July 2018 Running Challenge
Replies
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Thank you all for the suggestions thus far. Definitely I think the little clear medicine cups would be good for handing out snacks so nobody has to worry about wrappers, but they also don't all have their hands in the same bucket.
@PastorVincent What is a Pestle? I'm thinking the spot will be somewhere around 16-18 for the full marathon and about mile 5-7 for the half. It will be another couple weeks before I can confirm the location, though.
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midwesterner85 wrote: »@PastorVincent What is a Pestle? I'm thinking the spot will be somewhere around 16-18 for the full marathon and about mile 5-7 for the half. It will be another couple weeks before I can confirm the location, though.
Pestle is an ancient word from my indigenous ancestors that means, roughly, pretzel.
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It may sound dumb, but marathon runners temporarily lose at least 20 points of IQ while running the race. A sound track may sink in when signs don't and pre-race directions have been forgotten.
THIS! LOL, at my first Marathon I saw people handing out vaseline on a stick and the pacers all were yelling "THAT'S NOT FOOD!" "DO NOT EAT THAT" and the like.
I asked about and they told me "every race we get people that grab that stick and stuff it in their mouth."
I have not personally tried this, but I am going to assume that it is NOT a pleasant surprise.
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I walked to the grocery store today and walked back carrying the groceries in my backpack and one bag in each hand. It was a really good workout. Reminded me of living in New York without a car 😊 It’s not running but I did put some miles in.
Thank you for everyone who made suggestions about the shin splints. I will transition to different shoes and see if it makes a difference.
3.2 miles -7/8/18
Total miles- 7.8/30 miles4 -
July Running Totals (miles)
7/1 – rest day
7/2 – 5.11 not easy enough
7/3 – 4.14 warmup, speed work, cool down
7/4 – 6.22 commute to/from town park
7/5 – 3.74 warmup, tempo run, cool down
7/6 – rest day
7/7 – 10.01 poorly paced run
7/8 – 7.72 easy 60 minutes
July running total to date – 36.94
Nominal July mileage goal: 100 miles
Real goals: Get healthy. Build base. Work toward being able to run Wineglass in September.
Today's notes – With one thing and another, I didn't get out the door to run till 5 PM today. By then, the temperature was 82º F (28º C) and it was sunny. Dewpoint was 54º, so it didn't feel as awfully humid as it did most of last week. The baseline idea was about 7 miles, but I didn't know whether my ankles would be up to it.
Because uphill running is one of the things that can cause/aggravate Achilles tendinitis, I decided against my standard 7.2 mile route with lots of hills. Instead, I opted for a 10K route with fewer hills. Last time I went out for this route, I crapped out at 5K on a minor incline; I figured I'd get at least 3 miles in and had an option to add more distance.
Got past the place I crapped out last time. Got past the 2 hills starting about 3.7 miles on this route. Ran right past the corner where I would turn toward home for 6.3 miles; the decisions wasn't even close. I was going to come in around 7.3 miles and feel good, when I saw I was at 55:40 at the last turn. I turned away from home and ran to 57 minutes, plus a few seconds for traffic to clear. Turned back, got to my driveway at 59:24, and ran enough past to make an hour. The training plan I'm not following sometimes says an easy 60 minutes on Sunday anyway.
Came in at 7.72 miles in 1:00:02. The pace got accelerated in mile 6 when I ran past a couple small dogs. The one on a leash got yanked back at the end, but the loose one ran with me and yapped a lot while the owners were yelling at it to come back. Sounded fierce, but the fur brushing my ankles was soft and well groomed. I think the only way I would have got tooth marks was if I accidentally ran into that dog's mouth, but I was a little worried about accidentally kicking it. So that mile was a little faster than planned, but no great harm done.
Stretched, showered, iced down my ankles. They're feeling a little better than they did after running 10 miles yesterday, and it occurred to me that yesterday and today are my first two running days after coming off the Mobic. The ankles are feeling really good for not being on any anti-inflammatory medication. I do have some training aches in my calves telling me I haven't kept up the running; but at least I've kept up the weighted calf raises and walking lunges, so the calves don't feel like injury.
