Oscar wrote:@maxrip13 I was thinking yesterday about doing a base building block almost exactly as you did, and came across this post
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I´m new here btw, this seems to be a really nice forum.
I´ve been working my way to reach Simple, I´m working with the 24 at the moment. I´m in a position where I could start adding sets with the 32 kg. It turns out I´m struggling to comply with the daily frequency the program requires, so I switched to a 3/week light/medium/heavy approach (100 swings, 160 swings, 200 swings). I just read TB2 this week, and out of coincidence I´m biking to the office 2 times a week for 45 minutes. I´m alternating S&S and biking every other day. So I figured that this kind of looks like base building
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So let me see if I got your schedule straight. At the beginning, you were doing everything almost every day divided in two sessions: Endurance in one session and S&S + pull ups the other.
Afterwards, you had to swich to alternating endurance and S&S+pull ups every other day, for a total of 3 endurance sessions and 3 S&S and pull up sessions per week, right? This is roughly what I was planning on doing.
Basically yes. I set a goal for how many sessions I plan on doing and make sure I meet that for the "Week". My week isn't always 7 days, but I try to get all those sessions completed before I progress my weights, reps, run distance etc. I would call my weeks blocks, instead of 5 weeks of basebuild I would use 5 blocks.
At the time I had work PT commitments and occasionally I subbed these in where I needed. I also had access to a gym at Lunch everyday on site and was able to get my S&S+Pullups in that way. I also have a gym at home so can always get access to training. The run track was terrible for LSS and I don't run on treadmills by choice. I like to run outside since I am not a hamster.
If you get 3 sessions of S&S and 3 sessions of LSS a week, provided you stay within the correct heart rate zones, I think you have your base build pretty well covered. I like S&S because it is reasonably high volume with the swings, but allows you to focus on improving your run times etc. I added the pullups to tick off some SE I felt was lacking in S&S and because I love pullups. The pullups were the hardest part of the whole program.
It all comes down to what your goals are for the base build. I was in the military before so I am not a big fan of endless push ups etc for a traditional SE session. I enjoyed S&S because it was quick, fun and was still strength based. Paired with the pullups it had enough SE and I could focus on running which is a weakness.
Hopefully that makes sense.