February 2018 Running Challenge
Replies
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KatieJane83 wrote: »PastorVincent wrote: »KatieJane83 wrote: »Is it weird that I'm kinda excited that my lunch run will probably be in the rain? I don't think that's weird
Yes, but it is okay, even good, to be weird at times.
I'm a nerd/geek so being kinda weird, at least in the eyes of some unfortunate people, is pretty much my ground state of existence, lol. I just tend to not believe in the existence of 'normal', lol
Hear hear!2 -
@iofred you must have amazing powers against jetlag to cope with all that travelling!!!0
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PastorVincent wrote: »midwesterner85 wrote: »PastorVincent wrote: »midwesterner85 wrote: »PastorVincent wrote: »midwesterner85 wrote: »@PastorVincent If losing weight improved things and you have been able to last years without insulin, then you are almost certainly type 2. Some type 2's confuse the difference between insulin usage and insulin production. Some of the symptoms may be similar, but the pathways to the diseases are very different.
Type 1's will always need to take insulin. I would become ill within hours of no longer getting insulin and would be dead within a few days. That 938 mg/dl I said was my highest was after 2 days without insulin. It's a surprise that I even survived. It was when I was a teenager and was just at a point where I didn't want to live with it anymore.
For type 1's who are in what's known as the "honeymoon stage" (this is the time during which your pancreas still has some functioning cells left because the immune system isn't yet done killing all beta cells, there is some variation as to how long it takes. Usually, younger patients have shorter honeymoons. Adults can have honeymoons that last years, and a term LADA is used to describe adult-onset type 1. If you have type 1 / LADA, you should be monitoring very closely so you know when you need to start taking insulin. There is nothing you can do to prevent it in this case, as it is just a matter of when a significant enough number of pancreatic beta cells are killed. You will need to start taking insulin before all are gone, and the dose will then be adjusted as more and more are lost.
I made many many drastic changes at once, but I ASSUME losing weight helped. I used to spike/crash all the time, now I go weeks. Still though, probably Type 2 based on your thoughts, though the doc seemed to think I COULD progress to a non-functional pancreas in time, but said it was too early to know and that I might just limp along like I am for a long time.
Really hope I can. I mean, sure I have not had birthday cake in years, but that seems a small price to pay.
Probably should go to a new doc and find out, but since there is nothing I can really do to prevent it (doctor said the same, it will happen, or not, nothing I could really do) I do not feel like I need to rush over.
I don't get the impression that your dr. understands what is happening, or perhaps does not understand the differences between type 1 and type 2. If he thought you were type 1 / LADA, he should have referred you to an endocrinologist and you should be monitoring frequently.
Did you have a gad or c-peptide test?
It was an Endo and I am sure he understood it far better than I. For a while, I was testing constantly (picking all the fingers!) and logging and reporting in and he was taking blood for his own testing. The core of the problem was the pancreas is releasing insulin way late. So gonna make this up as it has been years since I looked at the numbers...
A normal person eats, and their sugar may spike up some, but comes down pretty quickly by itself and is happy in that 70-120 range most of the time.
A diabetic eats, sugar spikes up, and does not come back down without medical intervention (pumps, injections, pills, etc)
I am neither
Again, making these numbers up for sake of clarity. So I eat something normal-ish and not real sugary. If I track my numbers I get something like at 1 hour BG is like 300, at 2 hour BG is like 70, at 3 hour BG is like 170, at 4 hour BG is 20. I assume have gone lower than 20, given I have collapsed, but something in the low 20s is the lowest I have successfully recorded. I really try not get down there anymore. It is really not a fun place to be.
Doc explained that my pancreas is releasing the insulin too late, and then releasing too much, and then cutting off before doing it again. He said it might stay that way, or it might eventually fail. There was no way to know.
I have learned to treat it by eating ahead of the downswing, staying away from simple carbs and making sure I have fat and/or protein in every meal. I was supposed to keep going to see him every 6 months, but I fell off that bandwagon, and then moved.
Also running LOTS of miles to stay ahead of the calories. :loL:
So that might be way too much information but might make it clearer. I do not know if it is officially recorded as 1 or 2 or something else, I just know I pretty much have to act like a diabetic when I eat.
Oh I see... it sounds like atypical reactive hypoglycemia. LCHF definitely is a good tool, but there is also the super starch that was developed for people who have glycogen storage disease... and then was discovered it could help type 1's who have lots of hypos. Since then, it was commercialized and many fat adapted athletes use it for an extra boost during competition or other high intensity endurance events (typically 2+ hrs.). It has an extremely high molecular weight, so it absorbs very slowly and provides glucose over time without a BG spike. It's been commercialized (like I said, it is now used by a lot of fat adapted athletes for special events) and can be found as Generation UCAN.