I'll give it the night to make sure I don't come up lame tomorrow morning, but I think I'll register for Shoreline Half Marathon next Saturday. The weather forecast isn't terribly hot for Saturday, but that could change. It will be humid near Lake Ontario, but I've been running in the humidity. I'm pretty sure I can handle it, even if I have to run it a bit slow.
Should be faster than last year. This year, there is no 1:40 pacer and the 1:45 slot was taken before I saw the call for volunteer pacers. So I'll just run it, and probably come in somewhere in the 1:32 to 1:35 range . . . assuming I'm really as healthy as I think I am right now and the weather doesn't turn brutally hot and humid.
2018 races:
February 17, 2018 Freezeroo #5 (Valentines Run "In Memory of Tom Brannon" 8 Mile) (Greece, NY) finished in 54:48
February 24, 2018 Freezeroo #6 (White House Challenge 4.4 mile) (Webster, NY) finished in 28:46
March 17, 2018 USATF Masters 8K (Shamrock 8K, Virginia Beach, VA) finished in 31:55
March 24, 2018 Spring Forward 15K (Mendon, NY) ran at MP, finished in 1:10:47
April 16, 2018 Boston Marathon (Hopkinton, MA) finished in 3:28:43
April 29, 2018 USATF Masters 10K (James Joyce Ramble, Dedham, MA) finished in 41:33
May 20, 2018 Lilac 10K (Rochester, NY) finished in 42:21
May 26, 2018 Sunset House 5K (Rochester, NY) finished in 20:12
June 3, 2018 USATF Masters Half Marathon (Ann Arbor, MI) finished in 1:34:42
June 9, 2018 Ontario Summit Trail Half Marathon (Naples, NY) DNS - injury
June 17, 2018 Medved 5K to Cure ALS (Rochester, NY) short course, 18:04 for ~2.9 miles
June 30, 2018 Charlie's Old Goat Trail Run 5 mile (Victor, NY) 4.89 miles by Garmin, 43:15
July 14, 2018 Shoreline Half Marathon (Hamlin, NY)
July 28, 2018 Battle at Bristol 10K (Naples, NY)
September 30, 2018 Wineglass Marathon (Bath, NY)
November 11, 2018 Syracuse Half Marathon (Syracuse, NY)
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At many of the big events I've done there are people wearing gloves handing out jelly beans, snakes, fudge and the like. I hate the grab-your-own baskets of sweets, but the gloves give me the illusion of hygiene.2
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@midwesterner85 - Another thought: If it's a hot day, sponges soaked in ice water will be popular with the runners. Or washcloths, or anything cool to wipe their faces.4
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July....she will fly (at least her feet will)
7/1 3.92
7/2 3.07
7/3 rest
7/4 3.12
7/5 rest
7/6 rest
7/7 I'm old. I really need rest
7/8 3.83
total 13.94
Tomorrow is my 42nd anniversary....and if I remember correctly, that means it is also @shanaber 's ...Happy anniversary!
Ticker is my goal for 2018 and progress to date:
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Only 319 posts behind! Lol! Just wanted to post my miles quickly. I have a long stretcg of work days ahead. Trying to continue to lift weights as well.
July 5....6.23 miles......probably 88 degrees with 70% humidity.
July 8....2.28 miles on the treadmill plus weight lifting. Nicer weather but i was limited on time.
Total....9.51 mile
Goal....50 miles.
Am I the only one who is getting depressed about all of the 90+degree weather? Ugh!5 -
AlphaHowls wrote: »7/1 13.54 miles
7/2 20.08 miles
7/3 16.51 miles
7/4 20.38 miles
7/5 2.07 miles
7/6 15.36 miles
7/7 16.66 miles
7/8 16.03 miles
I have now been on MFP for three years. My starting weight was 223 lbs. My original goal was to lose weight, until I hit normal BMI. I passed that by and just kept right on going till I found a range I was good with. My range is 125 lbs to 135 lbs. I started walking when I first started MFP. After about nine months, someone asked me if I was a runner. I adamantly stated 'no'. After that day I thought about what the lady had asked and thought, 'why not?' I started running in spurts, no plans, just repeat in my head, 'don't stop'. Now here, I am pushing goals I never thought I would ever achieve. I ran a marathon a few months ago, now I just want to run, no destination, no alarming goal, just get up, get out and run. I thank everyone here for all the help, I have learned so much in reading about everyone. Thank you so much for the inspirations, insights and the smiles that go with my miles.
