levr/content/posts/polar-a-menti.en.md
2025-10-22 09:03:37 +02:00

78 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

+++
date = '2025-10-23T00:00:01+02:00'
draft = false
title = 'Polar lied to me'
+++
Ive been back to running for less than a month now — two sessions a week — and I still have a decent endurance base from hiking, including a mini-trek of 54 km over two days. Nothing exceptional, but enough to think I could handle some light training. Except…
Since getting back into running, Ive felt like a complete noob. Everywhere you read that to run in aerobic (zone 2) training, you need to stay in zone 2. Except…
As soon as I start jogging, Im in zone 3. If I speed up just a little, Im in zone 4, the threshold zone. I remember one session where I tried to stay in zone 2 and ended up running at 9:30 min/km — barely over 6 km/h. I walk faster than that when hiking. Sure, I was tired that day, but still…
Basically, since I restarted, Ive never done a run in zone 2 — always in zone 3, sometimes flirting with zone 4.
## Back to the Basics
Im 44 years old, with a theoretical max heart rate (HRmax) of 176 bpm and a resting heart rate of 56 bpm.
Polar automatically splits my zones like this:
| | Start | End |
|--|--|--|
|Z1 | 88 | 105 |
|Z2 | 106 | 122 |
|Z3 | 123 | 140 |
| Z4 | 141| 157 |
| Z5 | 158 | 176 |
And yet, every run Im around 145 bpm — which puts me right in zone 4. Not great…
## The Breaking Point
One day Id had enough — like I mentioned in my last running post. Fed up with the track, the watch, all of it.
So I went out and just ran by feel, pushing myself to break 30 minutes on a 5 km. I didnt care about zones, pace, or beeps from the watch. I just wanted to enjoy it — and pushing hard actually felt good.
Back home, I synced the watch and looked at the data more closely. Turns out, my heart rate peaked not at 176 bpm, but at 190 bpm.
At first, I was kind of proud — Id just smashed the “theoretical” HRmax. Heart of a champion, right?
So I updated my HRmax in Polar, which changed my zones to:
| | Start | End |
|--|--|--|
| Z1 | 95 | 113
| Z2 | 114 | 132
| Z3 | 133 | 151
|Z4 | 152 | 170
|Z5 | 171 | 190
That already made a lot more sense. I can now run without being out of breath — I can talk, meaning I am in aerobic endurance — even if the watch still says zone 3. At least Im no longer in zone 4 at 145 bpm.
## The Karvonen Formula
While digging around, I came across the Karvonen formula, which doesnt just use HRmax, but the heart rate reserve — the difference between your resting and max heart rate.
For me, thats 190 56 = 134 bpm. Using this, my zones look like this:
| | Start | End |
|--|--|--|
|Z1|123 | 136
|Z2 | 137 |150
|Z3 | 151 | 164
|Z4 | 165 | 177
|Z5 | 178 | 190
And suddenly, everything clicked. When I run “easy” — around 145 bpm — Im actually in zone 2, not flirting with the threshold zone.
That changes everything.
## The Takeaway
Since then, my runs feel completely different.
I run relaxed, at ease, without stressing about every beep from my watch.
And most importantly, I finally know that I wasnt out of shape — my watch just didnt know me yet.