What started as the story of an average Dave knocking things off his life to-do list is now a blog about distance running, triathlons, all things Chicago… complete with a Rock and Roll soundtrack.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Really? A Runners High?
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
The Long Pool
Monday, March 24, 2008
What about Cross Training??
Happy Easter
Saturday, I went for a run. Nothing fancy, just took off, got lost. Kept is slow and easy. Still a little chilly. Really ready for spring to really start.
Tonight I am playing hoops for the work basketball team. It will be a good change of pace. Also hoping to get a swim sometime today (lunch?).
Here is my run for Saturday. No, I did not see any creepy bunnies on my run, just getting better photos for Ryan.
Running
9.25 miles, 1:23, 8:57 minute/mile pace
Friday, March 21, 2008
Happy Easter... Iowa or Bust!
With the change in location this weekend, comes a change in workout routine. Luckily, there are places to run in most places, and in most US city's there are YMCA's with pools. Unfotunatly, I will be missing my weekly CARA group run, which I have really come to enjoy. Thus it will be a 9 mile run through the Iowa country side (which I have to admit, I am looking forward to).
Not only will I have some time to get out and see some of the rolling hills of my native land, but I will get a chance to run the rolling hills of my native land. Good prep for Pikes Peak (yes, I realize that is a slightly larger hill, but compared to the flat Chicago...)
Last night, quick 5.9 mile run. Annoying because I thought by going by the clock I would be six miles for sure. I wanted a nice slow paced run because my body was killing me all day from my previous workouts. Apparently I was 1/10 of a mile slower than I had expected. Oh well.
Also last night was nice as my sister and her boyfriend came over to my place to watch the Irish clobber poor little George Mason. No, I don't feel sorry for George Mason. They got to go to the final four two years ago. They just got lucky they didn't have to play ND that year.
Next game for the Irish, tomorrow at 5:40. I assume that it is an Easter tradition at the WND Gal's parent's house to watch basketball. If not, I will have to strategically place my run and have it go for about 2 hours longer than expected.
Probably won't post till at least Sunday. Dispite running for president, Al Gore must have never made it to Marion, or at least his wonderful invention the internet never did!
Running:
5.9 Miles, 53:35, 9:04 minute/mile pace (REAL slow)
Thursday, March 20, 2008
First Day of Spring? Six Inches of Snow? I call BS!
Runners World.com has a contest for Spring Haiku’s. Here is mine (with 6 inches of snow on the way):
Welcome to the spring
How I have longed for your sun
Why must snow persist?
The Remedial Group
To stroke my ego I always told myself that there was no correlation between spelling ability and intelligence. Mind you I kept telling myself that when we were spelling words with no more than 4 letters (and often spelling them wrong). In the end I think I have been vindicated. There were three of us in the dumbass group: Mark O, Kristin R, and myself (not putting full names to protect the innocent). While I have no idea what happened to old Mark O, (Google on revealed he attended his 10 year reunion at North High in Des Moines), last I heard from Kristin R is she is messing with the genetic code of corn for a large company near Des Moines. Thus, at LEAST 2/3 of the bad spelling group has managed to go on to hold jobs at a relatively higher level than our spelling ability would suggest.
Sorry, I digress.
The point is I have never much cared for being in the remedial group. Like most runners/triathletes I own a bit of a competitive streak. Not that I want to win every event, I am not that good at this sport of multisport yet, but I’ll be damned if I am the worse.
So after my smashing success in my Freestlye 1 class, I assumed I would be able to jump right into masters practices with the Chicago Blue Dolphins and be the hero. When I arrived last night, first thing I noticed is Coach Fitz from my swimming class wasn’t there. Not a big deal, I knew he only runs about half of the practices. This particular practice was run by two of his junior coaches (one who had subbed in for one of my classes, the other one was a Domer). I explained that I had just finished the Freestyle 1 class and I should be assigned to their expert group. Jess (the Domer) put me in the “Transition” group. I am not exactly sure what that means, but I can only assume it’s “man who sinks” transitioning to “man who may or may not sink.”
How did the practice go? Not really that bad. Most of it was stroke work and drills, but we didn’t swim for anything longer than 25 yards at a time.