@AlphaHowls
"...I just want to run, no destination, no alarming goal, just get up, get out and run."
That's a beautiful thing.
I may have to steal that goal!3 -
@midwesterner85 I bet you will get a different answer from everyone you ask!
For fruit, I think apple slices and grapes are great. Anything that I can grab as I run past and then eat whole, without worrying about finding a trash bin afterwards for the leftovers if I don't finish it right away at the aid station.
No oranges for me anymore - I remember a race on a really hot day where I had a nice juicy orange slice, and the next few kilometres the stickiness from the juice on my hands drove me insane, but that' might just be me
Hard cheese cubes are awesome for long races. Sure, they contain fat (but so do potato chips), but also electrolytes and protein.
And Cereal bars cut into small squares are also good.
Pretzels and Skittles are nice too. I would put them spread out on large trays. That way people pretty much only touch what they grab. Putting them in plastic cups would produce so much unnecessary waste! Unavoidable for road races, I guess (although if trail races can be bring-your-own-cup, I don't know why it shouldn't work at least for longish road races too...), but doubling or tripling that number when it's not really necessary seems insane.
Speaking of trash: if there are bananas, the should be lots of trashcans, also a couple of hundred meters after the aid station. I saw a runner in front of me slip and bust his knee once - running at the back of the pack is no fun if it means watching out for banana peel scattered all over the road.
E.T.A.: Okay, I just read all the other replies, seems I'm the only one who doesn't like the idea of extra cups for all the sweets. Never mind me then!
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]July 1 - 10 km club run
July 2 - 22 km long run
July 3 - sick
July 4 - sick
July 5 - sick
July 6 - sick
July 7 - 10 km run
July 8 - 6 km club run / 14 km run
July 9 - 12 km city run
74 km's run with goal 350 km0 -
@midwesterner85
a few thoughts - although bear in mind that much of my experience of aid stations is from races where people are running slower than trying to BQ.
pretzels, peanuts and potato chips are good for salt.
slices of orange are the most amazing thing ever, watermelon (I'm not personally a fan) and pineapple also go down well
cake - brownies, flapjacks, millionaire shortbread
skittles, jelly beans etc.
don't know if you can get it over there but soreen malt loaf went down really well on an ultra I marshalled an aid station!!
All I wanted on my marathon was a cheese sandwich. really. I needed that savoury, rather than just sugar all the time.
small cocktail sausages
schnapps. just a measure. works a treat.
buckets of water to dip bandanas in, and sponges, although I heard a podcast that suggested sponges get used to cool off ALL areas of the body not just the head and neck........
Just a comment about putting handfuls in individual cups. No. there's enough plastic waste in the environment without making it worse. hands dipped in bowls, deal with it. (that's you and me @_nikkiwolf_ maybe a European thing?)
and yes, put a rubbish bin a couple of hundred yards from the aid station. Trail runners can spot a road runner a mile off by the discarded wrappers thrown on the ground.5 -
ContraryMaryMary wrote: »At many of the big events I've done there are people wearing gloves handing out jelly beans, snakes, fudge and the like. I hate the grab-your-own baskets of sweets, but the gloves give me the illusion of hygiene.
I think this would pretty much guarantee me a PR!2 -
girlinahat wrote: »Just a comment about putting handfuls in individual cups. No. there's enough plastic waste in the environment without making it worse. hands dipped in bowls, deal with it. (that's you and me @_nikkiwolf_ maybe a European thing?)
