Andrew Skurka's account of his first BolderBoulder (2018)
Jake Likes Onions on jogging from the coyote's point of view.
Good overview of different types of speed training workouts.
A comparison of the Hansons Advanced and Pfitzinger 18/55-70 marathon training plans.
Good overview of Jack Daniels style training principles.
Fell running, also sometimes known as hill running, but not to be confused with mountain running, is the sport of running and racing, off road, over upland country where the gradient climbed is a significant component of the difficulty. The name arises from the origins of the English sport on the fells of northern Britain, especially those in the Lake District. It has elements of trail running, cross country and mountain running, but is also distinct from those disciplines.
My running shoes typically wear a hole in the side(s) of the toebox after a few hundred miles anyway, but I might consider just cutting them to begin with.
Cross sections of several models of running shoes.
A trailrunning journal
Matt Carpenter's write up on a cheap alternative to crampons for trailrunning/hiking
On one of Scott Elliott's Bear Peak streaks.
A nifty spreadsheet with some useful tools for people who train according to Daniels' Running Formula. Works fine in LibreOffice Calc.
An excellent review of JD's marathon plan by Trent Gill. This is basically the plan I'm planning to follow this summer.
Greg Kroleski's marathon training plan, loosely based on Jack Daniels' formula, which got him to a 2:42 finish. Interesting to me because he only ran 5 days a week and averaged less than 42 miles per week, less than what I plan, but is much master than me. (He also has a plan where he runs only 3 days a week.)
Greg Kroleski's account of his 8:09:48 Boston Marathon this year.
And he got some press coverage:
Stumbled upon this running weblog while reading about marathon training plans. I like her race reports.
Even though it conflicts a bit with the Jack Daniels plan I'm trying to follow (which has me running 7 days a week, about the same mileage every day during the first phase of training), I found this video by Jason Fitzgerald on planning weekly mileage to be useful as I try to put together a marathon training plan.
I like this guy's writing. I'm currently planning my summer marathon training and came across this article. The entries after this one mention him getting sick and DNFing his race -- but I'm still probably going to switch to 7 days a week of running as I increase my mileage.