15 minutes in zone 1, 10 minutes in zone 2, 20 minutes in zone 4, 5 minutes in zone 1
This was HARD! I had to walk at almost stationary pace to keep my heart rate down in zone1 -
Down the Oxford Road with Bear, my Polar watch, buzzing at me because my heart rate was too high: ooh, lavender, how lovely, it smells divine; buzz ๐; oh , no, a slope and Iโm already going at less than walking pace, ๐; those roses look gorgeous, buzz ๐ buzz; over the road, quick dash because a carโs coming; ๐ ๐ ๐; ten minutes in zone 1 with the watch going crazy - my heart rate was over what it should have been before I even started running. Mindfullness of breathing like Claire suggested ... Om ...
Up into zone 2: still buzzing every 30 seconds, past a garden stuffed with hollyhocks, bees busy making almost as much noise as The watch.
Then, at last, a 20 minute run in zone 4! Thatโs a shock to the system. And the bloody thing is now buzzing at me because my heart rate is too LOW! AND Iโm out of breath. This is really hard!
So turning off along a tree lined avenue. Oh, darn, somebody has put an enticing box of books and general tat out for people to take, and I canโt stop and look, let alone carry anything home.
But at least Iโm stretching my legs and actually getting somewhere as I pant along past the Waitrose car park and back into the town, glancing at my watch as I go. And at least this time, when another runner approaches, Iโm not high stepping on the spot like a carriage horse!
Exhausted and now have to get my heart rate right down for the cool down 5 minutes in zone1 - which proves an impossible task and the heart rate indicator stays stubbornly green.
So all round knackering but huge FUN . And look at the little gremlin I found lurking in the pattern on my capris.