At the Paris marathon they introduced specific bin types for banana/orange skins and plastic bottles (which they use instead of cups), in a really well-organised way (see here). The food waste is turned into compost, the bottles are recycled (into car seats for the BMW i3). I didn't run the race, but I read about it in a running magazine last year, and I thought it was awesome. I wish more race organisers would do things like that.
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_nikkiwolf_ wrote: »girlinahat wrote: »Just a comment about putting handfuls in individual cups. No. there's enough plastic waste in the environment without making it worse. hands dipped in bowls, deal with it. (that's you and me @_nikkiwolf_ maybe a European thing?)
At the Paris marathon they introduced specific bin types for banana/orange skins and plastic bottles (which they use instead of cups), in a really well-organised way (see here). The food waste is turned into compost, the bottles are recycled (into car seats for the BMW i3). I didn't run the race, but I read about it in a running magazine last year, and I thought it was awesome. I wish more race organisers would do things like that.
Paper cups would be far more sanitary and could be composted. Just an option.
If I saw 100s of sweaty people dipping hands in a blow of candy, I would pass it by and think bad thoughts. No thanks.3 -
7/1 = 8 miles
7/2 = 3 dreadmill miles and 30 minutes strength training
7/3 = 6 miles
7/4 = 5 miles
7/5 = 3 miles
7/6 = 12 miles
7/7 = rest day
7/8 = 7 miles
7/9 = 3 miles & 30 minutes ST
Re: race food
I can’t do candy during a race. I tried jelly beans once and I immediately hurled. Then again, I have a delicate runner stomach. Orange slices are amazing.
49/125 goal July miles0 -
also the cups thing. I've been a volunteer at an aid station, and at the final stop of a 10k where all the water was (there was none out on the course). For the 10k race, it took me the ENTIRE length of time folks were running to fill the cups with water. Setting up an aid station probably takes at least an hour (also if you need gazebos, tables etc.). There's fruit to cut and prep, and packet to open etc.
Top tip for water - fill JUGS. Easy for people to refill their packs if they want, and easier for you to refill cups. And what's with runners drinking one cup of water and then grabbing a fresh cup? I don't care if it's plastic or paper, just refill.
Bottles aren't great on some races, as runners sip from them and then throw them down maybe one or two miles down the route. Again, what's with the chucking your waste and expecting people to clear it up? Be like the Japanese. Tiny bits of gel wrapper dropped mid-trail/route I can accept by accident, everything else, be kind to the environment.
rant over.4 -
PastorVincent wrote: »Paper cups would be far more sanitary and could be composted. Just an option.
If I saw 100s of sweaty people dipping hands in a blow of candy, I would pass it by and think bad thoughts. No thanks.
Spread it out on a tray rather than in a bowl, even less problems.
What about the fact that the hands of one or more people touched the orange slice that you grab, is that also an issue?
I'd rather worry about touching the locking mechanism of the porta-potty doors if I wanted to start freaking out about unsanitary things in a race
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_nikkiwolf_ wrote: »PastorVincent wrote: »Paper cups would be far more sanitary and could be composted. Just an option.
If I saw 100s of sweaty people dipping hands in a blow of candy, I would pass it by and think bad thoughts. No thanks.
Spread it out on a tray rather than in a bowl, even less problems.
What about the fact that the hands of one or more people touched the orange slice that you grab, is that also an issue?
I'd rather worry about touching the locking mechanism of the porta-potty doors if I wanted to start freaking out about unsanitary things in a race
Your hands do not sweat? Odd. Mine get so bad I can not use the phone screen after a while. Dripping wet. Would not want to be the poor shmuck that came after me.
As far as the volunteers go... you are talking about 1 or 2 people, vs 100 sweaty drippy messes. I rather take my chances with the smaller risk vector.
