Thursday, February 01, 2007

Questions for the Nut

In attempt to try and answer some of your (anticipated) questions, I sat down and interviewed myself. It was a rather interesting meeting, not unlike, say a 60 Minutes interview, only a lot less combative and not as well watched.

Question: Madman, how long do you expect this insane event to take you?
Madman: Well, I ran the Ohlone Trail last year going the opposite way which is a longer uphill climb and it took just under 6 hours to complete the 50K/32miles. This year, I'll be running down what was the long uphill portion and only 45K/28 miles, so I expect my running time to be around 5 hours. Then just because I slacked off and ran downhill, I'll then get on my bike and ride 50Km/30 mile for a total of 95km. The biking portion will probably take around 2 hours.

Question: Wait a minute, didn't you say it was a 40Km run and 50Km bike ride?
Madman: Yeah, I know. It was a marketing thing. I figured it was easier to use round numbers. In fact, I'll probably do an even 100km by adding on some more road bike miles.

Question: What's with the kilometer thing?
Madman: It just sounds cooler. And, of course futher. I think 1 kilometer equals 3.28 foot-pounds per square inch or something like that.

Question: You mean 62 miles.
Madman: Sure.

Question: 5 hours, huh. That's kind of slow isn't it. Those guys in Boston run 26.2 miles in less than 3 hours!
Madman: The Boston Marathon is a road race and except for one 280 foot hill, is rather flat. Trail running is all about hills, mud, uneven footing, rocks, hills, and a few more hills just for fun.

Question: Fun?
Madman: Oh yes! I love trail running. I call it fast hiking. I get to see places I'd never get to in a day hike, views that a road runner never sees, and near death encounters with killer rabbits, for example.

Question: So why the road bike portion.
Madman: While I love biking in general, unfortunately EPRD doesn't allow mountain bikes, my favorite ride, on the Ohlone. A road bike, in this case is a necessity. But the ride back Old Calavaras Road is a great and beautiful ride.

Question: Can I ask some more questions?
Madman: Sure next time. Of course, I'd be happy to take questions via the comments section too?

Today's training run was a 10 mile small hill route for 1:24 minutes.

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

A VMS Challenge

Welcome VMS parents! I've posted up the flyer here that many of you recieved in the Wednesday envelope along with some additional details. Over the next couple of days I will try to address your burning questions, notably "Are you stark raving mad?!"

This year, I’m taking on a personal challenge to help raise funds for our school. I need your help.

On April 14th, my personal challenge is to run and bike a combined 90 Kilometers (55.92 miles) as a way to earn money for the VMS Annual Fund.

Here’s my challenge to you. I will match the first $1500 in pledges VMS receives for the run/ride.

This isn’t a registered race; just a challenge I’m offering up for myself and for you. And I’m not going to do it the easy way. I’ll be running from Del Valle Reservoir in Livermore to Mission Peak in Fremont via the Ohlone Wilderness. This follows most of the same course used in the Ohlone Wilderness 50K Trail Race which I've linked to here. The trail is rugged and climbs a total of 7,800 feet in elevation gain over 24+ miles. When I arrive in Fremont, I will then ride my bike the 30+ miles via Old Calavaras road to Pleasanton. It’s one of the toughest run/ride routes in the Bay Area.

I hope you’ll be willing to pledge $0.50 (or more!!) per kilometer. Together we will meet or exceed this year’s annual fund goal .

Please support me by making a pledge. You can pledge here , by submitting a comment below along with your pledge amount, or email me at arracer(at symbol)gmail(dot)com.


Monday, January 29, 2007

Here kitty, kitty

More signs of an active mountain lion in my training area.

On the first half of Sunday's workout, I found fresh mountain lion tracks on the descent into the Kilkare canyon. Since I appeared to be the first to that area (no other fresh tracks given last night's rain) and it just happened to be at my halfway point for the 8 mile run, it seemed like a good enough time to turn around.

