Not that there was a poll...
But on the toe socks...
I vote NO.
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Not that there was a poll...
But on the toe socks...
I vote NO.
Its so nice out this morning, i want to run. But its a rest day. It better be this nice tomorrow for my 10 miler.
vermont 100-miler is today..
i was volunteering at mile 15 aid station.
crazy. wow. amazing.
i'll be at the finish line tonight.. he wants me there at 5.
-steve
I just got home from running the Speed Goat 50k. That course seemed like a mini version of the HR. There was about 10500 feet of climbing! I had a finishing time of 8:56. The winner (a very fast women) finished in 6:30ish! People we puking all over the place and it seemed like lots of DNF's.
I'm not sure about the SB50 right now. I need a few days of recovery to forget about all the pain and suffering I went through today.
i love it when 10 miles feels easy. i love the long run.
I listened to the Pheddipations podcast today, i thought it would suck, but it didn't
^^^^ agree with the luv when the long run comes easy. Although mine this weekend wasn't the easiest; I did my "hill circuit" which obviously goes a bit tougher than the regular ole long run.
I need to work on eating better. Nothing more to elaborate on...
Great time
Was it Danelle Ballengee?
That sounds awesome.
My race is on Saturday the people that I have to interact with can't wait till it's over especially my wife. Its hard for me to have fun or be friendly to anyone with in three weeks of race day. I don't now why, all I want to concentrate on is training, nutrition and proper sleep. I'm not sure that my wife will let me do this again next year and I may have ruined my chances of a fight in the spring.
Looks like they have changed the race that is five days away. This is makes training difficult.
""As I am writing this last newsletter on July 22nd , we basically had 2 days of sunshine in the last 30 days. The course is wet and muddy. Be ready for serious fun and slow going.
Once again some adjustment had to be made on the course in order to remain offroad and avoid running through the golf course that is now completed and operational.. Consequently you will be running approximately an extra 15 minutes in the brook before reaching the base of Jay Peak( Aid Station # 2). As you will be coming down Jay Peak, the lower part of the trail has also been changed by a bushwack/Dan special in order to avoid the golf course again. Take note that this will NOT bring you back to the base of Jay Peak at aid station 4 but in the middle of nowhere. Therefore if you have a drop offbag at Aid station # 2 will only be able to access that bag at aid # 2 and no longer at Aid # 4 like last year.
As I was setting up the Swamp section, the???BEAVER??? have completely change the landscape and I was force to re route the course in order to give you a COMPLETE swamp/beaver dam experience.
With those changes, the 1/2 marathon should now be 19.5 miles as oppose to 18.5 and 33 miles instead of 31.6 for the full Marathon. My estimation is that the course is 30 minutes slower this year and I will consequently increase the cutoff time to 6.00 hours from 5.30 at the 1/2 point or mile 19.5."
Not a bad time for my first Ultra.
The winner was Petra McDowell!
Anybody use Accelerade? What do you think? I started using it recently and today was the only time i experienced any gastro issues after my run.
I have heard that it has that effect on some people. I am trying to move away from gatorade.
i am gonna try the EFS, i like that it has aminos instead of complete proteins, makes sense to me
The Jay XC Challenge was super fun and vary difficult. But I meet my goal of beating last years time. Last year the race was 18.5 miles and this year it was closer to 20 miles. Last year I just wanted to finish which I did in 5 hours and this year I just wanted to beat last years time time which I did this year it took 3 hours and 39 mins. Next year I will either run the extra 10 miles to finish the full or place in the top three of the 20 mile. Anyway I came in 10th over all and hope to maybe run the Vermont 50 in the fall. here are the results as posted on coolrunning.com. Oh looks like I was 8th in my age group of 0-39 what kind of age group is that? The full list can be found here.
http://www.tetongravity.com/forums/a...6&d=1185797906
Well maybe the Vermont 50 I'd run the 50K. September 30th
also
Manchester City Marathon Nov. 4th just to see if I can qualify for Boston and that will end my road Marathon career. I took up running to stay fit and Marathoners are not my kind of fit.
And there is a race at Bolton Valley Ski area with a walkers/hikers devision that I may do because my wife and 8yo would also be able to enter in the fun.
Vermont 50k = 31 miles?? :eek: That would be pretty impressive... still have enough time to train for it?? Or have you been running enough that you'd only have to tweak your schedule / ramp up your mileage?
I've got the NYC 1/2 coming up this weekend. I'm not too concerned about the race itself... ran 12 on Saturday w/o issue... but the logistics of getting to my starting area by 6:15 AM seem problematic!!
Speaking of 50ks, does anyone want to do this 50K with me?
http://www.thenorthface.com/enduranc..._overview.html
I won't be properly prepared, but I will have fun!
-steve
Game face from the Jay Challenge.
http://www.tetongravity.com/forums/a...3&d=1185822547
What a good time that was!
As with all large runs, the story was hurry up and wait in the morning. I didn't sleep a wink on Saturday night for fear that I would oversleep the alarm clock. Got up and outside by 4:30 AM waiting for my ride... we were through the Lincoln Tunnel a little after 5 AM.
