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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Week 5, Wednesday

So far this week I had a much needed rest day on monday after the race and tough sunday run. Yesterday I did a high intensity bike ride, and today had a run with a lot of hills. The bike ride was about 13 miles, took 45 minutes, and consisted of 8 sets of hard 1 minute. The run was intended to have 6, 30 second pick ups, but I wound up just using the hills as the pick ups and tried my best to recover on the downhills. Both workouts were pretty tough. I made it through. I have a swim later today, but the swims have been pretty easy for the most part.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Starting Week 5, post recovery

So,I really took the whole "recovery" part of recovery week to a whole new level. I missed quite a few workouts, but I suppose that's the life of a husband/father/triathlete/graduate student/part time contractor/etc. But it was also a race week so I did want to rest a bit going into the race, as I knew I had a good chance to win this week. I came into the week on the back of a couple of very good long workouts, which I wrote up in my last entry..I've really got to start doing this more often. My only excuse is pure laziness and forgetfulness, alas I digress. So first off, my workouts weren't anything to write home about so I'll go straight into the race report. First off, I knew going into this based on last years results, and my time when riding the bike course that I had to be a favorite going in(in my mind anyway). This was the MedWest Sprint Triathlon in Clyde, NC. It was a small race with only 63 competitors, but it was a really fun race. It was a short pool swim, a 10 mile bike and a 5k run. Being a pool swim you're required to enter an estimated time. As usual, the time I entered was right on the money based on my pace, sadly, the same could not be said for those in front of me. I passed my first person in the third lap, and the fact that there was another swimmer coming on at the same time, in the same lane made for problems. I got elbowed in the face making the pass, but I was able to accomplish it pretty quickly. I passed the next person around 200 yards. Come on people, submit an accurate time! Although I was the 24th person to start, I finished with the 7th fastest swim time. My submitted time was dead on where I finished, which means that almost everyone in the race ahead of me has no idea how to estimate their time. I really need to start inflating my time in pool swims, because I'm tired of dealing with that. I wound up finishing the swim in 4:39. I was satisifed with that, as that's right where I expected to be. On to the bike, this was the part I knew from having rode the course a few days prior. It started out with a downhill right out of transition, which made mounting difficult since I don't put my shoes on till I'm rolling. But I managed to get them on and got on my way. Immediately after the downhill you have about a mile steady, but not steep climb, followed by a LONG downhill into a flat. I tried to push as hard as I could up the hill knowing I could recover on the downhill. I definitely had a strong bike. Knowing the course I knew which hills I could really push and which to take it a bit easy on. I passed probably about 10 riders out there, and didn't get passed at all. I was really strong on the downhills and flats, and only slowed a bit on the long hills. I didn't want to push them too hard, with the run coming up. I finished the bike in just over 30 minutes and averaged 19.6 mph. I had hoped to be at 20, but I was close enough. I wound up finishing with the 9th best bike time overall, so I was pretty happy about that. Next came the run. Dear god, I wish I had at least driven the course before hand. This run was brutal. I started with a short moderate climb before a long steep downhill. Then came about a mile long steady, somewhat steep climb. It was brutal. I finished the first mile in about 10 minutes. Yikes! But after that it wasn't bad for the next nearly 2 miles. It was mostly steadily downhill with small, short uphill sections that didn't bother much. I picked up my pace considerably in those 2 miles, until the final half mile or so. Then we had to wind our way up a switch backing road. It was long, it was steep, and it was hot and sunny. That final push was brutal. I wound up finishing my run in 29:06. Not a bad finish considering after the first mile i was on pace for a 31 minute run, but still not nearly as good as I was hoping for. I wound up finishing 33rd overall in the run. However, I did live up to my hope and did win both my age group(which I wasn't competing in) and the Clydesdale division. So all in all I was really happy with my race performance. I feel like I could've done the run better had I known what was coming, I may have pushed that first hill a little harder if I had known how long it was. I don't know that I could've done anything differently on the last climb as that was just a push for survival. I didn't do a long bike this week because I had to choose between long bike or long run. Seeing as how my running still sucks and my biking is getting a lot better I went with the run. It was another grueling run. I had done a 1000 meter open water swim earlier in the day, and coupled with the previous race the day before, I was running on fairly worn down legs. And it showed. I actually felt pretty strong for the first 4 miles or so, but around mile 5 I really started to feel the wear. I think my biggest mistake was going too fast for the first half. like the 7 miler I did two weeks ago, I started out sub 10 min/mile only to slow considerably towards the end. Last week I started slow and increased my speed by the end. So, lesson learned. Slow the hell down!