I did spend a minute studying the tracks. The lion's paws are about the size of my fist. Not a small cat that one. I took some solace that despite a recent attack in northern California "You can expect on average to be killed by a car at the very minimum 320 times before you expect to be killed by a mountain lion. So you really shouldn't start worrying about a mountain lion killing you until at least 160 of your hiking companions have been killed by automobiles."

After the 8 mile run, Racer-X joined me for the mountain biking portion. We put in a nicely paced 11.2 mile loop covering some of the same area as my run averaging 9.3mph--not bad given the trail was pretty wet and the technical climbs were "traction challenged".

Total time 2:21
Total run: 8 miles for 1:09
Total bike: 11.2 miles for 1:12

Monday, January 22, 2007

A run, a ride, and a cat

Sunday was Big Hill + Bike day. Back to the Ridge for a 7 mile run up and back. There were a ton of hikers and bikers on the trail but my mind focused on a steady distance run pace. I was worried about the ankle, but on the climb up my ankle felt just fine. As I hit the top and moved into some roller coaster segments I started to feel some muscle burn in the left leg along the shin and down to the toe. I was tightening up, dagnabit! At mile 4 on the return loop, I did a quick stretch and worked the toe out slowly. A quarter mile later it let me go and the down hill run to the trailhead wasn't a problem. A vestige of the ankle tightness? Something brought on in the change of training routine? Who knows but at least I avoided hopping down the trail like a one legged post hole jumper.

Despite the muscle, it was a good day. The weather was fantastic. The wind was whipping up which kept temps from getting too cold overnight and gave us the added benefit of 120 mile views to the Sierras. The snow capped ridge line around Tahoe and Yosemite stood out. Let's hope we get many a winter view like that, but the signs aren't good.

Back at the trailhead, I readied for the bike portion of the route. Clipped in, I began the 2.1 mile climb back up to the top of the ridge. Some initial tightness from the run smoothed out and the climbs that day were right where I would hope--strong, fast and in the groove, baby! I had my ride Zen on that day and hit all the uphill technical and fast downhill turns tight and right on the line. On the back side I came across quite a sight. At the T where riders usually turn back on the loop return were dozens of the largest cat tracks I've seen yet. It was a good size mountain lion track with pads the size of my fist. The cat had been there recently. Bike tracks from previous rider (some whom I heard only minutes before) were overlayed by the mountain lion. I tracked it for about 50-60 yards down the fire road with prints going in two different directions. I should say I tracked it while riding a pace just short of peak exertion and lung explosion. I figured that predator was going to have to work for its supper.

I also made a note not to wear a wool vest and to lose the Eau de Mouton while running or riding.

Total training time: 2:15
Total run: 1:01
Run miles: 7.2 miles
Total bike: 1:14
Bike miles: 11.1 miles

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Substitution

Friday's routine called for a 7 mile small hill run. However, my left ankle woke up angry at me and barked with some minor pain on every step. It wasn't bad and probably something I could have run through but that seemed like a mistake. I suspected it was some minor muscle inflammation brought on by the amp up of my training. Turns out that was probably exactly it. I've avoided any running injuries for several years now by not over-training or adding too many miles too quickly. Despite having a nice 20 mile/week run base, I'm worried I may have tried to pour on too much new activity too soon.

Instead of the run, I grabbed the road bike and headed out for and hour+ ride as an aerobic substitution. I threw in a good long hill up Kilkare Canyon , a local training favorite, along with a few smaller ones just to make sure that I got some equivalency. And all without stressing out the left ankle.

The ride was excellent. I felt very strong and was able to keep a 17+mile pace despite a long ascent up Kilkare.

Later that night I spent some time rubbing muscles along the calf, chin, and ankle. What really surprised me was how tight the muscle was along my foot when I stretched my big toe! Wow. There was a lot of tension down there.

It's still a little tight, but I'll do some more massaging tonight and hopefully it will be ready for tomorrow's 7 mile Big Hill + 10 mile Bike ride.

