Sunday, November 15, 2009

Remembrance Day


I found myself with a rare mid week day off due to Remembrance Day falling on a Wednesday. I looked around for something to do and found a race in Vancouver. The race info said the race was taking place at Brockton Oval, which is a track. So I thought it would be fun to run 8k on a track.
Except the race started at Brockton Oval and was actually a trail run. Although I train on a hills course I wasn't prepared for an actual trail run. Against my better judgement I decided to run the race anyway.
Halfway through the race I was on pace for a 34 minute 8K but I lost focus as I was thinking about my awesome pace and tripped on a rock as I was running downhill. I sprained my ankle pretty bad.
I sat there for a few minutes in pain and disappointment. One of the many runners who passed me asked if I had tripped on a rock. When I told him I had he responded with a sympathetic "Son of a b*%#@, eh?!" Honestly, that made me feel alot better.
Eventually I was able to put some weight on the ankle and even started a halting jog. It hurt but I was determined to finish the remaining 4K to honor my grandfathers who served in WWII. But I was soon discovered by a race marshall who advised me to stop running while she radioed for the medical car. Discretion being the better part of valor I decided that I had given it a good effort but needed to not dammage the ankle any more. The ride back to the start was so embarrassing. So with my head hung in shame I achieved my first DNF.
The xray the next day showed a small avulsion fracture so I'll be on a crutch for the next two weeks and then re xray it and go from there. Hopefully the next x ray will be fine and I can start working back to my base mileage.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Adjust or Run in the Dark!


Daylight savings is wreaking havoc with my running schedule. That, and alot of early morning staff meetings at work means that I have to do more training at night than I am used to.
Today I was running 4oom intervals after sunset at Oak Bay Track. It was dark enough that I didn't see the other runner who started doing laps with me. When I passed her, she looked something like this...so I think I need to get to bed earlier so I can run in daylight...

Friday, November 6, 2009

Joy in Running


For some reason I forgot that I parked my car at my wife's Grandma's house yesterday. I took a cab home from the airport instead. I didn't even realize it until my wife got home last night and asked "Where is your car?" So my punishment was to run all the way to Grandma's house this morning to get the car. Its 8 miles.
It wouldn't have been so bad except it was raining sideways this morning. But sometimes you got to run in the rain. Except the rain stopped about five minutes into the run. The sun came out as I was running on the lakeshore. Sometimes you just gotta feel the joy of running.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Competition



Yesterday was another grind at Cedar Hill Chip Trail. I ran five laps. 10.88 miles. 1160 feet of elevation. I started at sunset and finished in the dark. I saw another fast runner doing laps in the other direction on my 2-4th lap. Having a rival always brings out my best. I never wanted him to see me slowing down. And I wanted to outlast him. I didn't see him on my fifth lap.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Gettin' Sweaty in the Parking Lot


University of Victoria's track was closed to the public yesterday. So instead of cancelling my speed training, I decided to run laps in the adjacent parking lot. The outside loops looked to be about 400 meters and there wasn't alot of traffic so...why not? As it turns out, the loop was 0.22 miles (a 400 metre track is 0.25 miles) so it was fairly accurate.
It was a little cold so I wore a warm up jacket and hoodie to the track. When I saw that the track was closed, I took off my jacket and hoodie and placed it on the grass and started doing laps. My friend Steve was with me and kept me company.
It was alot of fun. A couple of college kids were rollerblading in the parking lot too. Only a couple of cars entered the lot and I was never in danger of getting hit by a car. I did have to chase a guy away who was rifling through my jacket. I was finishing my last rest lap before my final 400m lap. I saw him wandering around and then he actually grabbed my jacket to check it out. I started yelling at him "Hey!" "Hey!" "Hey!" before he finally noticed me. "Thats my stuff." He dropped it pretty quick and made some lame excuse about how he was just taking it to turn into lost and found. He eventually drove off in a beater van.
That little exchange must have given me some sort of energy boost because I ran my final lap in 59 seconds!

