I agree with the good Doctor. I have to say, however, that I'm a sort of an odd duck here: I like long E sessions. One of my biggest training struggles is keeping myself from doing too much LSS. Last winter/spring was the first time I had gone completely "Black" since I quit powerlifting a few years ago, and the results were great. So I get it now that I need to keep my E habit in check. To that end, when I'm not in BB, I run a very strict "no more than once/2 weeks" for LSS. When I do go for a LSS, I tend to go for 45-60 min, but that's not because I think I"m getting some extra benefit over the minimum. I just like it.DocOctagon wrote:"Green is a specialist template" is how it's put in the book if I remember correctly. Unless you're training for a specific outcome involving endurance (SOF, selection, Spartan, Endurance racing) then anything over the minimums is too much. Meaning Base no more than once a year, and Black for the rest of the year. Any E sessions done during Black should stay at 30 minutes, maybe the occasional 45. Little more leeway with activities like rucking and cycling of course.
EDIT:
If you're a recreational athlete (non-operational/don't compete), then stick to the minimums would be my opinion. You're not gaining anything by long E sessions, and you're giving yourself less wriggle room in terms of recovery and food intake.
If you're operational or running Black-Pro, then 1-2 hours plus once a week isn't going to have a negative impact. You just have to self monitor a little more closely and adjust calories. There's slightly less room for error.
Last Saturday it had actually been three weeks, instead of two, since my last long LSS. I was interested to see whether I would have any trouble, since that was the longest I've gone without doing any extended E work in a few years. I had no trouble at all. I clipped out a course that I would normally do in 60 min in 55 min, and I was casual the whole way. Trust the system.