Total time: 1:14
Miles: 21.1 @17.1 mph avg

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Dream, Focus


In a long training cycle, when do you dream and when do you focus on the work at hand?

Sometimes I find I am zeroed in on my immediate actions: regulate my breathing, tune my pace, adjust my cadence, up my work level, tweak my tempo, glide, float, focus.

Sometimes I find myself deep in problem solving, dreaming my way through a problem, acting out on a plan, envisioning what I will do, taking in the view around me, tuning out the pain, tuning out the repetitive, anything but the now.

Yesterday, the routine was my first through the medium intensity of weights and jump rope intervals. I was totaly focused on form, posture, rhythm, tuning, and feedback. Today's 5 mile run was all about being somewhere else, distraction, and daydreaming.

In the first instance, I followed what experts describe as the focus of athletes need to get in the "zone" that results in performance gains. Bio-feedback techniques help train athletes to focus their efforts, achieve the zone, and excel by "de-icing" the body from the performance robbing aspects of stress.

Daydreaming or distraction may be considered "useless suffering" in that the athletes focus isn't on improving the performance but instead finding distraction from performance impacting stress. Or just taking in the beautiful scenery.

But experts agree. Daydreaming and not finding the zone negatively impacts your performance.

It sure did for today's 5 mile run. While it was okay, and the beauty of the cold dawn sky and leafless trees was inspiring, daydreaming as distraction from what clearly was not a stress-filled run only led to an "okay" and slower than typical outing. In contrast, yesterday's focused strength effort and accompanying 8 mile bike ride stands out as comparatively effortless and productive. On the other hand, a day dream here and there helps me when the training routine is long. And sight-seeing is another factor in my love for trail running even if it means that my mind is less focused on performance and more on what is around me and calls me there in the first place.

Yesterday's workout: 1hr
Medium Intensity strength workout: 30 minutes with one minute 3 cycles of Lat Pulls, pushups, squat/curl/thrusts with 1.5 min jump ropes between each routine.
Bike: 8.7 miles for 30 minutes @17.4 mph average

Today's workout: 42 min
Run: 5.2 miles @ 7:58 avg pace

Monday, January 15, 2007

Off and Running

Yesterday, Sunday, was the first day of training using the new plan. While I'm not "officially" slated to start until this week, I modified the Sunday progam to get a jump on the new schedule.

Ok, I admit it was more about not having the patience to wait until next week.

Sunday was another chilly one with the cold air mass from Canada still sending morning temps into the 20's. It was 32 when I headed out the door to load the bike rack onto the car. My intent was to run 5+ on big hills followed by 10 miles on my mountain bike up at my local training spot on the Pleasanton Ridge. I estimated about 2 hours of gone time with my wife as I headed out the door.

At the trail head by 10am and on-time, I began the 2.1 mile ascent to the top of the Ridge. My goal was to hit the gate at the 2.75 mark for a turn-around and descent back to the staging area for the second half of training. About a 1/4 mile up the trail, I remembered I had left my bike's front wheel in the garage in a distracted moment. Unless I was going to pull off a 10 mile wheelie, my plan had just changed.

The run was beautiful in the crisp morning air and while the trail had a few hikers and bikers, I was pretty much alone. I kept a pretty loose run but was still bothered by a pace that put me on top nearly 2 minutes behind my fastest ascent time. That was my "type-A" bad training demon talking, I reminded myself as I resisted the urge to turn up my pace. My average ascent pace was around 10:30 for the 700 foot climb up so I had nothing to be concerned about.

At the turn around point, I had reformulated the biking portion plan. I cast off the idea of going home and retriving my front wheel for the mountain bike and instead would jump on my road bike instead after the short drive to the house. Not quite a back to back run-ride, but close enough.

I got home and quickly transitioned to my road bike after a quick change out of my sweat soaked running shirt. It was about 39 degrees when I hit the street yet my wind breaker kept me nice and comfortable (props to the Pearl Izumi Blizzard jacket...the thing rocks!). I peddaled a mainly flat 10 mile section of road around town but at a fast pace. I was looking to maintain and 18mph average. Some hill sections killed that goal in the end, but it was a good 1.3 hour work out total.