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Be Patient


I woke up feeling fresh and ready for the six minute challenge. The mile is a drama in four acts. Todays playlist was "If God Could Send His Angels" for the first 4 minutes and finishing with "What Shall We Die For." The first quarter mile went by very quickly and comfortably as did the second quarter. The third quarter is about hanging in there and unfortunately today I only made it to .62 mile when I had to take a 30 second pause before I finished off the run. After the break I felt more mental resolve, which is encouraging because I can work on the mental part of the run as long as I am physically prepared.

I have to be patient. I remember when I could only walk 3.0 mph for seven minutes. And I was in pain for the last minute! I just kept plugging away and believing that my body was changing and adapting to the challenge. The first time I actually ran for a full twenty minutes (at a challenging 5.0 mph!) was an amazing accomplishment and I know I will run 10 mph for forty minutes some day. I just have to be patient and keep trying.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

I'll Miss This Run


Todays workout called for 4 laps of Cedar Hill Chip Trail. Lots of dogs but they are mostly on leashes. It was raining and windy the first two laps but I emerged from the trees to brilliant sunlight on the third lap. This trail is the perfect place to get your brain and legs stronger. I hope I find a replacement. As much as it is a grinding 8.66 miles, I will miss this run.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Rainy Day at the Track


I love training in the rain. Today was a track speed workout and it was raining and cold. Perfect. Because while everybody else is at home in bed hoping the sun comes out, I'm outside training. Plus, nobody wants to walk their dog in this weather, which is fine with me. Actually, about halfway through my run some dude with a dog showed up at the track and waddled off a lap and then ran away...
The plan calls for me to start pushing some paces now. Especially on track day because the distances are smaller I need to be pushing the pace while keeping my form and cadence. Todays workout felt great, first four laps in 102, 100, 100 and 95 seconds. Next three laps in 98, 93, 95 seconds. Next two laps 92 seconds each. Final lap in 78 seconds, which is three seconds off my goal.
I seem to be running more comfortably but as fast at the 184 bpm cadence (Civilization 4) as I am at the 208 cadence (Bad). Likely this just means that I am not fit enough to maintain my stride length at 208 bpm. I'll have to keep an eye on this when it comes to choosing my race day playlist.
All in all a fun day. Looking forward (kind of) to a tough workout tomorrow.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Learn to Suffer


Paul Tergat said "the great runners aren't scared of pain, the good ones are."

Saturday, October 10, 2009

I Think I Need A Week Off...

Todays 9 mile run marked the end of another three week cycle. I completed 14/15 planned workouts. My legs are tired and my new shoes have given both feet fierce blisters. Can't say how glad I am for planned rest weeks...

Friday, October 9, 2009

A New Run Every Time


Yesterday was my treadmill 6.2 mile run at 2.0 incline run at 8:00 mile pace. I use this run to simulate the mental challenge of running the 10K race. Physically it is an endurance run where I focus on form.

The run teaches me about my mental stages in a race. The first stage is pre-run. The alarm goes off at 6AM. My body wants to sleep. My brain starts rolling over all the usual excuses..."I had a stressful day yesterday", "I'm dehydrated", "My body needs to rest today". Finally I have to remember why I run and hence why I need to get up. Next stage is mile 1. The run starts and I can feel my heart rate increase and my breathing becomes harder. Mentally I start rolling through all the reasons that today I just need to run 1 mile or 3.1 miles instead of the full 6.2. By mile 2, my mind has accepted that I am running. But the excuses start up again as I near 3.1 miles (5K). "I really just want to be a 5K racer." Or, "Its okay to cut back just this once..." But I focus on whatever song I am running to and make sure that I stay on cadence and on good form until I am past the 3.1 mile mark.