Monday, July 2, 2012

Entering week 4, recovery week

So far so good, training has been going well and I'm enjoying the more laid back version of training than I employed last year. I know I'm getting through this race and I'm trying to enjoy myself more, while at the same time, seeing some solid speed improvements finally! Yesterday I had my longest run in, well, since the Ironman. I did 8 miles, and not only was I faster than I've been in years, it actually felt pretty easy. My HR never spiked and I never felt all that tired. I could've easily gone on longer, had I had the need to. I guess the need would be if a bear decided to give chase. But for comparisons sake, last week I did 7 miles in 1:14. This week I did 8 miles in 1:20. Last week I felt faint and a bit nauseous, where yesterday I felt absolutely normal. So, obviously I'm thrilled with my progress. My long ride was very hard to gauge because of the heat that we rode in, and the fact that we had to stop constantly to check the map. We got lost a LOT. It was a bit frustrating. And I ran out of water towards the end and did i mention it was incredibly hot? We were insanely slow, but a lot of that was cause we were talking a LOT and not pushing very hard. But I expect that speed to increase when I'm focused on racing. And, last but not least, I had an awesome swim on sunday too. I was supposed to do 1200, but that just seemed like too short for a long swim, so I planned to do 1500. I got into it and that just seemed to easy so I went for a cool 2000. I never stopped, never felt the least bit tired and did the 2000 in 35 minutes. That puts me well ahead of where I expect to do on my race. Considering that we swim with a current and I'll have a wetsuit. So all in all, I'm quite excited about my training progress. Recovery week ahead!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

It's been a while....

So I haven't written anything since my race last week. Good reason for that. Last weeks training was garbage. I missed most of my workouts, didn't do any training this past weekend, and well, it's just been really tough. Lots of responsibilities lately and getting my morning and evening workouts in has been super tough. I'm hoping that this week gets me back on track. I'm just not used to waking up at 5:30, probably because i've been going to bed at 11. I have to get back in the habit of 9-10 pm bedtime, and just sucking it up and getting out of bed when that alarm goes off. I'm actually less tired right now, despite less sleep and the workout than if I slept later. Anyway, I did get in a fairly long workout yesterday. I did a 27.5 mile bike ride in a little over an hour and a half. I love that ride, except for a small stretch where the road is terrible. But it's a really fun ride with one substantial climb and then a lot of other rollers. I did an easy run this morning on the treadmill, and my HR monitor was being really weird. There's no way I was running a 180+ HR while going at a 10 min/mile pace. I'm missing more swimming workouts than I have in the past, but seeing as how that's been my strong suit I'm ok with it. I've been doing all I can to not miss time on the bike. Not only is it the longest leg, but it's going to be the one that has the most impact overall. Being strong on the bike carries over to the run. But anyway, I just registered for Ironman Augusta, so I'm very excited about that. I don't know how it's going to go because I just don't have faith that I'm going to do well with my training. Actually, now that I think about it, it shouldn't be a problem. Now that I"ve lost my job it should be pretty easy to get my training in. Well, hopefully I'm writing again soon cause that means that I've been doing my training. Until then

