| Location: Orem,UT,USA Member Since: Apr 03, 2006 Gender: Male Goal Type: Age Division Winner Running Accomplishments: HS/COLLEGE:
mile: 4:56, 2 mile: 10:21 (1978)
marathon: 2:52 (St. George 1982)
OLD MAN (20+ years later):
5K: 19:53 (Nestle/Art City Days 5K 2007)
10K: 39:55 (Spectrum 10K 2008)
half marathon: 1:26 (Hobble Creek 2008)
marathon: 3:07 (St. George 2007) Short-Term Running Goals: Get back to a BQ marathon time (currently 3:40). Long-Term Running Goals: Have fun running, keep fit, and fight middle age spread. Run consistently and injury free. Maintain a healthy balance between running and other life priorities. Encourage my ever-aging running buddies to keep running so we can continue to share runs on the trail instead of rocking chairs. Personal: Blessed to be married to Karen for 30 years. We have six children (4 daughters/2 sons) ages 16 to 30, and one wonderful granddaughter. Favorite Blogs: |
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| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 20.00 | 13.00 | 27.20 | 0.00 | 65.70 | 125.90 |
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Saucony Guide 3 Miles: 17.20 | Mizuno Wave Rider 13 Miles: 11.30 | Saucony Guide TR 2 Miles: 50.00 |
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| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 2.80 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 5.80 |
| I ran the 2000 N route at a very easy pace. Larry, Wayne, Kent and I started together. Wayne turned back early for a bathroom emergency, and Kent eventually pulled ahead. Larry and I just slogged along at taper pace, talking about our plans for the Squaw Peak 50 on Saturday, my run on Saturday, and his camping trip. |
Saucony Guide 3 Miles: 5.80 |
| Add Comment |
| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 5.00 |
| I was a little late getting out, and Larry was even later. Kent was on time. None of us started together but we eventually met up part way up the water tank hills. It was a beautiful morning. Larry and I stood around and talked for a while about the 50 miler on Saturday, and about what kind of tree I should plant in my front yard to replace the big dead tree I had to cut down last year. My neighbor Terry Peterson, the one with the beautiful yard, was out so I consulted with him as well. I think I'm leaning towards a Sugar Maple. Last night I did some rough estimating of paces for the different sections of the Squaw Peak 50 and it added up to 11:47:00, roughly 14:00/mi. My stretch goal is to break 12 hours. My primary goal is to finish. My fallback goal is to survive without serious injury or death. Should be fun.
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Mizuno Wave Rider 13 Miles: 5.00 |
| Comments(2) |
| Race: |
Squaw Peak 50 Trail Run (50 Miles) 15:19:01, Place overall: 167 | Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 50.00 | 50.00 |
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Overall 167th of 219 finishers (20 DNF)
Male 50-59: 22nd of 29 finishers
Race Results:
http://racecontrol.kd7bbc.org/event/lookup?evt=b18eef84-7072-11df-8a3b-001ec21c888f Course Map & Profile http://www.squawpeak50.com/sqpkcrse.htm I don't have time for a full race report now, maybe later today. In short, this race pushed me beyond any mental and physical limits I've ever approached before. My previous longest distance run was 26.2 miles. It's now nearly twice that at 50 miles, with many very steep miles and treacherous footing (snow, mud, rocks). My previous longest duration run was 7 hours (just last week). It's now more than double that at 15 hours and 19 minutes. I fought through heat, humidity, knee pain, hip pain, PF pain, a rolled ankle, 4 falls, chafing, blisters, and calf and thigh cramping. Still, I was able to run the downhill miles clear to the end. I finished hours slower than I hoped, but I finished. A number of times when other runners asked how I was doing, my answer was "I'm enduring." There is much to be said for enduring, and I feel very good about my efforts and the results. Below are more details than anyone but my future self might care about, but feel free to read on if you wish: Several years ago the notion entered my mind to run a 50 miler when I
turned 50. With the Squaw Peak 50 Trail Run in my own backyard, I never
considered any other race, despite it being described as the 3rd
toughest 50 miler in the country.
Last year, at 49 with 50 just
around the corner, I seriously questioned whether I would be able to
dedicate the time to training that would be necessary. A conversation
with Rich Lamoreaux, who had completed the SP50 multiple times,
convinced me I could complete it with just slightly more training than
normal marathon training. I recommitted and submitted my registration in
December. I made it on the waiting list, and eventually into the race.