After the 3.1 mile mark, I magically begin to feel more resolved. I begin to visualize the race. My favorite vision is me finishing the Edmonton Marathon. I am either the winner or setting a new Canadian record. My run is the final 10K of the race. I am racing against the greats...Gebrselassie, Wanjiru, Ryan Hall and Bekele. Every two miles I drop one of them behind until finally it is just me and (usually) Wanjiru in a sprint to the finish. I imagine the crowd's interest increasing as word spreads that a Canadian is in the lead pack. I see the lead car with the time posted driving down the street and the crowd gets anxious to see if I am still behind it. They cheer when they see that not only am I still in the lead, but I am running strong. The crowds are growing as I run down Whyte Ave and the River Valley. They hold their breath to see who leads the race at the top of Victoria Park Road. Excited children start to run with me in the final push to Commonwealth Stadium. Finally I run into the dark tunnel that leads into the stadium and the final 400m finishing lap. The crowd chants "Ca-Na-Da" when they see me emerge onto the track in the lead as thousands of cameras flash. My wife waits at the finish.

And then the race--and the morning run--are over. The doubts and excuses are gone, replaced by joy, confidence and anticipation of the next chance to race.

Monday, October 5, 2009

New Shoes


Todays workout called for 4 laps of Cedar Hill Park chip trail. According to the Garmin, it was 1100 total feet of elevation gain over 8.68 miles. A tough run but I managed to make the last lap my fastest. Just as I was starting the first lap another runner passed me on the way up. He wasn't going much faster than me and I was tempted to pass him back but I decided to stick to the plan. It is good training for race situations because there will always be somebody faster and I got to learn to run my plan and not just react to other runners.


Anyhow, during the run I noticed that my shins were hurting more than usual. This is usually a sign that my shoes have worn out. I have had these pairs for 4 months and put alot of miles on them so I'm not surprised. So right after the run I hauled my sweaty self into Running Room for new shoes.


I usually run in Nike Air Pegasus. I like them because they fit my narrow foot and have enough midsole padding. They are also on the lighter side which is nice. So I picked up another pair. I also picked up a pair of Asics GT 2140 Trail shoes. Winter is coming which means alot of running in mud uphill and downhill so I hope these will provide a bit more grip.


Sitting at the bottom of the shoe shelf was a pair of track shoes on sale for $30. I have never run in spikes before but I am planning alot more track work. So I went ahead and bought them too. New Balance MDS 330. You even have to screw in the spikes yourself. Can't wait to try them out.


When it was all over, I found myself charging $350 on shoes. What have I become?


Sunday, October 4, 2009

Track Workout


Sundays are really my favorite day because the workout is short and different. Today was sunny with a little wind. There was a group of dog walkers at the track which always bothers me. Honestly, miles and miles of city sidewalks and parks and you have to walk your mutt on the track.

I call todays workout cutdowns because each successive interval gets shorter in distance and faster in pace. Interval 1 is 105 second 1/4 miles X 4 (7 minute mile). Interval 2 is 97 seconds 1/4 miles X 3 (6:30 mile pace for 3/4 mile). Interval 3 is 90 seconds 1/4 miles X 2 (6:00 mile pace) and the final 1/4 mile is 75 seconds (5:00 mile pace.) 1/2 mile rest between intervals. Pretty easy workout but fun to try to hit that 75 at the end. In case you are wondering, the world record for the 400m is 43 seconds and change.

All the intervals felt very comfortable today. I ran faster than my paces for intervals 1-3 but ran the last 400m lap in 80 seconds which is an official Garmin GPS personal best (my best unofficial time is 68 seconds...).

Tomorrow it is back to the grind. "The Grind" is a good nickname for the run because it is 4 laps of Cedar Hill Park Chip Trail.I think its about 8.8 miles of hill training. Basically mountain running up hill then downhill steep. Lots of fun once its over.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Lochside Repeats

I don't know why but I always get anxious before my big runs.

