Training With Your Cycle: A Guide for Outdoor Women
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You've had weeks where the trail feels effortless — legs light, lungs open, pace strong. And weeks where the same route feels like you're moving through concrete. Same training. Same sleep. Same coffee. There's a reason for that. And it's not fitness.
Women climb mountains. Run trails. Push limits. But most of the training advice they follow was never designed for them. For decades, sports science has been built around the 24-hour hormonal rhythm of men. Women operate on a different clock. Our physiology follows a ~28-day hormonal cycle that affects energy, recovery, metabolism, and performance in measurable, predictable ways that are almost entirely ignored by mainstream training culture.
Ignoring that rhythm means fighting your body. Working with it changes everything.
Female cycle outdoor training: That's where Moonchy comes in. For International Women's Day, we teamed up with the Swiss brand behind cycle-supporting cacao bars designed for women who move. Because performance shouldn't mean pretending you're built like someone else.
Hormones shift across the month. So does your energy, your pain tolerance, your coordination, your recovery speed, and your motivation. Research on female athletes shows that performance capacity genuinely varies across the cycle — not because women are inconsistent, but because the hormonal environment changes significantly between phases. Estrogen supports muscle repair and pain tolerance. Progesterone raises body temperature and increases caloric demand. These aren't inconveniences. They're data.
Instead of forcing the same workout every day, you can adapt your movement to your cycle. Not to slow down. But to move smarter — and get more out of every session.
Energy is lower. Prostaglandins — the compounds that trigger cramping — also increase systemic inflammation. This is the phase most women either push through uncomfortably or feel guilty about scaling back. Neither is necessary. Low-intensity movement during menstruation can actually reduce cramp severity and improve mood. The goal here isn't performance. It's maintenance and recovery.
Get into the fresh air. Keep the body moving gently. Think easy hikes, mobility work, stretching, slow walks outside. Recovery is training too — and treating it as such means you'll hit the next phase with more in the tank.
Estrogen rises steadily. Energy comes back — often noticeably. Many women report feeling more motivated, more coordinated, and more willing to take on new challenges during this phase. That's not a coincidence. Estrogen supports neuromuscular coordination and has a mild mood-elevating effect. Your body's capacity to adapt to training stimulus is at a high point — meaning the work you put in now translates more efficiently into strength and fitness gains.
This is the phase to take on more. Try the new trail. Add a training session. Push the distance. Perfect for trail runs, strength training, longer adventures, and any skill-based movement where coordination matters.
Estrogen peaks, and with it, so does strength and power output. Studies on female athletes consistently show peak performance metrics clustering around ovulation — faster sprint times, higher force production, better reaction time. This is the moment to go for it. Fast efforts, steep climbs, HIIT sessions, personal bests. If there's a goal you've been building toward, this is the window.
One note: elevated estrogen around ovulation also increases ligament laxity slightly, meaning joints — particularly knees and ankles — can be marginally more injury-prone. Warm up properly and don't skip the stability work.
Progesterone rises after ovulation, and with it, your resting metabolic rate increases — your body is burning more calories at rest. Core temperature also rises slightly, which affects endurance performance and perceived effort. In practical terms, the same run will feel harder in the late luteal phase than it did two weeks ago, even if your fitness hasn't changed.
Early luteal (days 15–21) is still great for steady endurance efforts — longer hikes, sustained trail runs, consistent strength work. As you move into late luteal (days 22–28), dial back intensity and focus on consistency over output. This isn't regression. It's a strategy. You're setting up the recovery window your body needs before the cycle resets.
Hormones don't only influence training. They also affect blood sugar regulation, mineral absorption, and energy stability across the day. Iron losses during menstruation increase the need for iron-rich foods in the follicular phase. Magnesium demand rises in the luteal phase, when many women experience cravings, disrupted sleep, and mood shifts. These aren't character flaws — they're physiological signals worth listening to.
Moonchy's organic cacao bars are built around seed cycling — a practice that uses specific seeds and nuts aligned to each cycle phase to support hormonal balance through nutrition. Flax and pumpkin seeds in the follicular phase. Sesame and sunflower in the luteal. Combined with functional ingredients like maca root, ashwagandha, and goji berries, and made with single-origin cacao from Felchlin in Switzerland, they're designed to give your body what it's actually asking for — whether you're heading out for a climb, a long hike, or a trail run.
No added sugar. No artificial anything. Just real ingredients, timed to your biology.
This International Women's Day, NoNormal and Moonchy created a limited bundle for women who don't compromise. The NoNormal Variety Pack — 30 cups of Swiss-made concentrated coffee paste, every flavour we make — paired with two Moonchy bars, one for each phase of your cycle.
Your cycle isn't a limitation. It's your compass. And now you have the fuel to follow it.
Yes. Light to moderate exercise during menstruation is not only safe but can actively reduce cramp severity and improve mood by releasing endorphins. The key is adjusting intensity — this isn't the phase for personal bests, but gentle movement outdoors is one of the best things you can do.
Cycle syncing is the practice of adapting training load, intensity, and nutrition to the four phases of the menstrual cycle. Rather than following a fixed weekly plan, you work with your hormonal rhythm — pushing harder when estrogen is high, recovering more intentionally when progesterone dominates. It's increasingly supported by sports science research on female athlete performance.
Yes, meaningfully. Studies show that perceived effort, thermoregulation, and cardiovascular efficiency all vary across the cycle. Many women find endurance performance peaks in the follicular and early luteal phases, while the late luteal phase requires more effort for the same output. Accounting for this in training planning leads to better results and fewer frustrated sessions.
The luteal phase increases caloric demand slightly as metabolic rate rises. Prioritising magnesium-rich foods (dark chocolate, seeds, leafy greens), complex carbohydrates for blood sugar stability, and anti-inflammatory foods can significantly reduce PMS symptoms and support energy. Seed cycling with sesame and sunflower seeds during this phase is one of the approaches Moonchy's bars are built around.