Training
history since the St. George Marathon last fall: History: My left
leg is 1+ inch shorter than right due to knee injury at age 14. I
have a "bad" left knee, that acts up occasionally. Oct 2009: Bad
right hip pain up to and during SGM. Orthopedic surgeon recommended
larger lift for short leg. I started wearing 3/4" in-shoe lifts. Nov
2009: 30+ miles/week Dec 2009: 40+ miles/week (except holidays) Jan
2010: 40+ miles/week (until PF injury on MLK day) Feb 2010: 30-ish
miles/week for a few weeks Late Feb, early Mar: 3 weeks of 20 miles
or less trying to heal PF PF wasn't getting better so I decided to
push the mileage again. PF wasn't getting worse, so I increased the
mileage. mid Mar to mid May: Gradually increased from 30 to 50+
miles/week, with 7 straight weeks of 40+ Taper - three weeks: 35, 32,
15
I ran the Painter's half marathon in January and the Spectrum
10K in March to get into the SGM via the Runner Series. Other than
that, I did very little to no speed running as I tried to get miles in
without aggravating the PF. I finally went to a podiatrist for the first
time in my life, and he prescribed orthotics. The PF had already
improved quite a bit before I got them, so the jury is still out on
whether the orthotics have helped much.
(For all you barefoot
running proponents out there, I've read Born to Run and understand the
potential benefits.)
On race day, I had a little knee pain, hip
pain, and PF pain, but none were bad enough to cause me serious concern.
I tried some KT tape on my bad knee as a precaution, but ended up
pulling it off early in the race.
I drove my buddy Larry up for
the early 4:00am start for those expecting to take 16 hours or longer.
His training had been considerably less than mine. I was hoping for
closer to a 12 hour finish so I started at 5:00am. I ended up catching
Larry at about mile 12. He ended up missing the cutoff at AS #8 by about
5 minutes and wasn't allowed to finish. Mostly he was very
disappointed, but he did admit that part of him was very glad to be
done.
Some of the runners I knew who also ran were Joe Martel
(12:17), Rich (11:41) & Marci (11:12) Lamoreaux, Paul Nielsen
(14:11), and Steve Earl (14:11). I never saw Joe, Rich or Marci during
the run, but ran the first part of the race with Paul and Steve.
Aid Station
| Distance
| Est.
| Actual
| Diff.
| Time
in Aid Stations
| Comments
| Start -
Vivian Park
|
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| 5:00
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| #2
Hope Campground
| 5.58 mi
| 6:28
| 6:14
| -0:14
| 0:02
Tighten left shoe, water, pancakes
| Dark, head lamp, ran
with Paul Nielsen and Steve Earl up the trail. Warm, humid, began to
drink to stay hydrated. At aid station, tightened my left shoe, drank
water, grabbed couple of pancakes (Scouts cook breakfast here), and we
headed out. I had a short double back to drop off my headlamp.
| #3
Rock Canyon
| 10.85 mi
| 8:00
| 7:24
| -0:36
| 0:01
Water, fruit
| I ran with Paul and Steve until I caught up to
Larry then I went with Larry for a while. I eventually left Larry and
caught back up to Paul and Steve. There were stretches of snow and mud.
| #4
Horse Mountain
| 14.62 mi
| 9:30
| 8:44
| -0:46
| 0:05
Socks, water, filled water, chips
| My feet were pretty wet
so I changed my socks as planned to help prevent blisters. Paul and
Steve went on ahead and I never saw them again. The climb ended at about
8000' and the descent back down to 5000' began. Going through an uneven
meadow I rolled my right ankle. It scared me at first but it didn't
take too long to walk it off then start running again. I decided to take
some pain killers but couldn't find them. I still don't know what
happened to them.
| #5 Gate@Dirt Road
| 20.8
mi
| 10:24
| 10:04
| -0:20
| 0:01
Water, snacks
| The descent continued. As I recall, we had
run in shadows and cloud cover most of the way thus far and on this
section we started getting more sun and heat. The thermometer at the aid
station read 72 degrees.
| #6 Left Fork/HC Gate
| 26.5
mi
| 11:24
| 11:26
| +0:02
| 0:10
Socks, water, filled water, snacks
| I had heard runners
didn't like the asphalt along this stretch. I concur. I seem to get
blisters on the balls of my feet when running on hot asphalt. After a
mile or so of asphalt I started getting that familiar feeling. By the
time I reached the aid station I had a blister on the ball of my left
foot, and another smaller one on the left side of my left heel. I would
feel them the rest of the way, but they were manageable. I changed socks
again at the aid station and reapplied Body Glide to my feet. I should
have reapplied it between my legs, as I ended up with chafing there
later in the run (especially painful in the post-run shower).