The plan today called for 5 X 1.5 mile repeats at 8:00 minute pace (12 minutes per lap). I learned from the Times Colonist that one of my problems is starting out too slow so I set the playlist for a slightly faster cadence ("When You Are A Soldier"). So as I started out on the first lap I noticed that I was running fast but not feeling much effort. This continued until the end when I noticed I was going to finish in about 10:30 so I purposely slowed down and still finished at about 11:10. Two minute rest and back at it. Every lap felt great, not pushing. There was a slight wind on the return laps which magnified the effort but didn't affect my time.

All in all a good work out.

Tomorrow is cutdowns at the track. I am hoping to hit 75 second quarter mile on the last lap.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Still Running!

Wow I can't believe I haven't updated this since July!

Looking back the race in Utah was awesome. But I told my wife that there would be no more travelling to races until I break 40 minutes locally. Seriously, that trip to Utah cost me around $5000 in lost income and travel costs and all for a 48 minute finish.

Anyhow, I am training now for the 2010 Times Colonist. I feel I have unfinished business with the race.

Happily I have found a training regimen that works for me and my current travel and work schedule. Sunday is track intervals. Monday is hill training mostly at Cedar Hill Park. Wednesday is speed training on the treadmill. Thursday is easy distance run on the treadmill and Saturday is 1.5 mile repeats at Lochside. Tuesday and Friday are rest days. The treadmill runs are done at a minimum incline of 2.0. Every fourth week is a rest week with reduced distances but a run on each work out day.

I have seen good results so far. I even clocked a 68 second quarter mile at the track a couple of weeks ago but lately have been settling for 81 seconds.

This week was rough 'cause I'm at a conference in Nanaimo and have to run earlier than usual. This morning's treadmill 6.2 was mentally tough. I was tempted to stop at 3.1 miles but am happy I pushed through it.

Monday, July 6, 2009

The Sweetest 6 Seconds

My chip time for the Provo Freedom Run 10K was 47:54.

After training and obsessing about this race for the past 10 months it was nice to get the race over with. I was confident that I had run every training run I was supposed to, including 10 milers and sprint intervals.

The night before the race I could not sleep at all. I didn't even doze. I laid awake in my hotel all night tortured by waking "what if" dreams. What if my playlist was too slow, maybe it was too fast, maybe I should insert "Roll Tide" into the playlist. What if people roughed me up or tripped me because I was wearing a Canada shirt? What if I didn't drink enough water last night, what if I drank too much and needed a break during the race? What if I started out too fast, what if I started too slow and got boxed in? What if we couldn't find parking and I had to jog 2-3 miles to the start? What if I got up too early, what if I got up too late? A thunderstorm rolled through at about 4AM with some rain. What if the roads were wet and I slipped on the downhill...?

As the restlessness wore on my head began to spin and I got a low grade headache.

The hotel wake up call at 530AM was most welcome. The "what if's" stopped and I decided to get out of bed. I was so tired.

The roads were dry and the sky was now clear. We found parking easily. Nobody even noticed my Canada shirt, let alone objected to it. I went for a warm up jog and felt surprisingly fast and awake. But my mouth was very dry.

I lined up in the area marked "7 minute mile pace". A thin black man, dubbed "The Kenyan", finished his warm up and lined up at the front of the pack. As I expected, slow runners began lining up in my area. Usually I politely tolerate this, but today I pushed closer to the front ahead of them. I didn't have time to weave past them at the beginning. The thin unshaven unshowered man next to me had a jersey on with a little "New Zealand" in the upper left chest. "Looks like I'm not the only non American in the race...", I joked. He chuckled nervously. He managed to share that he was from New Zealand but living in Nevada and was in town to visit relatives but really was here to run a race. He was worried about starting out too fast...

The race began after a ten minute delay. I pushed my way to the starting line. No more Mr. Nice Guy and getting passed by everybody at the beginning. This was a new philosophy: start like Seabiscuit. I was going to push the first mile, hoping to finish that mile in 7 minutes, then push the downhill section which was almost another mile, and finally settle into a 7:30 pace for the rest of the race. The point was to get ahead of the crowd so as to not waste energy trying to maneuver through them or being boxed in.