Monday, June 11, 2012

Biltmore lake Race Report and more

So it's monday again, ugh. This past weekend I raced in the Biltmore Lake Sprint Triathlon. What a great race! Easily the hardest short distance race I've ever done. Last year was the first time I had done it and it came up a few weeks after my first main race and a couple weeks before I began my Ironman training, so I didn't train specifically for it. This year the same could sort of be said, but I'm in the middle of training so I wasn't as off as last year, but even still, I've only been training for 3 weeks so far, so I didn't know what to expect. The swim: The water was a nice 74 degrees, wetsuit legal, and the air was in the low 60's. Very nice combination cause the water actually wound up feeling a bit warm. My swim wave consisted of all the men's groups so we had a pretty large wave. I thought I was lined up pretty straight on to the turn buoy, yet, I was all the way out on the edge of the pack. So I'm not sure what everyone else saw that I didn't, unless the majority of the people thought they had to swim close or to the right of the sight buoy. Either way, it allowed me a more open swim without the battle. I wasn't overly happy with my swim. I wasn't trying to kill myself because I knew I had a brutal bike ride ahead of me, and whatever gains I'd get from the swim would more than be lost on the bike. So I tried to hold back a little bit, but it just wasn't a good swim. I started getting a stomach cramp around the half way point. My only guess for the reason for that was eating the GU's too close to the race start. I usually eat one 45 min before and 15 min before. But I forgot and probably did more like 25 and 5. So it was still sitting there. Lesson learned, eat it earlier. The swim was relatively uneventful which is usually what I go for. I wound up finishing my swim in 14:08(or something like that) which was about 1:30 faster than last year(no wetsuit last year though). So I was pretty happy with that, especially considering I didn't try to push myself too hard. The bike: The bike is where this course gets its reputation. Thirty seconds in the bike you hit your first climb, and it just never stops from there. Nearly the entire route is up or down with virtually no flat stretches. And the stretches that seem flat are usually false flats. I did feel very good getting on the course. I hit the first climb and powered through it. I reached the top not feeling tired at all and started laying into the downhill. The next nasty hill comes in a neighborhood after you've lost all your momemtum from the previous downhill so you hit the hill without much speed. It's short, but it's extremely steep. During races I try to avoid standing as much as possible since that absolutely hammers your quads and makes the run miserable. But this stretch I just had to stand up and push a bit. After the neighborhood you have some slight hills, but I was able to stay aero through these until the first slight downhill where you can really let it loose. It's a pretty fun stretch of windy roads but not too steep. This leads to the most intimidating hill on the course, what I call the roller coaster climb on Pisgah Highway. I'm not going to detail the entire course, but I was very happy with how I did out there. I pushed pretty hard up the climbs, but not too to the point of exhaustion. My only issue was my brakes. There were a few stretches were I had to go slower than I wanted because they were acting and sounding very strange, and was afraid if I went too fast they might fail on me, and that's not a course to have a brake failure. My previous time was about an hour and six minutes and some change. My previous best time just doing the route alone was an hour and four minutes. Yesterday I did it in an hour and 36 seconds. So I blew away last years time so I was thrilled about that. I had hoped to break an hour which I just barely missed, but it gives me a new goal for next year. However, with a good bike you usually have poor run time. The run: I started into the run actually feeling pretty good. Legs weren't hurting me, breathing was under control, and I felt that I was maintaining a pretty good pace. But I also recalled last year feeling the same way right off the bat. I tried to focus on the scenery, the day, anything but the massive hill you encounter right at mile one. I got to the hill still feeling very good. But I knew that was going to change. The hill is absolutely nasty. It's the same on you encounter on the bike ride. Not long, but incredibly steep. I was probably running 12 min/miles up that hill, but so was everyone else around me. One person passed me on the hill and she was barely moving any faster than I was. But when I hit the top I still had plenty of energy which was very encouraging. I knew I was through the most difficult stretch and I could recover coming down the hill and then just push for the final mile and a half. It should also be noted at this point I had yet to have been passed by another person in my division. This meant that I was winning or that I just wasn't the first one out of the water. There really was no way to tell until the awards ceremony. It was also at this point where I got passed by the first person in my division. With a mile and a half to go, and the pace he was going there was no way I could match his pace, so I had to hope that I was at least in second place. I just kept going at the pace I felt I could maintain for the rest of the race. It was a tough finish because the course did roll a little bit, but I definitely felt better than last year when I wood chip got in my shoe and sliced my pinky toe. As I approached the finish line, I realized I definitely could've pushed harder(which has become a common theme), and I came through with a run time of 25:52. Which was almost 5 minutes better than last years time! And a pace of 8:20 min/mile. Crushing my goal of 9 min miles. Wrap up: So, turns out I was second out of the water. The guy who passed me also passed that guy and took first place. I wound up in third. Missing first place by less than 2 minutes. My final time was 1:42:50(ish) which was over 10 minutes faster than last years time. I was more than happy with how I did this weekend. I've never improved that much on a race performance especially considering my lack of training. It's a great race and I hope to better my time again next year. My run is what cost me first place again. Despite my solid run time for myself, it was still one of the slowest in my division. My swim and bike bought me enough time to make up for it. The average time was in the 23's. So by next year I expect to be doing sub 8 min miles and hopefully get my time down to the lower 20's. Yesterday I did a long, recovery ride around the fletcher area. It was an awesome ride back there. It was generally flat with one substantial climb that was a blast to come back down. We went about 28.5 miles and averaged about 16 mph. Definitely took it a lot easier than we had too though after the race we were both a bit worn out. It was a great route, the only negative was the enormous amount of traffic. I plan to do it again, but next time will definitely try to get out early before too many cars take to the road.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Fun ride yesterday, freaking exhausted today