I care about recycling, cleaning up the mess we have made of this planet, and more. But I just think there are better solutions than communal sweat sharing2 -
Here are my thoughts on waste and such at aid stations, and I know there are many runners who will disagree (which is a big reason why I asked):
The race I'm talking about will provide the cups and the aid station sponsors will provide trash cans / cleanup. I love to see cup-less races, but have only seen this once. At that particular race, it was a half-marathon (so no BQ's anyway) and they gave out refillable cups at packet pickup. The cups clipped onto a waistband and you squeezed it to open. You could opt out of this and save $2.00 off the race fee (I did this) and bring your own bottle. But there were no cups given out. You filled your own at the aid stations. They had quick-pour spouts (seriously, these would fill my 20 oz. in about 2 seconds, no joke). This was just outside a national park and done as a destination race. There was an important "No trash" policy. Aid stations did have snacks with wrappers and trash cans (mostly Honey Stinger as they were a sponsor). It was very clearly stated in the rules that you would be DQ'ed and banned from future races by this organization if you were caught littering. When I see pictures of cups everywhere on the street around aid stations at the big city races, I cringe because I know this can work. Yet I always get a lot of runners telling me there is just no way. At my last road race, I did what everyone else did (just threw the cups on the ground), but only because there were no trash cans provided at many of the aid stations. Of course it isn't possible then! But yea... I hate littering and waste.
This particular race is a "trail run" on a rails-to-trails trail. It gets much of the road runner crowd and not technical trails crowd, but the trail is only around maybe 10-15 feet wide and crushed limestone. They estimate 400 runners, so this is a pretty small crowd. I've run smaller (smallest had 19 total runners for the marathon and probably 3-4 times that for the half marathon race starting half-way along as both were point-to-point), but 400 is still a pretty small race.1 -
7/1-1.01mi
7/2-1.04mi
7/3-1.04mi
7/4-2.02mi
7/5-3.12mi
7/6-1.01mi(2 hours of aerial hammock and hoop)
7/7-1.01mi(2 hours of aerial yoga)
7/8-1.01mi(walked 5 miles at the renaissance faire)
i need to find commitment. teaching aerial classes, remodeling my home with my parents, renfaire season, keeping house...my time is quite tight and my body is tired but faire is too fun
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re: sweaty hands.
I have just come back from a weekend of fast swing dancing (collegiate shag). four hour workshops in non-airconditioned rooms, plus evening dances. You rotate partners a lot during classes, and dance will a variety of people during the socials. The tempo ranges from 180-220beats per minute. I take sweat from the leads arm, and put it on the next leads arm, ad infinitum. Add that to my own sweat and we are all pretty much just mixing our sweat together in one big wet dripping mess. You change shirts, you change t-shirts, but straight away you sweat into that new shirt.
Okay I'm not putting any of that sweat in my mouth, but the point is, if I cared about sweat I wouldn't do it. If you are that bothered by the hygiene of someone's hand in the bowl before you, I guess you'll have to be self-sufficient.
There's a lot of discussion from race organisers about how to deal with the plastic cup thing, and it IS pretty hard. Some will allow you to buy your own to clip on, but that takes a small amount of time to fill. Paper cups have their own environmental issues (they are never truly biodegradable as many have waxes on or plastic coatings). There are also a lot of complaints about the mess left after races (less so on trails because they tend to be smaller races AND good waste disposal is perhaps encouraged more. After the Brighton and Portsmouth marathons, the images of the bottles strewn on the ground were really depressing. These are races that are run pretty much on the beach, so the chances of littering the sea are too high not to do anything about it. More bins, and fostering a culture that it just isn't acceptable to drop litter is the way to go.
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PastorVincent wrote: »_nikkiwolf_ wrote: »PastorVincent wrote: »Paper cups would be far more sanitary and could be composted. Just an option.
If I saw 100s of sweaty people dipping hands in a blow of candy, I would pass it by and think bad thoughts. No thanks.
Spread it out on a tray rather than in a bowl, even less problems.
What about the fact that the hands of one or more people touched the orange slice that you grab, is that also an issue?
I'd rather worry about touching the locking mechanism of the porta-potty doors if I wanted to start freaking out about unsanitary things in a race
Your hands do not sweat? Odd. Mine get so bad I can not use the phone screen after a while. Dripping wet. Would not want to be the poor shmuck that came after me.