Total time: 1:20
Total run time: 0:42
Total run distance: 5.5 miles
Average run pace: 8:13 per mile
Total bike time: 0:35
Total bike distance: 10.2 miles
Average bike pace: 17.5 mph

Friday, January 12, 2007

History repeats-The Plan

Dan my trainer and advisor in all things training reviewed by plan for my Ohlone Beast. Once again, Dan puked on it.

Dan's plan was to save me from myself. The primary goal was to prevent me from over-training and increasing risk of damage to knees and joints, but at the same time, prepare me for that added cardio-vascular impact that a back-back 40K trail run and 50K road ride is going to have on me.

His plan initially cut out one of my favorite 5 mile recovery runs. We negotiated. I begged. He relented some what. We have a Plan(tm).

Monday is a rest day. Tuesday's alternate with strength training plus a bike ride one week and a medium intensity cardio/strength routine plus bike ride. Wednesday's I get my 5 mile run. Thursday's alternate between a 20 minute ramp-up ride or a 20 minute sprint interval on the stationary bike. Friday's I'm running small hills with a rest on Saturday. Sunday is a big training day: big hill runs back to back with a bike ride.

Scheduling time on Tuesday is going to be a challenge. Sunday is going to be asking for some family sacrifice as I eat into their time. This may be bigger than I thought. It is a Beast.

And now.. the Plan:


Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
Jan 15 (off) ME+JR+B8 run 5 flat RU run 7 h (off) run 7 H+B10
Jan 22 (off) S20/5+B10 run 5 flat SI run 8 h (off) run 8 H+B10
Jan 29 (off) ME+JR+B12 run 5 flat RU run 10 h (off) run 10 H/B10
Feb 05 (off) S20/5+B15 run 5 flat SI run 12 h (off) run 15 H/B15
Feb 12 (off) ME+JR+B15 run 5 flat RU run 6 h (off) run 8 H+B10
Feb 19 (off) S20/5+B20 run 5 flat SI run 8 h (off) run 10 H+B15
Feb 26 (off) ME+JR+B20 run 5 flat RU run 10 h (off) run 16 H/B20
Mar 05 (off) S20/5+B25 run 5 flat SI run 12 h (off) run 18 H/B25
Mar 12 (off) ME+JR+B25 run 5 flat RU run 10 h (off) run 20 H+B20
Mar 19 (off) S20/5+B25 run 5 flat SI run 8 h (off) run 22 H+B25
Mar 26 (off) ME+JR+B30 run 5 flat RU run 10 H (off) run 16 H+B15
Apr 02 (off) S20/5+B10 run 5 flat SI (off) (off) run 4 H+ B5
Apr 09 (off) ME+JR run 5 flat (off) (off) (off) Ohlone Run

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Nice run

It was 32 when I headed out the door. Two days of rest had an obvious impact on my running as I had an effortless first mile at 7:20. I tried to dial it back somewhat for the remainder of the run but I keep finding my body wants to run at a higher heart rate and faster stride. I was consistently hitting 152-157bpm with a 90 ppm cadence much higher than I should maintain for really long runs.

I ran jacketless with only a Sporthill zone 2 shirt and was comfortable the whole route. Tomorrow is forecast to be in the 20's so I doubt I'll go so light.

Running street side, which my route primarily consisted of, is a suck. I so much prefer the trail. No exhaust, no rush of cars, no high volume tire noise.

Total time 1:03
Distance: approximately 7.75 miles
Pace: ~8:15 average over small hill route

Annoyed a little

Ok, it's a little silly, but my first week officially on my training plan and I miss my very first scheduld workout. Not a big deal, but just a little irritating. An early morning work issue threw a wrench in the schedule.

Today's a 6 mile small hills run, so perhaps I'll get back on track with that.

Temps are just below freezing but no clouds in the sky.... more later perhaps after the run.....