Yesterday I did another great route, but I had to call an audible about halfway through. I had mapped it out, but unfortunately, the map doesn't distinguish paved from unpaved roads. So I got to where I needed to turn and was not about to do another climb on a dirt road. The funny part was that I saw the road and was pretty sure that was it. So, I pulled out my phone to look at the map. Of course I was in a dead zone, so as I'm sitting there waiting for it to load I hear some kind of weird snorting sound. And then I heard it again. I don't know where it could've been coming from as it was fairly open where I was standing, but there were some obstacles. The only thing I could think of was a bear was not liking where I was standing and was kindly telling me that I should be moving on. I chose not to think anymore about what it was, assume it was a bear politely asking me to move and I responded to his request. But all in all it was another good ride. My speed has been way up considering the hills, my HR has been at a decent level, low enough that I had plenty more in the tank for race day confidence. My exhaustion today though, wow. It's probably related to going to bed later than usual last night and perhaps adjusting to the new workload of training. Fortunately, after tomorrow I get three days in a row to sleep in. Oh no I don't. Early race on saturday. Well, I have two days to catch up. Going to be a fun weekend though. Biltmore lake is a great race.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Another day

Still feeling good. Last night I did a 40 minute run around the neighborhood with Rachel on her bike. As usual the neighborhood is a pretty tough route. I did 3.75 miles in 40 minutes. So my pace was a 10:41 min/mile with an average HR of 156. I'm trying not to focus on HR while running but instead on how I feel. So considering the hilly nature of that route I'm really happy with that time and HR. I'm definitely running faster by focusing on RPE rather than watching my HR constantly, and running is a bit more enjoyable by just enjoying the outdoors instead of constantly focusing on my watch. I missed my run this morning since I woke up and it was pouring. But I"ll more than make up for it with the Biltmore Triathlon on saturday. That race is a killer, but it's a pretty fun race as well. I'm looking forward to it! Going for another podium finish! Woohoo!

