Sunday, March 23, 2008

Catchup

Last week: 20 miles in 2 runs
This week: 47 miles in 5 runs

I had trouble getting back into the groove last week, but I did manage a 14 miler on Sunday to round out the week. I was back to business this week, and made it out 5 times, including two runs with Silas. On Saturday, I took him out hoping to get in at least 5 miles before he gave up, but I was able to put together an interesting route for him. We passed 3 fire stations and a backhoe, and went through the Northbrae Tunnel. We went nearly 9 miles, and he was still asking to see "another one fire truck" by the time we got home; unfortunately, I'd run out of fire stations to visit.

This morning was the LMJS fourth Sunday race. I had a pretty vague plan for this, which was something like run a long, easy warmup to get to Lake Merrit, then run the 10k to see what happens. Of course, I left the house about 10 minutes late, so my easy warmup ended up being 4.5 miles in about 35 minutes. I made it to the start on time, though, and lined up next to a guy in an Oregon shirt who was built (and shorn) like he was from Coos Bay. Today's race included 5, 10, and 15k distances, but the 5 and 10k runners had similar colored wristbands, so it was hard to tell who was who. I started off in a close pack of about 5 folks, including the Oregonian, that mostly hung together through mile 1 (6:04 - too fast for me today!). We strung out a bit, and I moved into 4th place while Oregon and another guy pulled away. Mile 2 was more reasonable, about 6:27, but I've noted before that mile 1 seems short and mile 2 long on this course; it may be related to the wind, though. During mile 3, though, I really felt like I was running out of gas - I was feeling those first 4.5 miles and starting to think this was a stupid idea. In fact, running is a pretty stupid idea anyway. To top it off, my shoe came untied, and the brief stop to tie it (while getting passed twice) really sapped my will. I came through 5k in 20:14, and miles 3-4 were about 14:30 together. Finally, at mile 4 I realized that I was still within striking distance of a guy in a yellow shirt. I figured I could get him within 1.5 miles, and started to make a move. I picked up the pace gradually, and by mile 5 (6:40) he could hear my footsteps. I closed in, and within about a quarter of a mile I decided he wouldn't be able to outkick me at the end, so I passed him. I came through the last 1.2 in 7:35 (6:20 pace) and finished in 41:15, in something like 4th-6th place. Not a great time for me, but I realized that today's run was more about mentality than speed, and I feel pretty good about not throwing in the towel. Unfortunately, I also realized that today's run was also more about endurance than speed, and I really didn't have much choice but to run home after the race, leaving my BART pass unused in my shoe. The 4.5 miles home was tough, but it gave me 15+ for the day and a solid week.

In celebration, I registered for the Broad Street Run today.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Hamster Wheel

Saturday pm, 4.25 miles on the treadmill

We went up to Lake Tahoe to ski for the weekend, and I figured I'd get a
few miles in on the treadmill while we were there. My lifetime
treadmill mileage stood at somewhere under 2 miles, and was pretty much
limited to trying on shoes; I've always thought that treadmill running
seemed hopelessly boring, but with snow on the ground, I didn't have
much choice in the matter.

It can be harder to fit in a run on vacation than at home, but after a
day of skiing, then Indian food for dinner, getting Silas to bed, and
letting C soak in the hot tub, I headed down to the gym for an iFartlek.
This is a workout created by Ian to break the deadly monotony of running
while going nowhere. I started at an 8 minute pace with my iPod on
random, then increased the pace by a click or two with each new song.