As to hypos, I've been 20 mg/dl and lower without much for symptoms, and yet I've been unresponsive with paramedics called in the 40's. It seems to be that the most recent time I ate has an impact. If I go low overnight / early morning, it doesn't have to be terribly low to go unconscious. If I eat something and over-estimate carbs (and therefore take too much insulin), go low 1 or 2 hrs. later, I tend to be able to handle it better even when much lower. Now that I don't eat carbs, the chance of a low due to over-counting carbs is less likely... just like when you eat lower carb, the odds that your body will release too much insulin (even if it takes time before it does so) should be lower.
I am not numerically LCHF - I mean I have done that. Spent a couple years on less the 60 carbs a day, and many weeks on less than 20 carbs per day. It really helped reset my diet and get my health back on track. Before that swap, I was essentially ONLY eating carbs. Talking pasta every night with garlic bread, and oh my YUM. Nowadays, I eat carbs, I just pay attention to how my BG responds. So birthday cake is out, but a bowl of cheerios is fine.
Still, my carbs have been inching up lately, and I need to pull them back down to something more reasonable. Carbs are sneaky little buggers.
I just don't eat carbs at all - maybe a few grams on some days, but 0g on a lot of days. I do plan to experiment with UCan later this year, though.0 -
I dont know if i was on a runners high or just completely stupid either way my body is going to hate me in a few hours. What was supposed to be just a short 5 miles turned into almost 15 miles. I had decided all week that i was going to find some new trails throughout the neighborhoods, had even "planned" my route which i clearly didnt pay attention to. Granted some of my misdirection came from the little critters that would freak me so at some points i was clearly lost. lol. I was trying my best to keep at a talking pace as i just got a HR watch but even at that pace i was so over the target range. oh well. lol. Hope everyone has a great weekend.
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midwesterner85 wrote: »I just don't eat carbs at all - maybe a few grams on some days, but 0g on a lot of days. I do plan to experiment with UCan later this year, though.
Would love to hear how that UCan works for you. Never heard of it before you mentioned it. I need to read up on it some.
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amymoreorless wrote: »Ha! I am in "get free stuff" mode. Any New Balance fans out there?
I just signed up to be a shoe wear tester. Free shoes! Maybe... I have not been chosen to wear test yet. I requested to try a pair of 860V9. We will see...abutcher2122 wrote: »I dont know if i was on a runners high or just completely stupid either way my body is going to hate me in a few hours. What was supposed to be just a short 5 miles turned into almost 15 miles. I had decided all week that i was going to find some new trails throughout the neighborhoods,
and that folks is how a person gets hooked on Trails
A balmy -7C ( 19F ) this morning with light snow so promises to be an interesting outing. Legs are 80% recovered from the impromptu Winter modified split triathlon on Wednesday so the hills today could be a challenge.6 -
Date :::: Miles :::: Cumulative
02/01/18 :::: 5.0 :::: 5.0
02/02/18 :::: 0.0 :::: 5.0
02/03/18 :::: 7.4 :::: 12.4
02/04/18 :::: 3.2 :::: 15.6
02/05/18 :::: 3.8 :::: 19.4
02/06/18 :::: 3.1 :::: 22.5
02/07/18 :::: 3.3 :::: 25.8
02/08/18 :::: 3.4 :::: 29.2
02/09/18 :::: 0.0 :::: 29.2
02/10/18 :::: 8.1 :::: 37.3
02/11/18 :::: 3.6 :::: 40.8
02/12/18 :::: 3.2 :::: 44.0
02/13/18 :::: 3.6 :::: 47.6
02/14/18 :::: 0.0 :::: 47.6
02/15/18 :::: 3.1 :::: 50.7
02/16/18 :::: 0.0 :::: 50.7
02/17/18 :::: 8.2 :::: 59.0
02/18/18 :::: 3.2 :::: 62.2
02/19/18 :::: 3.2 :::: 65.4
02/20/18 :::: 2.8 :::: 68.2
02/21/18 :::: 4.0 :::: 72.1
02/22/18 :::: 0.0 :::: 72.1
02/23/18 :::: 8.8 :::: 80.9
02/24/18 :::: 4.1 :::: 85.0
Goal = 87 miles (5k per day average)
Current status = 5.7k per day average
A great morning run today. A little warmer and less windy than yesterday, and I was so happy to be doing a short run instead of long that it felt great. Spirits were super high because our coach announced he was hired in a new position at a local club so a new running group will arise! I brought donut holes and one of our sub-group of women runners was celebrating a birthday and had brought mimosas. How awesome is that after a run? Of course then I realized I was eating calories like I had done a long run...:)
I also finally got my new shoes yesterday and have to say how much better my feet and legs feel - I went WAY too long on that last pair. Lesson learned, maybe.