I don’t want to belittle how much my swimming has improved since last year this time; in fact I feel very comfortable swimming freestyle. But I leave a little to be desired when it comes to the drills, and to be honest, while improved, I am still need to work on get the muscle memory to work for swimming. For example, we did 12 25’s at the end of practice, and I only used 17 strokes for the first 3, but then I couldn’t hold that level of efficiency for the rest. [To put this into perspective, I think my friend Charlie said he is down to 11 strokes. Of course he is going to swim the English Channel this summer.]
The coaches were very helpful, but I kind of hope I can sneak into the level one group next time. We will see.
Swimming
Chicago Blue Dolphins practice, around 1.5 hours
Note: GO IRISH!! Beat Patriots! (George Mason, 1st Round NCAA, 9 PM CST, CBS)
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Great Speedwork Article from Slowtwitch.com
Basically it says if you want to be a much faster runner, you need to run, a lot. Seems like common sense right? Although be warned, the levels at which Empfield is talking about would certainly risk injury for most of us weekend warriors. Despite that, there are good lessons to be learned from this piece.
Here are some good take homes from the story:
- "Get into a daily running habit." Good for lots of reasons.
- "Run more than once a day." This can add to you mileage while providing some rest. You can't have two hard workouts in one day, but you can do this.
- "Run with others." Yeah, as I can attest from last weekend's CARA run, that works well. Most of us runners/triathletes tend to want to stay up with the runner next to you.
- "Lose weight." The truth is, if you lose 5 pounds, your minutes per mile will drop. This is what causes a lot of eat disorders in college cross country, but with those of us with pounds to lose it is probably an ok reminder.
- "Learn to exert." Here is where Empfield reminds us the body gets used to challenging situations if you keep putting yourself through difficult workouts. It's the whole, "it isn't as bad as it used to be" way of thinking.
- "Run fast." He talks a lot about different types of speed work routines, primarily either doing interval days, or tacking it on at the end of a workout, but the point is that you need to practice fast to perform fast.
Here is one plan Empfield designed to be incorporated into your running over two to two and a half weeks (designed for 10k training, for a 37 min 10k goal, yeah I know that is fast, you will have to just do the math):
- 6 mile run, the middle three miles tempo, at 6:00-6:15 pace [At or just slower than your race pace for a 37 minute 10k -- thus substitute your goal 10k pace here.]
- 4X800m in 2:45, with a slow, 5-minute 800m jog in between. This is 5:30 pace, and should be a bit uncomfortable to run. You’ll find it difficult to hold form. Your legs will be a bit sore the next day. [For the human runners here, run yours at least a minute faster than your 10k pace. You can do this on the treadmill, but the track is better]
- 8X400m in 80sec, with a 400m jog in 2:30 in between. This is 5:20 pace, and will be a painful workout. It’ll be hard to hold form. [Again, change the math so the pace is a little faster than the 800 pace above.]
- 4X800m in 2:40, with a slow, 5-minute 800m jog in between. This is again 5:20 pace, but you’ll find it easier to hold form this time around, as these quicker-paced runs yield surprisingly fast results, at least in the area of motor learning. [Same as 400 pace above]
- 6 mile run, the middle three miles tempo, at 5:50-6:00 pace. This will be a faster run, with better form, and more even splits, than your first effort at this. [Again just change to your goal 10k pace.]
Overall, it is a great article. There are many more like it at http://www.slowtwitch.com/. Check it out.
Lastly, for those of you who have the fear of falling off the treadmill, here is a few good spills brought to my attention by Daily Triathlon. Watch ridiculous people falling off treadmills.
Here was my quick Tuesday night workout:
Running
On the treadmill, 3.5 miles, 28:06
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
What is the 3rd Oldest US Marathon?
Monday, March 17, 2008
Happy Saint Patrick's Day!
Saturday, March 15, 2008
100 Days Till Hy-Vee Triathlon
That I will be a little better prepared this year, and I am looking forward to giving it another shot. If you might remember, sometime in April of last year I decided to buy a bike and "learn how to swim" and enter in their inaugural event. In it I spent 53 minutes in the water (just an olympic distance, 1500 meter swim), which also included a few misdirections. After I finished the swim I was happy to just finish the event (which I did in 3:20:56, not particularly impressive).
This year I am already swimming, the running is again going well (as I am training for a half in April), and I am planning on biking the second the weather gets just a little warmer. Plus, with one under my belt, I have a lot better understanding on how this whole thing works.