I was right. It was boring. I made a deal with myself that I would run
at least 30 minutes or 4 miles, and began increasing the pace by an
extra click to get it done with faster. I tried closing my eyes, but
nearly ran off the side. The gym was hot and humid, and I was
breathless. Finally, I was almost done - with the next song, I would
click down to 6:30 pace and ride it out. Of course, the next song was
Angel of Death by Slayer, which is brutal to run to and 4 1/2 minutes
long. I made it to the first guitar solo, then had to click down to an
easy pace to cool down for a bit. About this time I remembered that I
was at 6300 feet elevation. After a bit of a cooldown, I'm done with
treadmill running for this year.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Unusual Run

Tuesday pm, 7 miles untimed

I've slept in 2 days in a row, and the lesson is that I simply don't hear my alarm when it's set before 5:30 am (5:20, in this case). I planned a run with Si after work today, but I got started early when I forgot that I didn't have my bike with me and that I would be late to get home for a parental handoff. Fortunately I was wearing sneakers today, so I ran the nearly 2 miles in jeans, carrying my laptop, in about 15 minutes. Once home, I changed into my running kit, played in the backyard with Silas for a bit, then we loaded into the stroller to get a few more miles in.

Nearly home, Silas asked to get out of the stroller ("Daddy carry Silas right now"), so I obliged and we walked the last few blocks home while Silas practiced his geography ("That was Dwight Way") and pronouns ("Daddy carries you... Daddy carries me.")

Si has been getting into running himself, especially playing chasing games with the dog. The other day on a walk, he picked a hilly driveway to run up and down about 15 times. No idea where he gets this from.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Nimitz trail

Sunday, 5.25 miles with Silas, untimed

We all headed up to Tilden Park to walk and run the Nimitz Trail; Christine was walking the dog with a friend who is visiting, but I promised Silas that I'd get him at least 2 miles down the trail to see the cows.

We set out at what turned out to be a brisk pace on the early hills, but I was really feeling yesterday's 16 miler in my hamstrings and flexors (or adductors?) I worked to slow the pace and watched the mile markers. We came to the first cattle gate at mile 2, but no cows yet. Moving through the rolling hills and through a couple more cattle gates, we finally found them grazing around the 2.75 mile marker. I pointed a couple cows out to Silas but realized that he'd get a better look on the way back. We turned around at the 3.5 marker (27:21, but I accidentally stopped my watch), then took a short break when we got back to the cows. Silas was pretty stoked to see them: "eating grass", "having milchie", "sleeping", and "making poop poop". We continued running until we met up with our peeps, then walked it back in.

42 miles this week; I could have pushed it today to hit my goal of 44, but I am satisfied with what I've got, with two especially good runs this week. Tomorrow morning, I'm hoping to see Jupiter on my run.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Uncharted Territory

Friday am, 6 miles in :46
Saturday pm, 16.3 miles in 2:00

Friday was a bagel run with Silas. He was game for anything, as long as he was able to wear his guitar shirt, which I pulled out of the dryer for the occasion. Berkeley Bagels was out of mini bagels, so I got Si a regular bagel with peanut butter.

But the real story is today's long run. I'd only been planning on 12 for today, but events had kept my weekly mileage a bit behind schedule. I decided against my usual long run route, up the hills toward Grizzly Peak, and opted instead for the flat and boring Ohlone Greenway. I started out, carrying a bottle of Gatorade (with extra salt), a Cliff shot, and the ipod. Shuffle mode did me right today, with Franz Ferdinand and the Decembrists providing most of the soundtrack, with some Billy Idol and Modest Mouse thrown in as well.

I ran out the Greenway and found the end, in Richmond, a little sooner than I had hoped. I continued up San Pablo Ave through Richmond and into the city of San Pablo - a town whose existence I had forgotten about but should have inferred, given the road that I was running on. I kept on until about 59 minutes, then turned around at San Pablo Dam Rd to retrace my steps. I took the goo and finished my Gatorade, and noted that I felt pretty darn good. I picked up the pace for the trip home, and kept feeling good except for a bit of stiffness (I stopped to tie my shoe about a mile from home and groaned audibly when I bent over). I negative split by a couple of minutes, so I ran around the block a bit to stretch the run out to 2 hours. To top things off, Christine was taking chocolate chip cookies out of the oven when I got home.

This was my longest run of the year (and, it turns out, the fastest overall) and went a lot better than my last 2 hour run. It leaves me feeling confident and ready for more. Normally, this would indicate that I'm due for an overuse injury, but fortunately next week is planned to be nice and easy before going to Lake Tahoe for the weekend.