The parking garage that my friend researched and reserved on 95th was actually closed at that time, in conflict with what it's website said, but after driving around a few blocks, we found a place to park. Feeling a bit behind our schedule, we hurried across the park to the starting area, fighting to keep the turtle's head from popping out! (ewwww) Run here... sit down, put on shoes... run there... get water... run there... hand in baggage... run over there... get in line for the john. Finally, standing in line at 6:15 AM for the 7 AM start.
Tick tock tick tock tick tock... (okay, I used that time to stretch)
The race started and I was about 3 minutes off of clock time by the time I crossed the start. Two days prior, I stopped into the expo and picked up my pace bracelet amongst other things - - 1:35:00 pace. Figured I'd shoot for something. The bracelet was pretty cool, actually, because it was based on the topography of the course, so they gave you times based on that as opposed to just averaging out the entire run. Unfortunately, what they didn't base it on was the fighthing of crowds at the beginning. For a 1:35:00 1/2 marathon, I needed to average a 7:15 mile... my first two miles were both around 8 minutes each as I was fighting through the crowds. I picked it up after that and logged a bunch of low 7 minute miles, but it seems the 7:15 pace was a bit fast for me.
Running a loop and a 1/4 in the park took a lot longer than I thought.. but when I turned out of Central Park onto 7th Avenue, I certainly got a nice kick. 7th Ave was packed with people and bands and just running into Times Square was awesome. Too bad it was over so quickly! We made a right onto 42nd Street and said, "hello Mr. Headwind!" and then turned down the West Side Highway to finish it off. "Hello, Mr. Hot Sun."
My energy reserves started to deplete and around miles 10 and 11 I switched over running on grit. I was proud of my kick at the end and finished in full stride at 1:39:12... not quite the 1:35:00 I was shooting for, but I'm pleased with it! Now if I had to turn around and run it back, I would have been in trouble. Thankfully, there's a lot of time left to train for the full marathon in November!
My splits: 5k - 27:04; 10k - 50:11; 15k - 1:13:13; 20k - 1:37:20; Finish - 1:39:12; pace/mile - 7:34
Thanks!
Not quite sure.. I picked 1:35:00 as a goal because I figured it was something to strive for and with the "could I qualify for Boston" question in mind.
I'm glad I ran yesterday as hard as I could because it definitely makes for a good gauge as to where I am. I definitely could not have kept going at that pace though... but I have about 12 weeks of training left.
I have a buddy who has run Boston twice and has run 4 marathons total I think? His first was 3:50, his second 3:07 (to qualify for Boston), and then ran a 3:01 in Boston in 2006 and a 3:20 something last year. He's a physical therapist / owns a PT facility/gym, so is a good resource... I want to talk to him about how to best get fast. Some things I'm thinking about... should I lift? What sort of speed work / interval training should I do? Etc..
My first was San Fran last year in 3:50:45... so I'm hoping to follow in his footsteps.
Right now, I do either striders or 800 meter tempo runs as speed workouts. I think maybe I should turn those 800 meter tempo runs into 1 or 2 mile tempo runs and try to do some lifting to increase muscle endurance.
Oh, and need to practice drinking water while running. That is an art. They had it televised (I Tivo'd) and watching the winner (59:30 = 4:30/mile pace) grab water and drink it without breaking stride at 13 mph was really cool.
Any advice from the collective would be appreciated!!
Oh, and GREAT JOB COURTNEY!
Weights will not make you faster. Stick to some basic upper body routines. Lower body weight training in unnecessary.
Speed work will make you faster.
Long runs will help you to attain endurance.
Check out the local running stores, they ought to know of the various track workout in your area and can give recommendations.
At a water check:
1) slow to a walk
2) grab cup (preferably filled)
3) drink while walking
4) drink as much as necessary
5) start walking fast for a few paces and ramp up into your normal running stride.
6) don't forget to have fun.
Later on, you'll figure out how to drink while running or, like me, you'll carry your own bottle.
Way to go Gary!!!!!!! Nice writeup as well!
Did really well at my sprint tri this weekend- 5th in my age group! Couldn't believe I was actually that close to the top. Totally confidence booster before IMLOU. :)
Thanks, Viva! I think what I have to do is do faster speek workouts (as if that shouldn't be obvious!!)
No worries on this one... stay tuned for the NYC 1/2 Marathon version of my "hey, you with the camera!" patented marathon photo. Here is the San Francisco 2006 version:
http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k1...77/image_6.jpg
Got my solo shot ~last 1.5 miles or so on the West Side Highway yesterday!
;)
..and yes, Court, it is just sooooo dorky!!
all you need now is someone to give you a high five!
No worries! There was a Brazilian Coockaracha (spelling, obviously) band with scantily clad dancing women at the turn off of 42nd St. They all got the road trip high-five.
(as well as a band on 7th Ave)
(as well as two other groups of spectators on 7th Ave)
(oh, and the peeps that were at the turn out of Central Park got the Stephen Colbert "wooooooooooooooooooo!!!" with hands pumping them up into a frenzy!)