The first mile was uphill. The mouth dryness was bothering me. I didn't think it was dehydration as it had started before the race, but it wasn't helping at all. Still, I pushed on and managed to finish the first mile in 7 minutes. Now on to the downhill section I had been practicing for months. Most recreational runners are uncomfortable on downhills, but I am confident and comfortable with them. And I didn't slip. I finished mile 2 at 14:15.

Now the race flattened out until mile 6. My mouth finally moistened up at about the three mile mark. That first 3 miles was finished at 21:22. At the time I realized vaguely that it was a personal best time. Unfortunately, the lack of sleep prevented me from realizing that A. It was a 43 minute 10K pace, much faster than my predicted finish and hence likely too fast and B. It was a 7:07 mile pace, again too fast to expect to sustain. I think that even had my sleep deprived brain been able to accomplish the simple math, the ability to decide to slow down was not there. So I continued to race at that pace.

Mile 4 was finished at 29:12, a 7:15 mile pace. Mile 5 was finished at 37:34, a 7:31 mile pace. I glanced at my watch at the five mile mark and noticed I was there at 37 minutes. My goal was 45 minutes. I thought I was on track to make my time, but again, my sleep deprived brain could not do the math. I needed to finish that final 1.2 miles in 7 minutes 26 seconds in order to make my goal. That is a 6:12 per mile pace. And the final mile was uphill.

It was a moot point anyway. The wheels fell off after 5 miles. In running terms, I bonked. I couldn't even hear my playlist cadences, let alone move my feet that fast. I reverted to my natural resting pace. My head started telling me to stop or walk. But then I saw my mom and niece and nephew waving and cheering for me. And somewhere ahead near the finish my wife waited. "No," I thought, "I may not be running my fastest, but there is no way I am going to let my family watch me walk to the finish." I also realized that to them it appeared that I was running hard. So I stood up straight and started swinging my arms and pushing as hard as I could.

By the time I could see the finish line, the race clock read 47:40 with 40 yards left to run. I could not accept that I had come ten months and hundreds of training miles only to run 48 minutes or longer. This race had to be a personal best, if only by a few seconds. Other runners were sprinting past me to the finish, inspiring me to push on. I could see the seconds ticking down as I got closer...45, 46, 47...my legs and lungs burned...50, 51, 52...waves of nausea passed over me as I fought off the dry heaves...53...Once last glance at the clock before I crossed the line showed 47 minutes.

My head was spinning. I could barely stand, let alone keep moving as one of the race volunteers shouted at me to get out of the finish area. Somehow I walked to the chip removal area where a young lady snipped the timing chip off my shoe. The dry heaves began again. I wandered to a picnic pavilion and laid down on the concrete floot. The world was spinning.

47:54. I had beat my personal best by 6 seconds. On no sleep. At 4600 feet of elevation. Uphill for the first and last mile.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

10 Mile Training Run

I can tell that the hills are making me stronger. My weekend ten milers include a downhill for the first 1.5 miles, two large hills in a row for mile 4, steep uphill a mountain for mile 5.5-6.5, steep downhill for mile 6.5 to 7 and mile 9-10 are uphill. No more flat 10 miles for me.

I like the down hill portions. They are perfect because the most important parts of the Freedom Run are downhill: the start and the finish. I am working on making the initial downhill mile my fastest. That is, I run as hard as I can in that first mile to keep the crowd behind me and then settle into my race pace. I am practicing running that first mile hard without being winded on my subsequent miles. I can see improvement in that area.

Also, I am working on running hard on the final uphill miles -- at race pace if possible. Because if you're not tired at mile 9 then you won't be tired at mile 6.

