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Hello
Everyone,
February
11, 2026
In
this Issue:
- Mar
1 2026 Sofie Manarin Nickel Loppet
- Try this VO2 max-boosting interval
session on your lunch hour
- How to be a lifelong runner
- Sudbury Rocks Running Club - Group
Runs
- Photos This Week,
- Upcoming Events:
Mar 1 2026 Sofie Manarin Nickel
Loppet, Mar
8 Frosty Growler, May 24 2026
SudburyRocks!!!
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Sofie Manarin Nickel
Loppet
Sunday, March 1, 2026
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Try this VO2 max-boosting
interval session on your lunch hour
A spicy workout that builds speed and stamina
without long recoveries
Keeley
Milne Published February 1, 2026
VO2 max is the ceiling
on how much oxygen your body can use when you’re
working hard, and it’s tied to everything from running
performance to long-term health. The catch is that a lot
of workouts meant to push that ceiling don’t feel
like they’re doing a lot, at least in the moment.
The longer recovery intervals between very short reps
can be unsatisfying and leave the session feeling like
a pile of short efforts instead of one clear stimulus.
A less common, but more satisfying way
to target the same system is Billat’s 30-30, named
for exercise physiologist Véronique Billat. It
uses very short, hard efforts with very short easier running
intervals between them, so your oxygen demand stays high
instead of dropping back down every time you recover.
Billat’s work focuses on the“lag” effect,
where your oxygen consumption doesn’t drop the second
you back off, and can stay near max, even when you slow
down. That lets you stack more total time near VO2 max
while avoiding long, exhausting reps.
The workout
Warmup: (12-15 minutes)
10 minutes of easy running.
Run 4 x 20-second relaxed strides, with
plenty of easy running in between.
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Run 2 to 3 more minutes of easy before you start the main
set.
Main set: (start with 12–20 minutes
total work)
Run 30 seconds hard at your VO2 max pace.
Follow that with 30 seconds of very easy
running (with the short interval, your effort will stay
near 50 per cent VO2 max effort)
Keep alternating until you can’t
hold the hard 30 seconds at the same pace anymore. For
a first go, cap it at 12–15 minutes even if you
feel like you could keep going.
Cool down:
Run 10 minutes at an easy pace.
How to find your pace without a lab
Do a six-minute hard time trial on a track after a proper
warmup. Take the distance you cover and divide by 12.
That’s your target distance for each hard 30-second
rep. Example: 1,800 metres in six minutes means 150 metres
per hard rep.
This works well for runners who want a
VO2 session that they can pack into an hour, and for anyone
who likes a repeatable format. You can get a lot of quality
work done without needing a long session. Make sure to
follow this workout (or any speedwork) with a day of easy
running or recovery.
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How to be a lifelong
runner
Simple tips from an expert to keep you moving for decades to
come
Keeley
Milne January 28, 2026
If
you’re looking for a “how to run forever”
checklist, you could do worse than listening to someone
who sees the long game up close. In a recent post, New
York-based Howard Luks, a 62-year-old orthopedic surgeon
(32 years in practice, with thousands of patients) and
enthusiastic trail runner, laid out what he’d tell
his 30-year-old self after watching, year after year,
who ends up needing surgery at 60, and who’s still
moving well at 80.
Treat hard efforts
like they’re limited
Luks frames joint health like a bank account: you can
spend big, you just can’t do it constantly (something
that applies to most of your body). “Your joints
have a finite number of hard efforts—budget them
wisely,” he writes. Be intentional about healthy
recovery, make easy efforts regular and stop treating
down days like failure.
Build muscle while it’s
easier
Luks points out that strength in your 30s is a long-term
brain-and-body investment. He calls muscle mass “cognitive
insurance,” pointing to the muscle–brain
connection and how much easier it is to build capacity
earlier than to claw it back later. Keep running, but
don’t skip the lifting because you “don’t
have time.”
Learn to work around injuries before
they become chronic
Runners, take note: “learn to train around injuries
now, not through them,” Luks warns. Pushing through
inflammation doesn’t make you tougher; it simply
makes the problem worse. The smart move is to adjust early
with surface changes, intensity changes, cross-training,
or physio (Luks emphasizes the importance of seeing a
physiotherapist regularly)—before you’re forced
to stop.
Keep the goal practical
Luks underlines the fact that consistent forward movement
trumps constant improvement. Regardless of whether you’re
able to blast to a new PB, the real win is being able
to run because you want to, opting to take the stairs
without worrying about sore knees and saying yes to whatever
adventure with your friends or family sounds like fun.
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Sudbury Rocks Running
Club - Group Runs
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Wednesdays
- meet at Apex Warrior parking lot departing
at 1800h. Typically runs are 1 hour or 10km.
Saturdays - meet at Bell Park's
Elizabeth St parking lot departing at 0800h. Typically
runs are longer at 1.5 hours or 15km minimum.
Generally the pace floats between 5 and 7 minutes per
km. Anticipate a mixture of roads and trail running on
the routes.
Inclement weather is usually just a challenge. Group has
only been cancelled for local races or xmas. Cancellations
or changes in meeting locations will be posted.
Locations are show in the
attached photos/maps.

Wednesday pm location

Saturday am location
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Photos This Week

Feb 4 Wednesday pm run
Feb 4 Sudaca

Feb 4 Moonlight

Feb 4 Moonlight

Feb 4 Moonlight

Feb 4 Moonlight

Feb 5 Moonlight

Feb 6 Moonlight

Feb 6 Moonlight

Feb 6 Moonlight

Feb 6 Moonlight

Feb 6 Moonlight

Feb 6 Moonlight

Feb 7 Rocks!! Saturday am run

Feb 7 Bell Park

Feb 7 Bell Park

Feb 10 Ramsey Lake

Feb 10 ramsey Lake Skate Path

Feb 10 Bell Park
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Upcoming Events
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Sofie Manarin Nickel
Loppet
Sunday, March 1, 2026
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March 8, 2026

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The Frosty Growler
Triathlon is back for 2026 & bringing the heat
to winter with a one-of-a-kind challenge that mixes
skiing, biking, and running into one epic race.
Whether you’re racing solo or as a team, The
Frosty Growler is all about getting outside and
embracing winter! And.. this year, we have short
and long course options!
Date: Sunday, March 8
Location: Kivi Park
Register
Today:
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May
24, 2026
SudburyRocks Race,
Run or Walk

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Registration is now open for 2026
SudburyROCKS!!! Can you feel the excitement! Secure
your spot now, and mark your calendars for another
epic event, Sunday May 24th 2026. We can’t
wait!
Click on the Race
Roster link in the bio or below!
https://raceroster.com/events/2026/111700/sudburyrocks-2026
Early bird prices
until December 31st.
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