I am sure that many who have read anything about periodisation have seen those graphical representations of a season with the gradually rising plain (the base) moving into a series of ever taller hills each followed by a valley (themselves a little higher than the last) until the highest peak is reached (hopefully in conjunction with the main event) and then falling into the valley of the off season.
So the bigger the aerobic base hopefully the more stress our body will be able to handle (without collapsing) as we build the peak. BUT and there is always a BUT

eg I have a goal that is about 2 years out, so obviously if I start building the base now then I will be able to build a higher peak come the crunch, yes



I think what we need to do is build a base, climb the mountain and then traipse down the other side BUT and here is the key, we dont go back down the way we came up, we go down the other side of the mountain to a valley that is higher than the one we started in .... we hang around and smell the roses and then we begin the building process again and climb the next mountain and so on and so on.
The base determines not only the height of the mountain in the immediate future but the height at which we start building again next season. If we build and build and build the base, one year, two years, three years, without ever bringing it to a peak then what we are doing is in fact limiting the height of the peak that we will achieve when we eventually start to build.
IMHO George