Secondly, they ran a very good event in Des Moines last year. They through a ton of dough a the pros, picked a very good route for the age groupers, a very fun one for the pros. And it worked out pretty good for the triathlon as well as they are hosting the last of the olympic trials for the US Triathlon team for the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. Pretty cool stuff for Des Moines (my hometown).
Thus our nations finest triathletes also only have about 100 days to see if they can fulfill their olympic dreams. Also pretty cool.
As we are talking tri, I would also like to recommend a new tri website: Daily Triathlon. They have a couple of cool videos on it. One is of an open water swim race in Australia, the other is highlighting a Kenyan running program. Enjoy!
Speaking of Daily Triathlon and Des Moines, here is a little video of a Laura Bennett interview, who won in Des Moines last year.
As for today, my CARA group had a good 8 mile run. Weather was a warm feeling 35 degrees, the wind wasn't quite was bad as last year. I actually forgot my hat and gloves and it turned out ok.
Running:
8 miles, 1:06:05, 8:12 pace
I hope you enjoy the St Paddy's day theme. Today we are off to see the Chicago river get greener, and then we are planning some celebrations.
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Some Peoples' Idea of a Dumb Idea
Co-worker, "You know you can drive up that right."
Dave, "That would be a lot easier wouldn't it."
Co-worker, "Yep."
I am excited and maybe a little scared... not that a mountain really cares. I did in fact register for the Pikes Peak Ascent yesterday. According to their website, Ascent Wave 2's (the slower wave, I didn't qualify for the fast wave) 865 spots filled in 1 hour 7 minutes. They still need to confirm my qualifications (that I did a half marathon in under 2:30), but once that is complete I willl be all set to knock off a couple of things off the list. Pikes Peak Ascent as an event is on the list, as is climbing a 14,000 ft mountain. If I don't get up a 14,000 foot peak before August 16, I will just have to kill two items off the list with one "run." Pikes Peak's summit is at the elevation of 14,115'.
I will post more info on this as my training continues, but the more I read about it, the more I get a little "concerned" with what I am getting into.
From their website:
The Pikes Peak Ascent® will redefine what you call running. Sure, they start out like a lot of races on Any Street, USA. But your first left turn will have you turning in the direction of up! During the next 10 miles, as you gain almost 6,000 vertical feet, your legs, lungs, heart and mind will be worn to a ragged nothingness. But it won’t be until your last three miles, with still over 2,000' of vertical to go, that you will realize where the it got its moniker—America’s Ultimate Challenge.
There’s a reason trees don’t bother growing above 12,000' on Pikes Peak. They can’t! Makes one wonder if trees are smarter than runners. Above treeline most runners take 30 minutes or more, some much more, just to cover a mile. What little air remains can’t satisfy the endless stream of zombies hoping only to survive their next step—a death march right out of a scene from Dawn of the Dead. Adding insult to injury, it might start to snow!
Great.
Well I have decided I need to keep challanging myself, this should be a good start.
I got the night off of working out. Joined my good friend Meghan Robb for dinner. Meghan is getting back into triathlons after a few years off. A natural swimmer, she is considering ESCAPE FROM THE ROCK Triathlon this summer. Could be a really cool event!
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
What was that God? You want me to run?
Nothing crazy, I had worked out five days in a row, and Monday was a big day, so I made this more of a recovery slow run.
Running:
4.79 miles, 44:13, 9:13 minute/mile. Very comfortable pace.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Sales Job Today, Olympics Tomorrow?
Even better, check out his training video.
Pretty good use of Johnny Cash’s version of “God’s Gonna Cut You Down.”
As for me, while I won’t go to the Olympics anytime soon, I do have high hopes for a number of events this summer. Wednesday is the registration for the Pikes Peak Ascent. This is a half-marathon up a mountain. A pretty big mountain.
More on that if I make it into the registration. It fills up VERY quickly. Wish me luck (not sure what good luck would get me, but I guess I am hoping to get into it).
Today’s Workouts:
Strength:
I haven’t talked much about Crossfit yet, but I will. I used their workouts for my strength training all the time. Pretty good stuff. I did a lighter version of their "Lynne" workout: Five rounds for max reps of: Body weight bench press, Pull-ups
Running:
On treadmill, 3 miles keeping HR under my anaerobic threshold (which was 167 when I last tested it). Then I did 4 x 400 meters for speed work (between 6-6:30 min/mile pace).
