We've all been there. After days or weeks of idyllic training in perfect conditions, surrounded by like-minded athletes and focused entirely on improvement, you return home. Suddenly, you're facing gray skies, work emails, and a distinct lack of motivation to get out and train. Welcome to the post-camp blues – a phenomenon that can derail even the most dedicated athletes.
Training camps offer a wonderful escape from everyday life. Whether it's cycling through Mallorca's sun-drenched mountains or running on Portugal's coastal trails, these concentrated periods of training provide the perfect environment to build fitness and skills. But as John experienced years ago with his Edinburgh Road Club teammates in Mallorca, paradise has its challenges.
During their two-week camp, tensions inevitably surfaced as fatigue accumulated. Sharing accommodation, disrupted sleep patterns, and the intensity of daily training pushed everyone's limits. Yet despite these challenges, they all made tremendous fitness gains.
The real struggle, however, began after returning home.
The post-camp crash isn't just about missing sunny weather (though that's certainly part of it). Several factors contribute to this common phenomenon:
Training camps typically involve significantly higher volume and intensity than your normal routine. While your body makes adaptations during this period, the accumulated fatigue often doesn't fully manifest until days after you've returned home.
This delayed fatigue response explains why many athletes feel relatively good immediately after camp, only to crash hard 3-5 days later when the true depth of their fatigue surfaces. One of the strongest riders from John's Mallorca trip actually abandoned cycling completely for the rest of the season – an extreme but telling example of how overwhelming this post-camp fatigue can be.
The contrast between training environments can be jarring. After training in shorts and short sleeves under blue skies, returning to cold rain, wind, or snow can crush motivation. This environmental transition affects both physiology and psychology:
Training camps create a bubble where everything revolves around your sport. Your daily focus is singular: train, recover, repeat. Returning to normal life brings:
This abrupt shift from a training-centered existence to juggling multiple responsibilities creates a psychological comedown that can deeply affect motivation.
Despite these challenges, there are proven ways to manage the transition back to normal life while preserving your hard-earned fitness gains:
Plan a progressive training load
Rather than going all-out every day, structure your camp with appropriate progression and recovery days. End the camp with 1-2 easier days to begin recovery before heading home.
Keep a training journal
As well as uploading everything to your training platform write comments about how you felt. This creates both a record of achievement and awareness of your accumulated fatigue.
Maintain basic self-care
Prioritize sleep, hydration, and nutrition even when surrounded by the social aspects of camp life. Small deficits compound quickly during intense training blocks.
Moderate social activities
While evening drinks and late nights can be part of the camp experience for many, excessive alcohol or sleep deprivation will deepen your post-camp hole.
Schedule a buffer period
If possible, return home with 1-2 days before resuming work. This creates space to readjust to your environment and recover from travel fatigue.
Expect the crash
Understanding that motivation and energy will likely dip around day 3-5 after camp helps you prepare mentally for this phase rather than being blindsided.
Plan lighter sessions
Schedule some days of reduced training load after camp. This isn't detraining – it's allowing adaptations to occur and fatigue to dissipate.
Have Indoor options ready
Have indoor training sessions prepared in advance so weather doesn't become an excuse to skip workouts entirely.
Focus on camp gains, not losses
Remind yourself of fitness improvements from the camp rather than fixating on performance decreases during the recovery period.
Set post-camp process goals
Create achievable objectives that maintain consistency without requiring peak performance (e.g., "re-establish training routine" and "recover from training camp load").
Leverage training partners
Schedule sessions with training partners to maintain accountability when motivation wanes.
Apply camp lessons
Identify elements of your camp routine that could enhance your normal training life – whether nutritional strategies, warm-up protocols, or recovery techniques.
John and I have both had experiences of crashing hard after a training camp so here are some things we do to prevent this for our athletes:
Remember that training camps are just one component of your overall development as an athlete. The true value comes not from the isolated fitness bump during those perfect training days, but from how effectively you integrate that work into your longer-term progression.
By preparing for the post-camp blues and having strategies to manage them, you transform what could be a fitness-derailing experience into simply another phase of your athletic journey. The camps that ultimately deliver the greatest long-term benefits aren't necessarily those with the highest training load, but those from which you transition most successfully back to normal life.
Have you experienced the post-camp blues? What strategies have helped you maintain momentum after returning to reality? Share your experiences in the comments below!