I have been run/walking for a few years now. I started getting ITB issues while I was training for my first half marathon, and it was not a pleasant experience. Since then, I run/walk to keep my issues more under control and it works for me.

My intervals are usually somewhere between 2/1 and 3/1, but Jeff Galloway just came out with a new strategy that suggests that using a 30-second walk break is best. As soon as I get back from my vacation at Walt Disney World, I plan on really starting my training back up for the races I have on deck, such as the Laughlin Half Marathon. I will have to try the shorter walk breaks and see how it improves my running!

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Jeff Introduces a New Run/Walk Strategy –
The 30-second Walk Break

Jeff Galloway’s Run/Walk/Run method was revolutionary for three reasons:

1 – Run/Walk/Runners felt better throughout the long run.
2 – Run/Walk/Runners recovered faster and got injured less often.
3 – Run/Walk/Runners went faster with the breaks than without.

Since his introduction of walk breaks in 1974, Jeff he has received feedback from hundreds of thousands of runners, allowing him to fine tune Run/Walk/Run to keep people feeling better, staying healthy, and running faster.

The greatest benefit of the walk break comes in the first 30 seconds. Our heart rates come down, the running muscles relax, we catch our breaths, and the fatigue melts away. After 30 seconds of walking, we tend to slow down.

Here is a typical example of what happens with a 1-minute walk break:

A run/walk/runner averaging 10-minute pace in a marathon using 3 min/1min might walk at a 15-minute mile pace for the first part of the race. As fatigue sets in, that walk gets slower, and by halfway, the runner may be walking at 18 min/mi.

This means faster running is needed to stay on pace, which creates more fatigue at the end of each running segment, so the walk will get slower, and so goes the downward spiral at the end of the race.

Avoiding the Slow-down

Compared to running constantly, the 1-minute walk break still results in runners feeling better, staying healthier, and going faster, but it can get even better! Limiting walk breaks to 30 seconds, or in some cases even less, while cutting the run time accordingly, gives all the same benefits, with even less fatigue and even faster times.

The Bottom Line

If you are in already using a 30-second walk break or less, you don’t need to adjust. If you are using an interval that takes a 1-minute walk break, keep the same ratio but cut your walk and run times in half. For example, a 1-minute/1-minute interval now becomes a 30-sec./30-sec. interval. It’s that simple.

*I am an official Jeff Galloway blogger! Want some more tips directly from Jeff? Click here!*

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On a final note, my friend recently was out on her walk and she ended up in a car. She decided she wanted to take legal action so she looked into lawyers similar to Beaufort Personal Injury lawyers. After a long search, she finally found some fantastic legal representation that got her the settlement she deserved.