) heart rate, it is easy to tell which heart rate range people need to maintain for each training.

One of simple example is based on ratio of the maximum heart rate:
- Zone 5 - 90% of the maximum heart rate ~ maximum heart rate
- Zone 4 - 80% ~ 70%
- Zone 3 - 70% ~ 60%
- Zone 2 - 60% ~ 50%
- Zone 1 - 50% ~ or less

Then to burn the body fat, zone 2 would be a good zone.  Typical marathon pace for many people is probably zone 3 or zone 2.   Many interval training can be zone 4 something like that.

The maximum heart rate can be find in a real high intensity activities or using an equation to estimate the maximum heart rate by age.  (A popular formula is "220 - age" [bpm])

Based on such heart rate zone definition, it is hard to maintain zone 4 for a long time.   Even zone 3, it is probably possible to maintain the range longer than zone 4.  But it is probably not easy to maintain zone 3 very long time.  To continue to maintain for very long time, it is probably better to stay in zone 2.   That is the idea.

Based on my experience, it is similar in hiking.  If the heart rate reaches zone 4, it is obviously impossible to maintain such high heart rate for long time.  Therefore, if we can maintain a pace in hiking based on this heart rate zone.  I think we can find a better pace for hiking.

This is the concept for "smart hiking" in higher elevation with heart rate.

(To be continue)





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