| #7
Sheep Canyon
| 30 mi
| 12:20
| 12:31
| +0:11
| 0:02
Water, snacks
| It was good to be back on a dirt road, but
the incline gradually got steeper. I continued to walk the uphill and
run the flats and downhills. It was kind of fascinating to me how my
body seemed to know when to run and when to walk. It wouldn't allow me
to walk downhills, and as soon as an uphill began I instinctively began
to walk. I credit this inner ballast with getting me to the finish line.
| #8
Little Valley
| 33.5 mi
| 13:09
| 13:44
| +0:25
| 0:07
Socks, water, filled water, snacks
| I reached Little Valley
roughly on schedule, except that I neglected to include time at aid
stations in my schedule. A volunteer refilled my water while I once
again changed socks and reapplied Body Glide to my feet. My PF, blister,
ankle, knee, chafing, and hip pain were present, but under control. I
picked up a package of Enlyten electrolyte strips before I headed out.
| #9
Windy Pass
| 40.5 mi
| 15:19
| 17:38
| +2:19
| 0:17
Socks, water, filled water, snacks, calf/thigh cramps, electrolyte
tablet
| I had been wondering ever since I ran from AS#8 to
AS#10 with the race director John Bozung and others last week to help
clear/mark the trail what it would feel like doing that same section of
the course after having run 33 miles. Earlier, along the asphalt road, I
had discussed this with another runner who had done the course before.
He said it would feel about like I thought it was going to feel like. I
knew he was right, but the steep climb to Windy Pass was far more
difficult than I envisioned. I swear the mountain got longer and steeper
during the week. Climbing the three steep ridges nearly straight up
took all the mental and physical stamina I could muster. With the
exertion and the thin air it seem like I was taking 2 or 3 breaths for
each small step. I just tried to keep moving, stopping only a few times
to take pictures. My relief at the summit was premature, as the steep,
rocky descent down to the Windy Pass aid station seemed even more
difficult than the climb. I underestimated the effort for this climb by
about 2 hours. It reminded me of the Ragnar leg of the Ragnar Relay,
except I was doing it after running about 40 miles. I found a chair at
the aid station. The volunteers were awesome as they filled my water and
brought me snacks. I had put the double layered socks they gave us in
our race packets in my vest and decided to put them on for the 10 miles
of descent remaining. As I bent each leg to put my shoe back on it would
cramp severely. One of my thighs even joined the fun. I used most of
the Enlyten strips along the way, and my eGels have electrolytes in
them, but apparently I was running low. A volunteer dissolved an
electrolyte tablet in some water, and I took another eGel. During the
remainder of the run I had a couple of minor cramps when I stepped
wrong, but they weren't a problem.
| #10 Big Springs
| 46.5
mi
| 16:17
| 19:27
| +2:50
| 0:01
Water, snacks
| I had been looking forward to the downhill,
but the first few miles weren't so much fun. There was mud, snow, and
rocks with some scary slopes mixed in. I fell on my backside three times
in the slushy snow. One of the times was especially hard as my feet
flew up and I landed flat on my back. This must have been when my eGel
packet exploded, but I didn't notice until later when I felt the
stickiness drip down onto the back of my left knee. When I sat down at a
picnic table after the race, I almost didn't get my shorts unstuck. As
the snow transitioned to mud, I at first tried to avoid the mud but
eventually just ran through it, only avoiding the deepest muck. I met
and ran with Dave along the first part of this section, then
transitioned to run with another runner for a while down the gentle
descent nearer the end. Ever since falling behind Paul and Steve I had
mostly run alone. It was nice having some company. He stopped for a
nature call and I proceed alone to the aid station at Big Springs. I
called Karen as I was approaching to tell her I was only a few miles
from the end.
| Finish - Vivian Park
| 50
mi
| 16:47
| 20:19
| +3:32
| Total:
0:46
| The last 3.5 miles of downhill sure seemed to have a
lot of uphill. I ran the downhills, but still ended up walking a lot.