Off to get the dog some more exercise.
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February 1 - 2.1 mile Treadmill run
February 2 - strength workout
February 4 - 2.25 mile Treadmill run
February 6 - 4 mile Treadmill run
February 8 - 3 mile Treadmill run
February 10 - 5.09 mile run
February 13 - 2.75 mile run
February 14 - strength workout
February 15 - 4 mile Treadmill run
February 17 - strength workout
February 18 - 6 mile run
February 20 - 3 mile Treadmill run
February 24 - 4.1 mile run
36.29 miles so far/Goal 40 miles
Upcoming Races:
3/17/18 USO 10 Mile Race at Ft Campbell
4/28/18 Brown Deer 10k
6/10/18 Manitowoc Half Marathon
8/18/18 Madison Mini Half Marathon
9/16/18 North Face Endurance 10k7 -
So let's see, if I run 46 miles today, or tomorrow, I will be on track for my "about 200 miles" that I was thinking I would hit. Should be no problem... well if my name was @JessicaMcB that is Somehow I think I will be a bit shy. I do hope to get 15 or 20 in tomorrow, time permitting.7
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PastorVincent wrote: »polskagirl01 wrote: »
It worked! My monthly HM streak is secure. The main challenge was mental, as I hate being cold. Everything was covered in snow, but fortunately it wasn't slippery. By the end of the run, my phone was acting funny (I use it for music), and my outer layers (buff, jacket, etc) were freezing solid, but I felt okay myself, so my clothing choices must have been alright overall. I don't have time for this cold weather, though. Can't wait for Spring!
Yay! Congrats!
Also keeping your phone close to your body instead of outside your close will help it handle the cold much better.
It was zipped in my jacket pocket, with the headphone wires going inside my shirt. It was strange to me that the jacket front froze the way it did, as it was only -8 C and I wasn't feeling dangerously cold. Even my feet were fine (in 2 pairs of socks with a sandwich bag in-between). I do have a warmer ski jacket that I wear in colder temperatures, and today was kind of borderline as to which one I put on.0 -
amymoreorless wrote: »amymoreorless wrote: »Ha! I am in "get free stuff" mode. Any New Balance fans out there?
I just signed up to be a shoe wear tester. Free shoes! Maybe... I have not been chosen to wear test yet. I requested to try a pair of 860V9. We will see...
https://product.testing.newbalance.com/
For those who like other brands....
Whoo! Thanks! I saved the info. I already signed up on the NB. I'll hit these up later!1 -
2/1: 11.85 miles
2/2: 13 miles
2/3: 13.07 miles
2/4: 10.3 miles
2/5: 10.26 miles
2/6: 10.26 miles
2/7: 10.35 miles
2/8: 9 miles
2/9: 8.2 miles
2/10: 8.5 miles
2/11: 8.5 miles
2/12: no run
2/13: 10.8 miles
2/14: 12.3 miles
2/15: 12 miles
2/16: 12 miles
2/17: 11.87 miles
2/18: 16.04 miles
2/19: 10.92 miles
2/20: 11.65 miles
2/21: 11.58 miles
2/22: 11 miles
2/23: 12.2 miles
2/24: 11.05 miles
Total so far: 256.5 miles/300
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polskagirl01 wrote: »PastorVincent wrote: »polskagirl01 wrote: »
It worked! My monthly HM streak is secure. The main challenge was mental, as I hate being cold. Everything was covered in snow, but fortunately it wasn't slippery. By the end of the run, my phone was acting funny (I use it for music), and my outer layers (buff, jacket, etc) were freezing solid, but I felt okay myself, so my clothing choices must have been alright overall. I don't have time for this cold weather, though. Can't wait for Spring!
Yay! Congrats!
Also keeping your phone close to your body instead of outside your close will help it handle the cold much better.
It was zipped in my jacket pocket, with the headphone wires going inside my shirt. It was strange to me that the jacket front froze the way it did, as it was only -8 C and I wasn't feeling dangerously cold. Even my feet were fine (in 2 pairs of socks with a sandwich bag in-between). I do have a warmer ski jacket that I wear in colder temperatures, and today was kind of borderline as to which one I put on.
Jacket pockets are not warm. They keep warm in. So if you put your hand in it, your hand generates heat and the pocket keeps the warmth in (somewhat). So without a heat source, the phone was pretty much out in the cold. It cools down slower than it would out in the air, but still cools down. If you kept the phone closer to your body, the heat from your body would keep it warm enough. Or you could stick a hand warmer in your pocket.
Just a thought.
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February goal: Keep kicking at Zumbro training
Nominal mileage goal: Let's say 140? I really don't know. Real plan is to follow training and coach's advice well.
