5 DIFFERENCES BETWEEN TRAIL & ROAD RUNNING

Running

QUICKER

CADENCE

QUICKER CADENCE

Because of uncertain terrain (rocks, roots, etc.) trail runners often take more, shorter and more delibrate steps, resulting in a faster cadence than the same runner running on the road. 

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MORE

ELEVATION

MORE ELEVATION

Many trails exist in national parks, and other areas with many more available hills and vertical climbs than exist on standard paved roadways. A marathon might have 1,000ft elevation. A trail marathon might have 5,000ft.

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SLOWER

PACE

SLOWER PACE

Despite more, faster steps, you'll probably run a 'slower pace' than you would on the road. This is mainly due to navigating your footing (tiny side steps vs big long strides) and the (likely) increased elevation gain to deal with.

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UNEVEN

TERRAIN

UNEVEN TERRAIN

Not to be understated - road running is fast & easy because the ground is predictable. Trail running is a whole other ballgame because each step is unique from the last & requires focus & dilligence for proper footing.

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ALL THE

GEAR

ALL THE GEAR

Typically running further from home and less supported, trail runners carry a bit more gear. Hydration packs, heavy tred shoes, treking poles (occasionally) among other things. But hey, the more you carry, the further you can go!

GOT GOALS FOR THE ROAD?

Check out our Marathon training plans for all different time goals - designed for morning and evening (and everything in between) runners alike.