I've run this section of road many times. I never dreamed it would take
me as long as it did. I saw a moose and a skunk along this stretch, to
go along with the two sets of two deer and the squirrel I had seen
earlier. South Fork park was full of people who all seemed to be having a
great time. The canyon was cool and beautiful as the sun was beginning
to go down. It was great to see Karen, Brittany and Emily cheering me to
the finish, along with Larry and Jolene. I felt badly for making them
wait for me so long, but it felt might good to be finished.
|
I
started at 5:00am and finished at 8:19pm. My official finish time was 15:19:01 (18:23/mi), way slower than the entirely too optimistic
estimate of 11:47 (14:08/mi). I had totally ignored the time in aid
stations, which ended up being 46 min for me. I also severely
underestimated the last three sections planning for 20:00/mi, 9:00/mi
and 8:30/mi with the actual paces being 33:26/mi, 18:10/mi, and
14:51/mi. What was I thinking?! I'm not even sure I could hit those
paces fresh with good trails, especially not 20:00/mi for those steep
climbs.
My legs recovered pretty quickly. My feet feel beat up.
When I got home I had the shakes and had a hard time not shivering. I
couldn't bring myself to get into a cold tub, but did soak my feet for a
few minutes. In the shower I felt nauseated if the water was warm and
shivered uncontrollably if the water was cool. I eventually got clean
enough to be able to rest on the bed and eat a little. I was still
shivering. I finally just crawled into the blankets and hoped to feel
better in the morning.
I'm writing this on Sunday evening, the
day after the race. I got up early this morning as usual (before 6:00am)
for my meetings and was at the church from 7:00am to about 2:00pm. A
few people who knew I'd run the SP50 were surprised to see my at church,
but I felt pretty good. I'm actually considering running the Utah
Valley Marathon on Saturday, but I'll wait and see.
Many
(including my good wife Karen, and my own mother I think) have
questioned my sanity for wanting to do something like this, and wonder
why I would do such a thing. For me, it's the thrill of adventure; the
satisfaction of pushing my limits and discovering that I'm capable of
far more than I first supposed. Running marathons as a young single
adult taught me lessons of preparation, faith and endurance that have
benefited me beyond measure during my life. I've now stepped that
confidence up a notch as I've faced and overcome the greatest mental and
physical test I've had to date. For me, it's spiritual. I've seen, felt
and experienced things I could do in no other way.
If you think
people are nuts for wanting to run a 50 miler, don't run one. If you've
run a few marathons and are thinking you might like to give an
ultramarathon a try, I strongly encourage it. I have no regrets.
|
Saucony Guide TR 2 Miles: 50.00 |
| Comments(8) |
| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 3.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 5.00 |
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I ran the water tank hills with Larry, Wayne and Kent. It was 4 days after the Squaw Peak 50 and 4 days before the Utah Valley Marathon. My goal was to see how my legs felt to help me decide whether to run the marathon. As I jogged up to the meeting corner, I had some pain in my right heel, my left knee hurt a little, and my feet still felt a little beat up, but I felt up for the run. The PF-related heel pain felt better as I warmed up. I've been used to this since the PF flared up back in January. It feels a little different after hyper-extending it 3 times during the 50, but I'm not too concerned about it. The feet felt a little tired during the run, but nothing to worry about. With a few days more rest they should be fine. The left knee only really bothered me on the steep downhills where I had to watch my footing. When I hit the level section between hills 2 and 1 on the way back down I picked up the pace to catch up to Wayne and Kent. I was moving along at a fast pace and my legs felt great. It felt good to open up and run fast. I passed them just as we began the descent down the steep first hill and the knee didn't bother me when I didn't have to brake to watch my step. I'll decide on Friday whether to run the marathon, but it looks like a go. With the "no rocks, snow or mud", secure footing, and a mostly gradual downhill course, I think I'll be fine if I don't push the pace. I took it easy last year and ran 3:50. This year's course should be faster. That's only about 1/4 as long as I ran last week.