I feel strong. I feel confident. I am still excited to run the race in Provo.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

D-Day

Not many people remember, but today is the anniversary of D-day. I had no relatives who stormed the beach in Normandy, but I had two great uncles who fought in the Pacific. One was wounded in Bataan and the other was wounded at Guadacanal. I thought about them today on my ten mile run.

Mile 5 of the run is up a mountain about 400 feet. I pretended they were hills at Juno Beach and kept telling myself to "get up those hills."

I also saw two fawns that were just barely bigger than a chihuahua. I stopped to watch them for a few seconds before they scampered into the bushes.

Physically I felt fine once I started running, but it was a struggle to get out of bed and get moving. Feet, knees, legs and everything else felt really good. I ran the ten miles in 1 hour 21 minutes, which is one of my better runs.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Countdown to Provo

July 4th is coming soon. About 4 more weeks to train. My training schedule is now simple: 30 mile weekends and two speed sessions. I will run 10 miles on Saturday, Sunday and Monday morning. Tuesday and Friday are rest days. Wednesday will be 1/2 mile intervals with a 2 minute rest on a treadmill at 9.0 mph. Thursday is an 8 mile run on a treadmill. The first two miles at 7.0 mph, the next two miles at 7.5 the next two at 8.0 and the final two miles at 8.5 mph. All sessions are followed by ninety minutes of stretching, IT band massage and ice.

I can't say I'm nervous about the race, but I am thinking about it all the time. Running the course last year was a great idea because now I can visualize the race and how I want to run. I imagine myself charging out of the start and running hard for the first mile to avoid getting boxed in like at the Times Colonist. I am running hills now and imagining that they are the big hill at the finish of the race. I am at peace with the race and confident that if I complete my training schedule then I will physically be ready to do well. I have also come to peace with my own limits and no longer feel burdened by having to win the race. If I get 45 minutes in Provo I will feel great.

Physically I feel great. I have no injuries at this point. I just bought new shoes and they should be broken in but still fresh by July. I am sleeping well and have no symptoms of overtraining at this point.

I can't wait to start my 10 milers this weekend.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Times Colonist Part II: Be Like Seabiscuit!

I have admit that I was very disappointed in my race at the TC 10K. I honestly was expecting 40-45 minutes. But I have reconstructed a time line of mistakes and what I learned from them so that I am better for my goal race, the Provo Freedom Run 10K on July 4.

6 days before the race: I decide that my taper will consist of one hard ten miler the Monday before the race and then no running at all for five days. The thinking was that my legs will be fully rested for the run.

3 days before the race: I decide that my race plan will be to run the first 5K slow and the second 5K fast. The rationale is that by purposely running slower I don't risk burning out in the first 1/2 of the race, and I had some fast 5K training runs in the three weeks leading up to the race. If I could save some energy for the final 5K I could rip off another fast 5K.

The night before the race: I decide that my cadences will be 184 bpm for the first 5K and then jump to 196bpm and 224bpm for the final 5K.

The day of the race: I wake up at 6:00 AM for an 830 AM start. There was no rationale, I just couldn't sleep any more...

So here we are at the race. Actually 13000 people is alot more than I thought. I was warming up by running around the block but had to stop when the crowds of runners got too thick to run in. So I decided to walk up to the race start and eventually found a quiet corner where a couple of elite women runners were warming up. You could tell they were elite because they had impressive warm up stretches, cool sunglasses and shiny singlets. That and their race number said "elite".

So with about fifteen minutes to the race start I decided to get to my official starting area before it got too crowded. My race number was green because my estimated finish time was 45 minutes. So I was proud to line up in the green area near the front...until I look around and see just about every color lined up in my area. The nerve! I worked all winter for that race start position and these posers were crowding my space. I should have taken that for a clue.

Mayor Fortin was speaking before the race. Telling lame jokes etc and at one point even welcomed everybody to the tenth annual Times Colonist 10K race...except all the marketing posters, flags, t shirts etc said 20th Annual Times Colonist 10K. I don't think anyone else was listening to him though...