Monday, June 4, 2012

Another week down, another week closer

Well, two weeks down. Only a short 17 to go. I really really enjoy training now. It's crazy. I did miss a workout friday, but, oh well. It was a short bike ride. In the grand scheme of things it wasn't going to make any difference in the long run. We had a trip to Virginia that made getting a double workout in friday pretty difficult. But I did make myself get out for my longish ride yesterday. That was a really nice ride, but I did push a little harder than I intended. But it felt good. I think I actually enjoy pushing myself than the laid back training I was doing last year. Not to mention the fact that riding hundreds of miles on Riverside drive got very old after a while. So doing new and different routes is a lot more enjoyable. I did the same ride yesterday that I did last week and I improved by 5 minutes. But I did push harder. I haven't looked at my average HR but I'm sure it was higher. But I'm starting to think I'm going to get a better return on the investment than by just going along at an easy pace the whole time. However, my cruising speeds are far higher than they were last year. Last year I'd usually cruise around 18 I'm pushing 21-22. Probably a combination of better aero position and using the big ring in the front instead of the small. I'm using a bit more power but it doesn't seem to be wearing me out any more. I've also used this strategy in races and my runs haven't been affected. Today I had my first truly long swim. The warmup was a 4 x 200 with a main set of 1500. It was very easy. Speed was ok, but the ease of it was what I was going for, and I truly hate long distance in a pool. Nothing like staring at the same blue line for 30 straight minutes. I much prefer open water swims for those kind of distances. I need to find a lake I can go swimming in close by. All in all training is still going great. My weight is starting to creep down much sooner than I'd have liked. Time to start ramping up the amount of food I eat. I'm at 205 right now, down from 210 just two weeks ago. I don't want to drop below 200 until more like september. At this late i'll be in the low 190's by then. Rachel will NOT approve of that!

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Training is goooooood.....

I am truly enjoying training! I don't know what the difference is. Maybe it's a few weeks of killing myself in the basement or it's a different type of training than I did last year, but whatever it is, I'm liking it better. Last year was a lot of the same types of training, every time. It was either hours upon hours of riding back and forth on riverside drive, or running the same flat loop at carrier park, but my god did it get dull and boring. There was never anything new to see, nothing new to accomplish, just grinding out mile after mile. This time I've been using new venues, no real specific plan other than to run/ride for a while. I'm doing hills, mountains, roaring downhills, windy roads, trails, etc. It's just been so much more fun. Where last years training felt like a job, this year it's been pleasure. So that being said, yesterday I went for my hour bike ride. I was sort of trying to get out of it, but of course the wife says, "oh you can go for it now, dinner will take a bit longer than that." Dammit, gotta go. So I did. I rode from my house, out weston rd to mills gap and just rode that for a while. It's slightly rolling, mostly flat. But wow has my fitness improved. I don't know why. But for a while there I was cruising along at 22 mph with my heart rate only around 130 or less. Amazing! Even the climbs I was moving around 18 mph and my HR only climbed slightly. It was such a great ride. My runs have been similar. I've been moving at a pretty good clip, feeling a bit wiped, buy my HR is still staying on average in the 150's. It's climbing by the end, but I've been able to move pretty fast at a fairly low rate. I'm loving training this go round! Can't wait to keep it up!

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Finished week 19...

Just finished up week 19, which for me, was my first week of training for Augusta. So far so good. I'm following a similar plan as for last years Ironman, but I'm pushing mysself a bit harder this time. I really want to improve in speed, and running easy, 12 minute miles, is not going to help me. It'll get me to the finish line, but that's not my goal anymore. I need to get faster. So far so good though. Since my last post I've had several runs and swims and I think only one bike ride. The runs have gone well, my HR is down a little, despite feeling that it's really high. But on flat ground, my easy pace is lower than 10 min miles, so that's a great start for being so early. I can only assume, hope, that that will improve especially when I get into speed training and track/hill workouts. This morning was muggy as hell and I ran around my neighborhood, which is a very tough combination. But the run went pretty well. I tried to keep a constant pace the whole time without ever killing myself. I maintained about an 11 min mile, while trying to focus on recovery. I'm feeling pretty sore this morning, but my lower back is not hurting. I noticed it starting to hurt just a bit last night after my run and figured I'd know if something were wrong this morning. The next couple weeks of training are going to be fairly boring I'm afraid. It's the same workouts for the first 4 weeks just getting you into the swing of things. So it'll be pretty easy going. I'm actually looking forward to the more grueling training later on.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Day...whatever...of training...

