>Do you use a racewalking technique?
Not strictly: I'm sure I don't always have a straight weight-bearing leg and I probably also have 'loss of contact' (two no-no's in official racewalking), but I have read up on it and try to incorporate some of the techniques (the ones that won't make me look too odd!: the bent arm, and really pumping the arms when I need a speed boost; working on the front-to-back hip swing and making sure that my step is longer in the back than in the front; working on foot speed over gait length).
I use some of my walks, or parts of walks, to focus on specific techniques, like posture, driving with the arms (I notice that doing this works the back as well), pushing off from the back toe, keeping feet close to the ground (knees don't come up much at all), hip movement.
It also helps me to either have something/someone to compete against (my Garmin helps me push, but I also try to set up targets to try to catch up to as fast as I can without running. The other day, another walker was on the other side of the street, about a block away, and I pumped up the speed to pass her, and of course had to keep up that speed for a while so I'd look cool and fast! Another day, it was two women walking on the bike trail with me).
I started walking without music (because I long ago got rid of my Walkman and my portable CD player, and don't have an IPOd), and found that it works well for me. I have enough noise in my head to keep me preoccupied, it's safer, and if I need a push, I just run some song through my head. The other day "Flight of the Bumble Bee" and "Ode to Joy" (the faster parts) helped me power through one interval. (I'd tried "Little Red Caboose," but it wasn't fast enough. Don't ask me where it came from, except that I was on my way towards a railroad track!)
> If you don't mind me
>asking, how tall are you and do you have longish legs?
I'm 5'6" (on a good day) and have just average leg length for my height, I'd say.
> Just
>wondering if a certain technique or physical traits help. I
>once paced myself by following a woman walking on campus at
>lunchhour who was moving at a fair clip ... she took smallish
>steps but could outpace me - I was surprised.
I've learned that most of the fastest racewalkers have fairly short legs compared to their height, because what takes you faster is the speed of your stride, and the longer the lever is (the leg), the harder it is to move it fast. So people with longer legs are faster when just strolling, but people with shorter legs can learn to move them faster more easily. That's why the 90=degree bend in the arms is important as well: a shorter lever that can move faster (and the legs will pick up the same pace as the arms, so if you ever feel like you want to go faster, just start pumping those arms, and the legs will follow), also keeps you from getting swollen/tingly hands.
I think I'm just kind of built for walking: I always walk fairly fast, even when just strolling through the mall, and I've always had a 'wiggle,' which may or may not be the same as the racewalking hip movement--which is forward and back--but it helps.