Sunday, September 25, 2011

You'll Have to Call Me Lefty

Sometimes when it rains, it pours. Training has been less than ideal with the staff retreat planning and starting work. The surprise volleyball appointment just made things tighter and I had to drop from focused training to a series of base work. I got smacked with a terrible cold and chest infection that hurt me for 10 days. Then I screwed up my arm.

I was playing volleyball with the high school team. After jumping in cold to serve repeatedly, we then did a hitting drill. For the remainder of the week, my arm was quite sore. Then on International Day, on the first play of a kickball game, I whipped the big red rubber ball at a 6th grader and heard a pop. My arm hurt like hell. The next day it was on fire. I went into the doctor who gave me a cortisone shot in the ass and sent me to the hospital where an ultrasound revealed no tear. However, even a week off volleyball, swimming, and lifting (with drugs) and it still hurts very bad.

Training through September 25th.  Swimming and lifting have taken a hit with the arm injury.

Cumulative Distance
Cumulative Time
Swim
13500m
6:19:20
Bike
359.7 mi
21:25:29
Run
167.82 mi
22:27:22
Core
N/A
4:30:00
Lift
N/A
3:30:00
It hasn’t been all illness and injury. I have been doing weekly time trials with the jogger. Four straight victories at 5k and 8K pushing two kids. Have some of that. My weight, which was a grotesque 158.5 lbs in late July, dropped to 154.3 by September 1st and by month’s end I am looking at 151.5 lbs. Again, I am not preoccupied by weight but I love to see the results of the work put in. I am stronger up top than I have been in years (likely the last Ironman) and shaving the fat will only make me more efficient.

The real satisfaction has been the bike. I don’t have the log from the last Ironman but Sarah confirms that I wasn’t on the bike that much. Not that I have been Team BMC or anything lately, but I am getting 1-2 shorter rides during the week and another “longer” ride of 30 miles or so on the weekend. This is a good start. I took this momentum to Clarens, a small mountain town to do a nice loop of the lovely Golden Gate Highlands National Park.

Rising early, the cold smacked me in the face like an underage partier mouthing off to a bouncer at a club. It was fricken freezing to say the least – my guess is 40 or slightly colder. Good thing I packed my arm warmers. After a couple of very steep kilometers, I hit my first turn, a dirt road. Whelp, that is over. I turned around to do an out-an-back in the park, forgoing the loop. The problem was my hands got too cold on the downhills. The body heat was generated well on the ups, but every time I got over 15mph (which is anything not a hill) my digits ached like in a Michigan winter. Several times in the first hour I could be found on the side of the road, hands shoved in pants, begging for my crotch to return warmth to my finger tips. When my hands weren’t the problem, it was my forehead and toes. Thankfully, the route was largely uphill on the way out.

My turnaround was at 28 miles out. After descending for several miles prior to this, I just laughed knowing what was coming. A monster category 3 climb awaited, yet it was probably the best 20 min of cycling I have ever had. Legs pumping, lungs heaving, blood boiling, I shot up this behemoth while Sarah grabbed some video (what you won’t catch on film are the screaming kids in the car). The final part of the route was predominately downhill, and I hit over 50mph on the bike, while riding 35+ on some of the “flatter” portions. It definitely made me see why the first half was so hard (see the profile below). But any ride where you see zebra, ostrich, antelope, and wild horses is a good one.

I also did some running there and was joined by three local men for over a mile. It still amazes me the people in other parts of the world who come out and run with a total strangers. If that doesn’t make you feel like you are in that scene in Rocky, nothing will.

So peep this video. It is the first in a series of documentation of the training I am doing for Ironman. Sarah asked why this song (Public Enemy’s He Got Game). I don’t know, maybe it was the beat, the mix of old school and “new” (1998) school. Maybe I just got game. So enjoy.




The profile for my 51.5 mile ride in Clarens, going over four Cat. 5 climbs, one Cat. 4, and two wicked Cat. 3 climbs. (or look here)







Sunday, September 4, 2011

Tri Training - The First Month

Taking on a new training program can be pretty exciting. But I don’t recommend an Ironman plan without having adequate time. Time is something I have not had. Since moving back I have been very busy with work, going in sometimes 6 of 7 days. Not to mention a staff retreat outing that took many hours, was stressful, and made me miss some training. With that behind me I am on my way.

Thus far, I have been putting in about 2x/week of core to focus on the strength. A better core will help in the water and also on the run after hours of work. I have also been lifting about 2x/week. Nothing heavy; just the high rep/low weight for chest, shoulders, and back. I want to get stronger for the swim but I know the extra bulk will not be beneficial to lug with me on the bike and run. So balance is key. My bike has been about 2x/week on the trainer and once/week on the road for a longer ride of 20-25 miles or so. The trainer sucks as I pedal the whole time and at a much slower pace than the same effort would give me on the road. I am getting in 3 runs a week of about 4-7 miles each. It is a bit low but my first marathon isn’t until November, and I can manage pretty well on the run, so I am looking to use time an energy to build a base in the other two sports.

The bummer is that I had to take on coaching boys HS volleyball this term. So three nights per week I am staying late at school and missing out on some valuable training and rest time. I have accepted this and figure that a long base will work well for me.

After a few weeks in the pool, I am getting myself together. I started with 500m days and couldn’t do more than 250m in a shot. Then I got up to 1000m and was doing 500m at a time. My first time trial came after about a month of this and I did 2K straight after having not even gone half that far. I rocked out a 39:23, which is equivalent to a 1:15:00 swim for Ironman. I am stoked. I swam 1:13:00 my first Ironman and I am close to that pace already. I want to improve on it.

My bike hasn’t gone as well. Optimistically, I entered a 98K race. It was only just over twice as far as I had ridden so far, so why not do it? Well, first because I came down with nasty chest infection and spent the weekend in bed. I hauled my butt to the race and realized that I forgot my gloves. Gloves are sorely needed because South African roads are essentially gravel laid over glue. It hurt. I also forgot my Gu’s so I had no energy supplement. Not a good day. I couldn’t really stay with the pelotons that I wanted, but it was a decent effort. I held about 22.8mph over the first 27 miles and then faced with a turn I decided to head to the finish for the shorter race. The last 4 miles were killer and I ended the 50K ride in about 1:30:00. So it was a decent day despite the setbacks.

I have decided to keep a Cumulative training distance/time for the program. Here is my effort from August 1 to Sept. 4.



Cumulative Distance
Cumulative Time
Swim
9000m
4:09:20
Bike
190.5 mi
11:20:34
Run
90.72 mi
12:07:22
Core
N/A
2:30:00
Lift
N/A
2:15:00