So we counted down the start and off we went. So here is where my decisions started to play a role. My five day taper had made my legs a little stiff. Combine that with a decision to start slow and me forgetting to start my stop watch meant that instead of running the first kilometer in 4:30, I ran it in 6:00! Except I didn't know that when I got to the 1K marker, because I hadn't started my stop watch...I guesstimated that I had run it in 5:00.

Also, I underestimated the size of the crowd. Its one thing to let 400 people run past you at the beginning and then to fight your way past the crowd later like I did at last years Victoria Marathon 8K. But it is quite another problem to let thousands bolt past you at the start and then try to fight your way through them later on. It was a disaster. The course quickly narrowed and I spent kilometer 2-5 boxed in at a 5-6 minute kilometer pace.

I hit the second half of the race discouraged by my time and worn out. I wasn't worn out from the pace, I was worn out by the mental effort of running through crowds. Then my fast cadences started. The problem was that although I had run to each individual song before in training, I had never run to each song in a row for a full sustained 5 kilometers. It became readily apparent that I could not maintain the pace. Unfortunately, I had not put any backup medium tempo cadences in the playlist, so I had to revert back to my slow tempo cadence the rest of the way. I pushed as hard as I could, but could never get into a rhythm. I was happy to cross the line at 48, because it sure felt alot harder than that.

Afterwards I got some advice from my brother Aaron. He races triathlons. First of all, it was nice to have another athlete to discuss the race with. Non competitive runners just don't understand what its like to train for months and then come up with a disappointing effort when it matters. Anyhow, he pointed out that the problem was traffic management and race tactics. Without going into details the new strategy is to attack the first kilometer and then run the race, attacking when the course allows and settling when it doesn't.

Its not my style to run hard at first. I need a couple of kilometers to get loosened up then I take off. But that is what cost me the race. A friend at church pointed out that Seabiscuit was the same way. Remember Seabiscuit? In order for him to race War Admiral, they had to retrain him to run hard right at he beginning. So I have to be like Seabiscuit. I have to train to run hard at the start without dying at the finish.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Times Colonist Part 1

Today I ran my first big race of the year, the Times Colonist 10K. It is a good gauge of how I am doing after my winter training. My unofficial time (i.e. my own stopwatch) was 47:10. It was a fairly comfortable run that started out with me getting passed by just about everybody, as usual. The race had almost 13000 entrants so I spent alot of time getting boxed in and trying to politely run through crowds.

I'll post more when I get my official time tomorrow.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Speed Training and Sharpening

I have finally entered the speedwork phase of my training. The mileage is cut down a little bit but the tempo and cadences are definitely faster. The main training days are Wednesday (880 meter or half mile repeats) and Thursday (1-3 miles at six minute mile pace.) These training sessions are done on a treadmill. I am up to 6 half mile repeats at 9.5 mph (6:18 minutes/mile) and eventually will work up to 12 half mile repeats at that pace over the next 6-8 weeks. I can finish one mile at 10 mph and will keep working until I can run that pace for 3 miles straight.

My weekend running (Friday - Monday) consists of 6-14 mile runs with sections run at my goal pace or faster. I also practice my race plan. My race plan is to run the first 4.5km at 4:30 km pace/cadence. The second half of the race will be run at 3:30km pace/cadences.

Its amazing to think that a year ago I was injuring myself trying to run 5 minute kilometers. Now that is a warmup pace.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Run With Patience

Last weekend my endurance base training peaked at 10 miles a day for three days. It is hard to believe that a year ago my long runs were 2 kilometers. While 10 miles was not easy, I enjoyed the challenge.

In particular I was inspired by the following message from Paul found in Hebrews Chapter 12:

"Wherefore, seeing we also are encompassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God.

For consider him that endured such contradictions of sinners against himself, lest ye be wearied and faint in your minds...

Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless, afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby."

