M'kay

December 28, 2024

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Location:

Eatonville,WA,USA

Member Since:

Nov 01, 2007

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Age Division Winner

Running Accomplishments:

Short-Term Running Goals:

Regain consistency.

Build up slowly and come out strong.

Regain "speed" (relative)

Finish WR50 again.

Improve at Cascade Crest. 

2013 Races:

  • Capital Peak Mega Fat Ass 17M (1/19) - 2:48:48
  • Yakima Skyline Rim 50K (4/21) - 7:16:20
  • Grey Rock 50K (5/13)
  • White River 50M (7/27)
  • Cascade Crest 100M (8/24-25)

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

Find my true running potential, then exceed it.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Hoka Stinson B Lifetime Miles: 982.34
Hoka Stinson Evo Lifetime Miles: 452.95
Altra Provision Lifetime Miles: 139.73
Altra Torin Lifetime Miles: 380.08
Hoka Bondi 2 Lifetime Miles: 706.15
Hoka Mafate 3 Lifetime Miles: 81.12
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
9.000.000.000.009.00

9 miles in 1:06:15, 7:21/mi, HR 150.

Easy run at lunch under overcast sky, a sprinkle of rain, and cool temps (58F).  Upper left calf still tight, so icing it in hopes it'll feel right for tomorrow's hill repeats.

 Adrenaline 8 (Yellow)
 550.18miles
 Adrenaline 8 (Blue) 343.43 miles
 Asics 2130 (Blue)  123.70 132.70 miles
 NB 903 107.47 miles

Night Sleep Time: 7.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 7.00
Comments
From Lucia on Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 11:39:20

Great pace Dale! I hope your calfs feel better tomorrow. What in the world is that photo of?

From Dale on Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 11:45:37

Thanks, it's feeling better this morning.

The picture is of the baton we got for running the Northwest Passage relay, sitting on a shelf in my desk at the home office.

From Tom on Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 16:03:19

Dale great miles and pace this week. I envy your ability to crank out all these sub 7:30 miles with such ease.

Also interesting to look at your HR info each day since I've started tracking this.

One thing I'm noticing is that on my early morning runs when I wake up and immediately go running, my HR is often similar to my afternoon runs even though I'm running 1 minute per mile slower in the morning. Have you noticed anything like this?

Also curious what you think your max HR is? What's the best way to figure it out and is it possible to actual get there in a race? I've seen my HR hit 190 a couple of times some I'm thinking my max is probably around 195, but just wondering what the best way is to measure it. 195 seems abnormally high for a person my age (almost 44) but I suppose a lot of this stuff is just hereditary and nothing to worry about.

BTW I think you will totally crush your marathon with a massive PR.

From Dale on Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 17:13:22

Thanks Tom. Not sure how but I seem to have had some switch flipped a couple of weeks ago and have felt pretty good lately. Wish I knew how it happened...

I'm not very good at running first thing upon waking....I'm noticeably stiffer and slower compared to when I run after I've been up for a few hours. I don't think my HR is much higher, just that it's tougher to get up-to-speed for the first couple (several) miles. But it does sound like we're alike in one regard.....neither of us are particularly good at running without letting our bodies wake up.

My max is 193. I did the initial measurement by strapping the HR monitor on a couple of years ago, warming up for a few miles, and doing repeats on the steepest hill I could find until I was exhausted, then looked for the max when I downloaded the garmin data. At that time, it was 189. Just this past August in a 5K, I peaked at 193, so I guess I'd just been sandbagging it all along! :) Seriously, I'm not sure how I managed to hit my max in the middle of a 5K but I do know I was hurting badly by that point.

I'm not sure there's really any "normal" HR.....there's the mean for people of a certain age but I recall the over/under is like 20 bpm, so it's a pretty wide range to fall into. Plus, I believe the max doesn't fall nearly as linearly as they say with age for folks who exercise, so the 190s are definitely completely plausable.

I've also got a heart murmur (have since birth, barely detectable) and an abnormal EKG, so I often wonder how/how much those affect my HRs during exercise. I know that over time my exercise HRs at certain paces (threshold, marathon, etc.) have made more sense (i.e. fallen into more commonly accepted %max ranges), but my easy pace HR is still pretty high (140-160). I asked my coach once and he said not to worry....some folks can use the HR as a pacing guide, others can't. Plus, mine is definitely affected by temps, humidity, tiredness, exposure to direct sun, and probably some other factors I've forgotten. I guess it's one tool in the toolbox.

We'll see about the PR.....I'm going to pray for good weather, run the first 20 miles for a 3 hr pace, and run the rest with whatever is left. The good news is that I'll have company with a fellow blogger trying to sneak below the 3 hour mark as well.

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