| Add Comment |
| Race: |
Utah Valley Marathon (26.2 Miles) 04:28:59 | Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 0.00 | 0.00 | 26.20 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 26.20 |
| Well, this is embarrassing...or at least enlightening. I was wondering what it would feel like for a 50 year old man to run the Utah Valley Marathon the week after running the Squaw Peak 50 Trail Run as his first ultra-marathon. Not too surprisingly, the answer is...not very good. I finished in the very slow time of 4:28:59. It started out okay, but that okay feeling only lasted about 6 miles. I guess that's about how much I had recovered from the 50 miler, because familiar feelings returned...sore heel, sore hip, sore left knee, tired feet. As the steady rain began, my pace slowed. My splits were: 8:02, 7:27, 7:45, 8:24, 8:49, 8:57, 10:37, 10:30, 9:30, 9:49, 10:38, 9:49, 9:35, 9:34, 11:43, 12:25, 12:20, 11:07, 11:01, 10:29, 11:16, 10:57, 10:37, 10:21, 8:14/mi at the end. The good news is I finished, but I couldn't have without help from my son Andrew and from Larry. I called Andrew and asked him to bring me a knee brace so I didn't over do it on my left knee. He met me at Bridal Veil Falls Park with two different braces. I crossed the highway and ended up putting one on each knee. They started to help almost immediately and I didn't worry about my knees for the remainder of the marathon. As I approached the mouth of Provo Canyon I met Larry on his bike. He road the last 7 or 8 miles in with me. His conversation kept me going. Those miles were hard. What am I saying, all the miles were hard, except maybe the first six. So my experiment this year is to see if a 50 year old man...specifically this 50 year old man...can run the Squaw Peak 50, the Utah Valley Marathon, and the Ragnar Relay on consecutive weekends and survive. Two down, one to go. After a very cold bath I actually feel much better. I'm optimistic.
| Comments(11) |
| Race: |
Wasatch Back Relay - Leg 11 (3.7 Miles) 00:34:55 | Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.70 | 3.70 |
| Wasatch Back Relay - Leg 11 - Up to Snow Basin - Very Hard I started this leg at about 8:23pm and the weather was pretty nice.
After the steep climbs in the Squaw Peak 50 two weeks ago, this steep climb on the way up to Snow Basin didn't seem quite so steep, but running uphill is never easy. It was even harder for the guy on the backcountry.com team that carried a canoe the entire leg. As I passed him I told him I was pretty sure he was working a lot harder than I was. My pace slowed from 9:30 to 10:30 to 11:00 as I neared the summit, but I kept my feet moving pretty steadily and felt like I ran pretty strong. I managed 6:24/mi for the last downhill mile.
I passed 6 other runners on this leg and was not passed by anyone.
| Add Comment |
| Race: |
Wasatch Back Relay - Legs 23 & 35 (12.5 Miles) 01:44:23 | Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 0.00 | 12.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 12.50 |
| Wasatch Back Relay - Leg 23- Rockport Reservoir - Moderate I
started this leg at about 6:40am. There was a cold headwind so I wore my jacket. The sun came up during the leg and it warmed up enough for me to unzip my jacket a bit and pull up my sleeves, but the headwind never stopped. Near the end it was so strong I had to turn my hat around so it wouldn't blow off. I just focused on trying to keep my feet turning over and my body moving forward. I finished this 5.6 mile leg in about 49:30 (8:47/mi). I passed 8 runners and 6 passed me. A lot of the elite teams caught up with us during our second legs. You can tell the elite runners because they pass you like you're standing still. Wasatch Back Relay - Leg 35- Guardsman Pass to Park City - Very Hard
I started this leg at about 3:52pm. It has been pretty hot, but the heat didn't really affect me on this leg. Shortly before my leg started I felted really tired and didn't much feel like running...a feeling very unusual to me. Lyle asked me when I had last eaten. I realized it was around 8:30am, over 7 hours ago. I had been so concerned about digesting the pancakes, eggs, and sausage that I had forgotten to eat anything in the meantime. I decided to quickly down an eGel and hope for the best. It must have worked, because I felt pretty good as I started to run and passed 10 runners in the first couple of miles. I was warned shortly before my leg that it had grown from 5.4 miles to 7 miles, because of construction I think. What I didn't expect was when we turned off the road a couple of miles in and ran most of the rest of the way on a single track trail through the trees and along some dirt roads. I was glad I had been doing more trail running this year, and it was a lot easier than much of the Squaw Peak 50 course, and very beautiful, but I still had a few missteps and nearly rolled my ankle once. Two runners passed me on the first section of trail. I passed one of them back when we got back onto a dirt road. I enjoyed this leg and felt like I ran it pretty hard. I passed 18 runners and was passed by one. I averaged 8:13/mi. I was surprised to see a bandage over Lyle's eye when I handed off to him in the exchange. I later learned that he had been stretching leaning on the side of a Honey Bucket portapotty. The wind had been gusting and just as someone opened the door a strong gust of wind caught it and it whacked Lyle in the face. He got some first aid attention and had it bandaged up by the time I got in and ran the last leg very strong. They thought he might need stitches, but after he got home he said it didn't look too bad, and he was too tired to go to a doctor, so he just super glued it. What a tough guy. This was one of my slower relays, but given that I'd run the Squaw Peak 50 two weeks earlier, followed by the Utah Valley Marathon one week later, I feel very satisfied with how I did. My teammates were awesome and I had a really enjoyable time. Everyone ran strong and worked well together to make everything come off without a hitch. It was yet another successful relay.