When I run, I know that my ancestors watch. In particular my Aunt Julianna who died of Rheumatoid Arthritis last year. She was quite athletic until the disease struck her when she was young. She runs with me. My uncle Mike died of a drug overdose in his early twenties. He runs with me. They and others are my great cloud of witnesses.

One of the benefits of living in Victoria is that many Olympians live and train here. It is inspiring to know that triathlete Simon Whitfield, who won Gold in Sydney and Silver in Beijing, will be lining up just ahead of me at both the Times Colonist 10K and the Royal Victoria 8K. Part of the fun of racing here is that you catch glimpses of these amazing athletes running the same race or training on the same trail that you are. With a little more training, I think, I might be able to keep up with them for just one mile.

Life has set before me various races. Some miles are more grievious than others. Yet I run inspired by Christ. He authored the course, trained on the same trails and finished the race. And from time to time, usually when I'm running harder than I think I ought, I catch glimpses of Him running the same mile.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Crowded Treadmills

Apparently physicians like to run marathons. At least, thats the impression I got today at the conference. No less than 3 different presenters "happened" to mention they were marathon runners. One found a way to brag that he was running "Boston" this year, another joked that his best and worst marathon times were in the Vancouver Marathon and the third guy just mentioned running the Vancouver Sun Run. Well you know what they say...the next best thing to running is talking about running...

After the conference ended I had an afternoon to kill so I went to the cardio room here in the hotel. Its a pretty scrub exercise room with only two treadmills. The treadmills had a 30 minute limit. I have to say I hate it when they limit the time on the treadmills but I also understand. Its distracting to run a 10 mile tempo run while looking over your shoulder to see if you're about to get kicked off the machine. Anyhow, I jumped on and ran 3.5 miles in the 30 minutes which is basically an easy run for me as I am recovering from a cold. But right after I started a whole bunch of old skinny guys showed up in the fitness center. They all looked disappointed that the treadmills were taken and so they jumped on the crosstrainer or the stationary bike. I didn't let it bother me as I only planned on a short run anyway. The run felt great and I was even able to run 1/4 mile at 9.4 mph followed immediately by a quarter mile at 10.5 mph, which I could do because I was only running 3.5 miles total.

It will be nice to finish my easy week tomorrow morning with a 5 mile run if I can squeeze it in without getting kicked off the treadmill...

Thursday, March 5, 2009

New Year and New Goals!

I know its been a while since I posted. For some reason, I think I always have to post with a picture.

Its the beginning of March and I have a whole new year of racing. I plan to run the Victoria Times Colonist in April. The Provo Freedom Run in July and the Edmonton 10K in August. I will volunteer for the Victoria Marathon Weekend to get a look at the organization of a run.

My winter base training is finally winding down. I am trying to hit 50 miles per week but life keeps getting in the way. I average 40 miles per week with a rest week after every 2-4 weeks of training. The winter base running is 3 long runs of 10 miles each in which I focus on my running form at an aerobic pace. Right now my aerobic pace is 5:00-4:30 per kilometer. I run sprint intervals on a treadmill once per week. The sprints are 4:00-3:30 per kilometer for either 4 X 1/4 mile or 4 X 1/2 mile (I alternate each week). The purpose of the sprints is to increase my VO2 max, condition me to run while uncomfortable and give me the confidence that I can run fast. I run one 8-10 mile tempo run on the treadmill each week as well. This usually involves a 2-4 mile warmup and then running 4-6 miles at 7.5-8.5 mph. This is actually an aerobic run for me in which I focus on running hard even at the slower cadences (176-190 bpm). It is really tempting at the end of those runs to just go hard for a mile or two but discpline is a key to improvement.

I'm in Vancouver tonight, staying at the Fairmont hotel for a conference on chronic pain management this weekend. I'm just getting over a cold so lucky for me its a rest week. I'm feeling way better and looking forward to an easy 4 mile run on the hotel treadmill tomorrow morning. Later...