Swimming:
This practice comes from Fitz at Chicago Blue Dolphins. I only post it because it is on his public site, and because I keep telling everyone I know in Chicago to go to him for swim lesions. I mean it. They really do a great job there.
Tech/Link Set:
4 x 50 Skating Drill @ :15R – Focus: Breathing into the water
4 x 50 Drill @ :15R (25 Triple Switch, 25 Triple Switch for a Bite)
4 x 50 FR @ :20R
Main Set:
4 x 25 Five Switch Drill @ :20R – Breathe into the Water
4 x 25 FR @ :20R – Breathe every 5th stroke
3 x 50 FR @ :30R (1st 25: Breathe every 3rd stroke, 2nd 25: Breathe every 5th stroke)
3 x 50 FR @ :30R (1st 25: Breathe every 5th stroke, 2nd 25: Breathe every 3rd stroke)
Cool Down: 100 Drill/Swim – Alt. 25 Triple Switch for Bite + 25 FR
Yeah, now I have a few hours of work to do. I am beat. Tomorrow I am off to Omaha for a meeting. No workout for me, but it has been 4 days in a row, so I am due for a rest day. Update on the Pikes Peak registration on Wednesday.
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Lazy Sunday...
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Six more weeks of winter it will be!
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
When In Doubt, Do It Now!
"So little done, so much to do."
I worry that people see this blog and think I am only concerned with physical activity. It is my hobby, and I enjoy pushing myself to do things I have never done before. As an added bonus, it keeps me healthy and clears my head. The super extra bonus, is that it allows me to plan healthy things with my friends and family (plan with them, drag them into, merely semantics).
But especially on this day when I have friends who find themselves with new challenges and opportunities, I think about Cecil's dying words and I wonder aloud in this strange blog world,
"Am I doing the right thing?"
I suppose that is goal in itself.
Today:
Running
I stole this from someplace on the web. It is a good speed workout when you are stuck in 12 inches of snow in St. Louis.
Warm up 15 minutes at base pace (let’s assume 8 min pace/mile)
4 min at 10% faster than base pace (about 7:10 pace)
3 min at 12% faster than base pace (about 7:00 pace)
2 min at 14% faster than base pace (about 6:50 pace)
1 min at 16% faster than base pace (about 6:30 pace)
Rest interval is half of the running time (i.e. 5 minute interval gets 2:30 rest)
How Many States? 40 Down, 10 to Go
ALASKA
DELAWARE
HAWAII
MAINE
MISSISSIPPI
NEW HAMPSHIRE
OREGON
PENNSYLVANIA
RHODE ISLAND
VERMONT
I did knock off South Carolina recently. Hopefully get this done in the next couple of years.
Monday, March 3, 2008
Stair Climbing Update
Hopefully next year we will be able to round up a few more people for the event.
In addition, a few of us did an encore run up the Hancock Building on February 24. My uncle came down from Traverse City MI and joined myself, What's Next Girl, and our friend Lane for a dash up "Big John".
I had a blast, but I am ready to get outside and have some fun. The is only so much fun you can have turning up dry stairwells.
Hustle Up the Hancock
Learn How to Swim... Check!
OK, so I didn't win a Oscar a few weeks ago, but I did graduate from "Freestyle 1" class at Chicago Blue Dolphins.
As many of my friends love cracking jokes about (see here), I am not a naturally skilled swimmer. While I did participate in swimming in high school, I was very, very bad at it. For whatever reason they decided not to teach me how to do it right there, but thanks to my friends Kristin and Sara, I was introduced to Total Immersion Swimming, and the Chicago place where they teach it, Chicago Blue Dolphins.
I had five classes at their training faculty (see photo) with their top notch instructor John Fitzpatrick. Despite Fitz being a Michigan guy, he really isn't a bad guy and he understands how to teach swimming to a self proclaimed hydrophobe. It really helps that their facilities include the Endless Pools, which allow you to see yourself in the mirrors they place below you and the instructor can stay next to you to help keep you in the right position.
All in all, they run a very good program there. I highly recommend CBD, or any TI class to those who are trying to learn to swim better, for whatever reason.So Learn to Swim is on the done list. Also note that Swim the English Channel enters the "To Do List" (really, plans are underway, more later).