Yea so I'm not doing the countdown thing again. Just going to try and post day to day as my training progresses. I just did my long, "easy", run yesterday. It was anything but. It wasn't as long as I planned, 47 minutes compared to 60, and it was anything but easy. I planned a 5.5 mile route, knowing that the hills in my neighborhood would slow me down. The problem was that it wasn't so much the hills that slowed me as they were more like mountains. Dear god, I've never ran such long and steep hills before. It was downright brutal. Lesson learned. No more running around my neighborhood for my long "easy" run anymore. I'll be going to fletcher park for that from now on. However, despite that, the run actually went really well. I don't know what my pace was, probably around 11 min miles, which considering the terrain, not too bad. I felt really good throughout and my legs only feel slightly tired today. So, all in all, good start to the training season. It's so much nicer than insanity. Less insane too. Needed to add for my own good. Supposed to be an RPE 2-3 run. Felt like a 7-9 with bits of 10 and 5 thrown in there depending where I was on the hill. Future reference, do not do this run again for an easy run.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Training has begun for the Augusta 70.3

So over the past weekend I realized how much I absolutely hated doing the Insanity workouts. Not because they were too much of a challenge, but simply because it was not fun. My scheduled had become, get home from work, say hi to the family. Rush down to the dungeon(basement), put on the video, proceed to kill myself for 40 minutes, look out the windows at what was almost always a beautiful day, then trudge back upstairs, sit for 20 minutes so I could stop sweating, shower, start sweating again, crash on the couch. This past weekend during our trip to Hilton Head I had a revelation while running with my dad while he biked and our two dogs. I missed the outdoors. It was a beautiful morning, beautiful weather, beautiful scenery and I had my dog at my side enjoying the fresh air together. I realized how much I missed triathlon training. It even hit me that it didn't even feel like training. It was just a nice time enjoying the outdoors. So it hit me. Why am I doing training that I hate, when I could be doing training that I love? So, I informally jumped into my half IM training this week. I'm using a program from the same person who wrote the program I used for the full ironman. It's by Scott Herrick and found on Beginnertriathlete.com. It changes up every week so the training never gets stale. Gives a lot of different swimming routines so that remains different every time as well. Given my experience and knowledge I'll probably modify some sessions here and there, but I liked it last time and was a good guide. So far this week I got in a 6 mile run on monday which took about 57 minutes. Now I gotta say, as much as I hated Insanity, I've definitely seen a difference. The last time I did that very same route was 5 weeks ago. I haven't done any running since and it took me 58 minutes and change, but I felt miserable. I had to walk a few times and I struggled mightily to make it back. This past time I cut over a minute off the time, and felt far far better. It was cooler though, so who knows. Either way though, I think Insanity did teach me to fight through a lot of pain and misery. I didn't do anything on tuesday. Oh well. Yesterday I got back in the pool after a long lay off, and it pretty much showed. My speed is still pretty constant, but my endurance doesn't seem like it used to. I did 1500 yards in 27 minutes. The main set, including warm ups(i tend to swim these at normal pace) was 1250 and I did that in 22 minutes. So I"m pretty happy with that speed. My focus this season is going to be on the bike and run. I'm very deficient in those, especially the run. If I can even get up to a relatively average run I'll be competing for the podium at every race. My bike has been pretty solid this year, it's been the run that's cost me. In each race this year I've lost places going into the run. My second race I went from second to third, and my last race I went from second to fourth. I need to at least hold position. My sprint tri 5 k time is around 8:25 min/mile. I'd like to get that under 8 by the end of the season. Overall goals for the season: Sprint tri 5 k: sub 24 minutes oly run: sub 1 hour Augusta Half IM: overall: sub 6 hours Bike: < 3 hours Run: < 2:15 If I can accomplish those two, I can come in under 6 hours. My swim will likely be in the 35 min range, or less(I hear there's a current). My plan is to push myself harder in training this year than I did last year. I'm going to incorporate track training and hill workouts. For my running training, I typically have 3 runs a week. I plan to do at least one hill/track workout, one tempo run, and one slow easy run. I'm so excited to getting back to tri training!

