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| Detailed plan giving daily runs.
| No details on paces for training runs, just distance
|-
| [http://www.amazon.com/Koerners-Field-Guide-Ultrarunning-Ultramarathon/dp/1937715221 Hal Koerner's] 100 Mile Plan
| 100 Mile
| 35 miles
| 35 + 20 miles
| 76 miles
| 20
| 6 (including twice/day runs)
| Tempo, Hills, Fartlek
| Distance
| Complete book
| See below for caveats
|-
| [http://www.amazon.com/Relentless-Forward-Progress-Running-Ultramarathons/dp/1891369903 Relentless Forward Progress] 40 miles to 100K on 50 MPW
| Complete book
| See Below
|-
| [http://www.amazon.com/Koerners-Field-Guide-Ultrarunning-Ultramarathon/dp/1937715221 Hal Koerner's] 50 Mile to 100K Plan
| 50 miles to 100K
| 30 miles
| 25 + 25 miles
| 76 miles
| 16
| 6 (including twice/day runs)
| Tempo, Hills, Fartlek
| Distance
| Complete book
| See below for caveats
|-
| [http://ultrarunning.co.nz/content/100km-training-programme Ultrarunning New Zealand 100Km Plan]
| Detailed plan giving daily runs.
| No details on paces for training runs, just distance
|-
| [http://www.amazon.com/Koerners-Field-Guide-Ultrarunning-Ultramarathon/dp/1937715221 Hal Koerner's] 50K Plan
| 50K
| 30 miles
| 25 + 15 miles
| 66 miles
| 16
| 6 (including twice/day runs)
| Tempo, Hills, Fartlek
| Distance
| Complete book
| See below for caveats
|}
=Notes=
[[File:Relentless-Forward-Progress.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The cover of [http://www.amazon.com/Relentless-Forward-Progress-Running-Ultramarathons/dp/1891369903 Relentless Forward Progress].]]
Bryon Powell's book "Relentless Forward Progress", subtitled "a guide to running ultramarathons" is one of the first books that focuses on providing systematic advice on ultramarathon running. The book includes a number of training plans that are mentioned above, but also includes a lot of breadth and depth. While I may not agree with all of the advice, it's a well written book that is well worth reading interested in running ultramarathons. I particularly like the way that Bryon has asked many authors to write up sections of the book to give their perspective. I'm especially impressed the way Bryon gave two different authors the chance to put forward their opposing views on the role of speedwork in ultramarathon running.
=Hal Koerner's Field Guide to Ultrarunning=
[[File:Hal Koerner's Field Guide to Ultrarunning.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The cover of [http://www.amazon.com/Koerners-Field-Guide-Ultrarunning-Ultramarathon/dp/1937715221 Hal Koerner's Field Guide to Ultrarunning].]]
Hal is an experienced, talented, and successful ultrarunner, having won many races. I had high hopes for Hal's book, and I think it does contain some useful advice and is worth a read. However, I feel that the book is based around Hal's personal experience which may not work for an average or novice ultrarunner.
* The depth of Hal's experience comes through in the book, but so does his lack of wider research.
* The advice to drink before you're thirsty and to drink beyond thirst is outdated and dangerous. While dehydration can slow you down, it really a serious problem, while over-hydration ([[Hyponatremia]]) can be fatal and has been for a number of runners. How does have a section on hyponatremia, but it's in a separate section of the book from hydration, and that the advice is unclear at best.
* Hal uses the Hill training sessions as [[High Intensity Interval Training]] which I think is an important part of any training program.
* Hal talks about descending, and gives plenty of advice on technique. (He ignores the critical aspect of [[Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness]], but that's true of nearly every running book I've read.)
* It's nice to see that Hal mentioned [[Overtraining]], but the advice is rather superficial.
* The advice to force yourself to eat when you're not hungry is something I believe to be a cardinal mistake. I have found that eating what appeals is a far more successful, and if nothing appeals, forcing food down rarely has a happy ending. I believe that our subconscious and appetite has a far more sophisticated ability to determine what we need.
* Recommending that gels are always taken with water ignores [[The Science of Energy Gels]].
The book does contain three training plans, for the 50K, 50 miles to 100K, and 100 miles. These plans feel a little like an afterthought, tucked in the back of the book almost like an appendix. The plans that do include fartlek, hill repeats, and tempo runs but the details seem lacking. Hal mentions that the tempo run should be at 10K pace, but does not indicate how much of the 6-20 mile tempo run should be at that 10K pace. The 50 K plan includes a 30 mile long run, which seems a little excessive, as does the 25+15 back to back long runs.
=See Also=
* [[A brief guide to ultramarathon distances]]