| Add Comment |
| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 5.30 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 5.30 |
|
Well, I'm back in the saddle again...but a little saddle sore. After the 50, the marathon, and the relay I found myself physically beat up and...a little unexpectedly...mentally tired of running. I didn't run a step last week, which normally would drive me nuts, but it didn't bother me...and I maybe even enjoyed it a little. Thankfully, I've got good running buddies to keep me from straying too far. I was talking with Larry yesterday and he said they were going to the track this morning. I was still feeling some pain in my knee and heel, but decided to go see how it felt to run on them. Larry didn't show, but Kent and Lyle did. They ran 1/2 mile repeats while I just ran slow laps. I had a hard time generating any speed this morning. My knee and heel did hurt a little, but I think it was my right hip and overall stiffness that kept me running slow. I had read Tom Lee's blog from Saturday where he said, "Those darn scar tissue areas just don't ever seem to completely be
happy, but I've found they do alot better being active than when doing
nothing." I've learned that before. I'm learning it again. I believe Sasha calls it active recovery. My current plan is to return to a previous plan to take aspirin regularly. My dad's heart surgeon recommended aspirin to me as a precautionary treatment for my family history of heart attacks, and it is a long established anti-inflammatory that should help with my arthritic hip, bad knee, and PF pain. Gee whiz, I sound like I'm 80, not 50. I was talking with a good brother at church yesterday whose father is 87 and suffering from Alzheimers and is unable to care for himself. We had been talking about how life can be challenging at times. He mentioned that he is grateful just to be able to take care of himself and deal with the challenges each day brings. What a great attitude. The martial artist Bruce Lee said, "When you feel pain, you know that you are still alive." Gladly, I'm still alive.
I just realized I quoted both Tom Lee and Bruce Lee. I wonder if they are related?
|
Saucony Guide 3 Miles: 5.30 |
| Comments(1) |
| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 3.30 | 0.00 | 1.00 | 0.00 | 2.00 | 6.30 |
| I ran the Tuesday 2000 N hill route with Larry, Wayne, and Kent. Kevin joined us about half way through. Today felt better than yesterday, although the route starts out going up the 2000 N hill so it was hard to tell at first. I was working harder than I'm used to just to run 9:00/mi during the middle of the run, but I was encouraged by running the last mile at just under 8:00/mi. The normal pains were there, but not too bad.
|
Mizuno Wave Rider 13 Miles: 6.30 |
| Add Comment |
| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 2.60 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 6.10 |
| I ran the water tank hills with Larry, Wayne and Kent. I was encouraged when I got to the bottom of the first hill and was actually feeling a little bit excited to head up the hills. I pushed pretty steadily and reached top in 17:26, not a PR but respectable. Wayne finished well ahead of me. He's been training well, with a focus on hills, and it shows. On the way back Wayne and Kent had gotten a little ahead when we reached the gradual downhill on 1600 N from 400 E to Main. I decided to take off and see if I could catch them. I had just mentally committed and started to accelerate when Larry realized his dog Ozzie hadn't crossed the intersection with us. I looked back and couldn't see Ozzie so I applied the brakes and went back with Larry to look for him. He wasn't too far behind. After we made sure he got across the intersection safely I restarted my acceleration down the hill. By now Wayne and Kent were far out of reach, but I managed to average about 7:10/mi pace for that half mile. If felt good to get my legs moving again. After all the slogging I seem to have been doing recently, I'm beginning to feel sorta kinda a little bit like a runner again.
|
Saucony Guide 3 Miles: 6.10 |
| Add Comment |
| Easy Miles | Threshold Miles | Marathon Pace Miles | Track speed mileage | Hill mileage | Total | 20.00 | 13.00 | 27.20 | 0.00 | 65.70 | 125.90 |
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Saucony Guide 3 Miles: 17.20 | Mizuno Wave Rider 13 Miles: 11.30 | Saucony Guide TR 2 Miles: 50.00 |
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