Monday, May 14, 2012

Clemson Triathlon Race Report

So yeah, I haven't done much posting this year. I haven't had much to post about. Training related anyway. With the new baby training has been an afterthought. I've taken up Insanity since it takes a lot less time and it's enabled me to get training in, even if it isn't triathlon specific. However, it's been interesting after seeing my results from this weekends race. This season I've done virtually zero triathlon training. It has consisted of a handful of bikes, runs, and swims and two races so far. However I've done 3 weeks of Insanity so far. When comparing last years Clemson performance to this years, I'm amazed that I was only 30 seconds slower this year than last when I had been training for 5 months at this point. There's definitely something to be said for Insanity. It is definitely training me to perform at an anaerobic level and tolerate higher levels of pain associated with it. My only disappointment was that I crossed the finish line and actually felt as if I had a lot more to give. My swim was good. Better than I had hoped. I came out 2nd in my category, and i was somewhere in the 14+ minute range. The weirdest thing was my bike. I actually finished higher overall in my bike than I did in my swim. That has never happened before. I have been making an effort to give a lot more on the bike that I have in the past and it's showing. My bike times have been considerably faster this year than in past seasons and my runs haven't suffered like I thought they would. The run is tough no matter what, so I might as well go as hard as I can on the bike and just hope for the best on the run. I knew I'd have a pretty good bike at the charleston sprint since it's dead flat and you can really pound away, but I knew Clemson would be a new challenge since it's hilly. But I knocked this one out too as I forced myself to pound the pedals up the hills and rest on the downhills. That strategy worked out very well and it's one I'm going to try to employ next time at the Biltmore Lake race. That'll be a different story I believe because the hills are longer, steeper, and more challenging than I faced in Clemson. The run went pretty well too. It's a tough run because you start with a 1 mile steady downhill. It's a nice way to ease into the run, but it makes for a very tough final two miles. After it flattens for a football field distance you have a short, but brutally steep climb. You go a bit farther on flat ground until the turn around at which point you have to go back down the steep hill, not as bad as climbing, but not exactly a rest either. I did however feel pretty good at the bottom, and increased my pace somewhat. I felt really good coming up the final mile long hill, and just wish I had pushed a bit tougher in that last mile. Either way, I was very happy with the race, especially considering my lack of specific training.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Lake Lure Collegiate Spring Tri - First race of the year

So, training hasn't gone so well since the last time I posted. I've gone through several training programs and nothing has stuck. Since my last post I've had a baby and moved. Those things have taken a bit of my time. Plus my job hours were cut, which you'd think would give me more time, but since I'm now on a 4 day, 9 hour schedule, I have long weekends, but less time during the week. So, the bottom line is that I've hardly trained so far this year. I tried to get in a few rides/runs/swims, but nothing that would be considered "training."
Well, this first race came up quick and I figured, what the hell, I'll do the best I can. It's not a big race so it's a good starting barometer. I've decided that going forward from here I'm just going to get in training sessions when I can, but I'm not going to worry about sticking to a schedule, at least for now. The first half of this season will just be fun, and starting in June I'll get more focused as I start training for the Augusta Half Ironman in Sept.
Anyway, back to the race. The swim was a 500 yard lake swim, then a 13 mileish bike ride through what was mainly rolling hills, and then a 5k run.
The swim felt very good, and quite different from the last one. This wave contained five people, where as my last open water swim had 2500 people. A bit roomier. I felt pretty good, considering I've swam 5 times in the last 3 months. Although I got out, I'm hopeful the swim was long, because my time was not good if it were a true 500 yards. I'm a typical 1:43 or less per 100 yard swimmer, and at the race I paced 2:03, if it were accurate. Even in the Ironman I paced 1:45, so I highly doubt I was that much slower, considering I was pushing harder as well.

Anyway, on to the bike. The run to the TA was a joy. Had to run up a short beach, then up a very long staircase, then a slight hill. They never do us much favors with that. I could barely run it, I had to walk a good bit of that. I did a pretty fast transition, and then started running out of transition and I'm running and running, and finally wondering where the hell the mount line is and I yell out and ask, apparently it was a random spot that a few volunteers were standing on, and no one either told me, or they didn't say it loud enough...typically there's a line spray painted. No biggie, that probably only cost me a few seconds. On to the bike...I actually felt great on the bike. The course started with a pretty long, steep climb. All in all it was actually a pretty fun course. Lots of turns, ups and downs, and I surprised myself. I pushed pretty hard and passed quite a few people who had a significantly large head start on me. I really knocked out the hills so that was encouraging for me going forward. I'm really going to try and get more hilly rides in so I can improve in that regard. That is clearly my biggest weakness, and it'll not only help my bike but my run as well. My bike time was around 49 minutes and I averaged right at 16 mph. A little slower than where I was last year, but since I haven't been riding at all, I'll take it.