;) yes, I'm a dork
hey roadtrip, congrats dude. that's an awesome half-performance for a half-event.
(:
bd4a gave me a piece of advice a couple of weeks ago, which i have taken to heart: run for 21 consecutive days. establish a habit, or some shit. i said, "ok."
as of this morning, i am up to 10 consecutive days. I wasn't feeling good yesterday, swollen gland or something. but I didn't want to kill the streak, so I got dressed up after I got home from work (it was 9pm), with a flashlight, reflective vest, and a garmin. I didn't bother with the HRM, i felt so crummy i figger'd i'd only run a mile or so..
but it's funny, and this happened on sunday, too: no matter how crummy feel before and during the first few minutes of a run, i always feel good by mile 1. I ended up running just under 3 miles on both yesterday and sunday, even though both runs were planned to be just a mile.
running every day, just to keep a streak alive, has had an amazing result - besides the theoretical beginning of a habit. i've noticed an amazing endurance and (dare i say it?) speed gain in just 10 days of running consecutive. With a couple of exceptions, I've planned to keep the workouts easy to promote recovery from consecutive hammerin', but most of the easy workouts have turned out harder than planned because i'd decide to go an extra mile, or i'd see a hill and say "fuck it, i'm going for it." the hard workouts have been amazing, too - I felt so good after the trail-run up bear mountain that I did a 3½ mile easy jog afterwards. I felt so good after 9 miles of a 12-mile long run that I did the last 3 90 seconds/mile faster than the first 9, and finished strong. I keep exceeding my own expectations.. and my confidence is building as a result.
My plans for the fall are exciting.. what started out as a time goal for a marathon have turned into an endurance goal for multiple marathons and a 50k! i'm really eager to get that 50k done so i can call myself an "ultrarunner," because it's such a far cry from my super-fat days.
"I used to be fat. I still am, but I used to be, too."
anyway..
yeah.
-steve
PS I have a new "steve is smoking crack" dream goal, the hardrock 100..
check out these photos:
http://picasaweb.google.com/Hardrock...n/Hardrock2007
amazing.
-steve
Hmmm... interesting concept that I just may have to try to incorporate into my training. As much as I say I can't get out of bed in the AM to run before work, maybe I'll give it a shot again; but instead of doing the 7 mile run, only do the 5 mile loop...
I'll be in Vegas next Sunday-Wednesday. I'll probably be the only person on the treadmills!!
Mrs Montanaskier is running an event again this weekend. The Georgetown to Idaho Springs half marathon. It is downhill 1k so she should do pretty well. Wish her luck, she is a maniac!
I remember her Boston triumph... report back on Monday. I'll put her in the 1:30 to 1:35 range!
my running tr....
did the mt werner challenge last weekend. it was a 12 mile run that goes from the base of steamboat to the top of the storm peak express (9.6 miles up) and then 2.4 miles down to the top of the gondola.
decided to do this the day before. i had a pretty light week due to work and trying to sleep, so i figured it would make a nice rest taper for the run. i was nervous as hell about the uphill, since the weekend before i blew up on my long run (would have been 16-18 miles, new route) and quit at 12 miles after a rough time on a long, steep uphill trail.
looked at the map and course descriptions and decided to start really slow and try not to blow up on the uphill (or at least too early). the race started and i was literally one of the last 2-3 people running up the dirt road from the gondola base towards the bottom of thunderhead. felt like i wasn't working hard at all either with the heartrate or the breathing. as we approached thunderhead i realized that my plan seemed to be working. i started passing other runners and then we got on a beatuiful shaded singletrack through some aspens on the way towards rendezvous saddle. some slight downhill and flat sections allowed some rest and the ability to pick up speed. a slight downhill towards the base of the sundown express, and then the first uphill i walked. on the next uphill and short downhill before the final uphill push on pete's wicked trail i passed the last two runners i would end up passing. the last uphill was mostly running with short walking breaks until the course moved to a service road heading towards the top of storm peak. tried to push hard once i saw the top (probably my pushing hard looked like a slo-mo version of running fast) but then it was 2.4 miles of steep downhill to the gondola. tried to keep the feet moving fast and tried not to break too much on the downhill.
finished about 23 minutes behind the winner, but had a fun time... especially loved running on the edge of some of the service roads looking down through the woods imagining it with about 20-30 inches of new snow and the tree skiing that awaits this winter. i loved on the uphill that every once in awhile i would look down towards the valley and think " damn we've climbed a lot already.", and then you'd look up and realize you had a long way to go (or i'd look at the garmin watch and see how much further it was). first longer trail race since restarting running back in january and was pleased at how my training is coming, even with the occasional feel like shit runs.
i've been following this thread since the beginning and just want to give it up to those such as steve who are losing a lot of weight and getting their shit together health wise. it's a bitch... starting is the hardest part (i used to weigh 310) and it's great to hear.
next race, continental divide trail race (16 miles) and then some more training to see if i can go sub 1:40 at the moab half in october.