As far as the volunteers go... you are talking about 1 or 2 people, vs 100 sweaty drippy messes. I rather take my chances with the smaller risk vector.
I care about recycling, cleaning up the mess we have made of this planet, and more. But I just think there are better solutions than communal sweat sharing
The backs of my hands don't sweat as far as I can tell, but my palms do, especially in humid weather. I'm pretty blasé about germs and stuff but I wouldn't love the open candy grab option either - I feel like it would just turn into a sticky mess. Orange slices seem like a nice middle ground.0 -
Yeah, the waste and littering is a big issue that we should all be concerned about, I agree (as I'm sure most do). The amount of cups on the ground at the race this past weekend was staggering. For a trail race especially going towards cupless would be important.
I am rather grossed out by digging sweaty hands into a big communal bowl, but on reflection with the waste of little cups, I could probably get over it. Maybe the tray idea to spread out so you would be more likely to just touch the ones you are taking. Maybe a little scoop so people (or the volunteer) could scoop some out into their hand and not dig into the bowl?0 -
This is the ‘lovestation’ from my half marathon last years. Yes, that is alcohol in the drinks.
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midwesterner85 wrote: »Here are my thoughts on waste and such at aid stations, and I know there are many runners who will disagree (which is a big reason why I asked):
The race I'm talking about will provide the cups and the aid station sponsors will provide trash cans / cleanup. I love to see cup-less races, but have only seen this once. At that particular race, it was a half-marathon (so no BQ's anyway) and they gave out refillable cups at packet pickup. The cups clipped onto a waistband and you squeezed it to open. You could opt out of this and save $2.00 off the race fee (I did this) and bring your own bottle. But there were no cups given out. You filled your own at the aid stations. They had quick-pour spouts (seriously, these would fill my 20 oz. in about 2 seconds, no joke). This was just outside a national park and done as a destination race. There was an important "No trash" policy. Aid stations did have snacks with wrappers and trash cans (mostly Honey Stinger as they were a sponsor). It was very clearly stated in the rules that you would be DQ'ed and banned from future races by this organization if you were caught littering. When I see pictures of cups everywhere on the street around aid stations at the big city races, I cringe because I know this can work. Yet I always get a lot of runners telling me there is just no way. At my last road race, I did what everyone else did (just threw the cups on the ground), but only because there were no trash cans provided at many of the aid stations. Of course it isn't possible then! But yea... I hate littering and waste.
This particular race is a "trail run" on a rails-to-trails trail. It gets much of the road runner crowd and not technical trails crowd, but the trail is only around maybe 10-15 feet wide and crushed limestone. They estimate 400 runners, so this is a pretty small crowd. I've run smaller (smallest had 19 total runners for the marathon and probably 3-4 times that for the half marathon race starting half-way along as both were point-to-point), but 400 is still a pretty small race.
The trail series I am doing this year gave a discount if you volunteered to bring your own cup and one race swag was a reusable cup. I love this and even donated additional money (they were planting a cactus or tree for everyone that brought their own & you could donate.).
I am a huge environmentalist. That's one reason I take my vest to every race. I can stash my trash in a zip pocket and throw it away later. If I don't see a trash can, I hold on to my cup (if I need gatorade since I have water). Or I will stop by the last can, finish, and toss. I never throw it on the ground. 1) being a back of pack person I hate having to dodge or step on a million cups. 2) why should volunteers have to clean up after me?
You can find recyclable plastic cups or paper for snacks. I get the sanitize thing. People sweat. They blow snot rockets, wipe their nose. Scratch, pull, adjust sweaty parts of the body. Use porta potties and don't wash hands or use sanitizer. Volunteers are usually wearing gloves when handling the food, at least at the races I've done. One race, they just dumped the m&ms into runners hands. Which was a bit odd but worked. It may slow people down though and if they are trying to BQ won't want anything that slows down.1 -
LaDispute57 wrote: »My favorite aid station food is grilled cheese.... I also like mashed potato balls
what are these potato balls you speak of? i think i must become familiar with them
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