T2 as usual was super quick. However, I'm starting to think I need tri specific shoes. I'm always have a hard time getting my shoes on barefoot, because the sole slides up with my foot. Sometimes takes a few tries to get it on properly, kind of defeating the time saving aspect of going sockless.

So on to the run. My running seems to have taken the least beating, since that was my best time(not overall, but to me). This run started out with about a quarter mile downhill, so just enough time to let you cool down a bit from the bike, but then went straight into a very steep quarter mile climb. Brutally steep climb, I made up running, but I was barely going faster than a walk. After topping out you were rewarded with an equally steep downhill, so hardly a break. The next mile or so was a steady climb to the turnaround. I think i maintained a fairly steady, solid pace until that point. I knew once I made it to the turn around the rest would be easy. After hitting the turn around I picked up my pace slightly, since I had just a bit over a mile and it was all slightly downhill. As I got closer I kept increasing the pace just slight before breaking out into an all out sprint with about 50 yards to go. It was actually the best I'd felt after finishing a sprint tri. I'm usually feeling pretty lousy and very light headed, but I didn't feel any of that. My run time was 25:46 for a pace of 8:31.

I wound up finishing first in the age group division, but it was only out of three. But hell, a win is a win! I'll take it.

Friday, February 10, 2012

2012 Triathlon Season is underway - Week 1

Yea, so the whole "I'm going to start posting again thing really didn't pan out so much. Oh well. I haven't had much to say. I had been doing P90X over the past couple months to work on some of my short comings, which is primarily strength. It worked I'd say. I managed to add on a few pounds of muscle, I think. My weight is up about 13 pounds since the ironman, but considering there was thanksgiving, a cruise, and christmas in between there, I would venture a guess that I did not gain 13 pounds of muscle since then. But, I definitely noticed and felt a difference in strength by the time I put an end to P90X. It definitely works, but I just hated every moment of it. I was really happy to get back to tri training this week. Indoor training is not for me. Nor is waking up at 5:15 every day. So anyway, I had done a few runs, swims and bike rides interspersed over the past few months, but nothing really consistent. I did a 10 a few weeks ago. I did finally accomplish one goal, which was a sub 1 hr 10k . I do feel I could've done a lot better with a better strategy. I had actually done the route the week before, in worse conditions, with a slightly better time. I just went too hard at first leaving me dieing over the final two miles, especially the final half mile of steep climbing.
I started up this week with my training set for my target race at the Biltmore Lake Sprint. I'm hoping for a drastic improvement from last years race when I really didn't train for it it all. It was during my down time between training periods and it was just a local race I wanted to race. So I have no reason why I shouldn't beat my time of 1:47 from last year. I did place 3rd in my group though, so it would be cool to improve on that.
My training has been super easy so far, quite a huge change from Ironman training. The sessions are far shorter now, but are focused on higher intensity for the most part. It does make them considerably more difficult than last year, but far far far less time. I haven't really taken my road bike out at all do to weather and laziness. But I have gotten two indoor trainer sessions in so far. It seems that swimming is my most vastly improved segment, possibly as a result of P90X. My upper body strength was easily my biggest weakness, and despite swimming being my strongest sport before, it so far seems even stronger. My running is feeling pretty good too. I'm not watching my HR like a hawk like I had been before, but more running by feel. My comfortable pace seems to be in the 9:45 range, give or take depending on the terrain.
I've become part of a weekly group run on saturdays that focuses on trail runs, so that'll definitely help tremendously with leg strength and endurance. Hills have been a huge stumbling block for me, so this will definitely help a lot.
Well, that about covers it, back to work I guess.