2/1- REST
2/2- 5.5
2/3- 16.6
2/4- 4.2
2/5- REST
2/6- 9.1
2/7- 6.7
2/8- REST
2/9- 5.5
2/10-10
2/11- 9.8
2/12- REST
2/13- 6.8
2/14- 6.8
2/15- REST
2/16- 5.8
2/17- 13.4
2/18- 9
2/19- REST
2/20- 9.1
2/21- 6.9
2/22- REST
2/23- 4- ugh
2/24- 12.3
Total: 141.6
Today's notes: Assignment was an out/back. Run for 90 minutes and then turn around, retrace steps and come back in 80 minutes. First part of the "back" was a slog up hill on not-quite-packed snow, really slowing me down. I ended up getting back in 1:25:45, so faster than my going out, but not as fast as assigned. Oh well, at least I met the goal of harder effort on the way back.
Winter storm warning for tonight/tomorrow should make tomorrow's "run" more interesting.
2018 races
3/28- END-SURE 50k
4/13- Zumbro Endurance Race 100 Mile
7/28- Minnesota Voyageur 50 (coach brought up this one)
9/8- Superior Trail 50 mile
10/20- Wild Duluth 50k
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Jennifer did you make a Strava request???0
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Skimmed 100+ posts. Lots of chatter about diabetes and blood donation. Don't know much about managing diabetes.
@PastorVincent - Anecdata re: blood donation. I had been giving blood like clockwork, every 8 weeks, when I became a runner. For a while, no problem. Then I got serious about racing. One year (2015? 2014?) I donated on a Monday before Thanksgiving, and ran the 10K on Thanksgiving Day. It was not a good race, and I blamed many different things; but in hindsight, the fact that I had donated blood 3 days earlier was probably the biggest thing.
I didn't see it making any difference in easy runs, and it didn't make enough difference to grab my attention before I started watching race times for PRs and doing well. Later, my regular doctor (not a sports doc) told me to back off to donating 4 times a year, and not within 2 weeks of a race. Other stuff in my medical history may have been relevant to this, and you have stuff going on that I don't which is probably relevant to what's right for you.
The postscript: Last time I went in to donate, my iron was too low in the Red Cross test for them to take a donation. This was after years of being borderline low, close to the limit every time. I haven't been back; I think I may have saved enough lives before I got to that point.3 -
February Running Totals (miles)
2/1 – 5.01 easy
2/2 – rest day
2/3 – 7.00 paced run
2/4 – 5.17 almost easy
2/5 – rest day
2/6 – unplanned rest day
2/7 – scheduled rest day
2/8 – 5.17 easy with fast finish
2/9 – rest day
2/10 – 6.17 partly paced run
2/11 – 6.52 at marathon pace
2/12 – rest day
2/13 – 7.78 easy with hills
2/14 – rest day
2/15 – 5.06 easy + one stride
2/16 – rest day
2/17 – 7.97 Freezeroo #5 - 8 mile race
2/18 – 6.05 easy
2/19 – rest day
2/20 – 5.59 easy plus a stride
2/21 – 6.46 group run
2/22 – 5.20 easy
2/23 – rest day
2/24 – 12.30 paced run + 4.4 mile race
February running total to date – 91.45
Nominal challenge goal: 100 miles
Real goals: Transition from recovery to base building by end of month. Give myself a chance to start and complete Boston 2018.
Today's notes – This is a tale of two runs, what @Stoshew71 might call a daily double. Temperature was forecast for near 40º F (near 5º C), with 7-9 mph NW wind. Other than wind direction, this is similar weather to what I've run in recently. I opted for shorts and a single long sleeve tech shirt.
First run, the plan was to pace 7 miles (out of routes for 7, 12, or 14 miles) at 8:00 per mile, starting at 7:30. No one showed up needing that pace, so it was just the other 8:00 pacer and me. We didn't pay strict attention to pace, and he's naturally a little faster than I am, so it crept up there. Had a nice conversation about a variety of running topics, and late in the route I missed a turn. Realized it a bit later, took the next available turn, and went back to base mostly on the remainder of the route. The planned 7 mile route came in at 7.94 miles per Garmin, at an average pace of 7:42 per mile. Good thing we weren't responsible for anyone else.
I was okay with the faster pace after I missed the turn, because that removed time pressure. The other pacer went out for the additional 5 or 10 miles with the 8:30 pacers. I changed into a dry tech shirt and dry hat, got in my car, and drove across town to get to a 4.4 mile race with a 10AM gun time. The race site was near Lake Ontario; the classic directions there say, "Go north on Holt Road, and if you drive into the lake you've gone 100 meters too far."
A northerly component of the wind meant it felt noticeably colder at the race site than it had where I was doing the allegedly paced run. So I hung out in the heated shelter until 10 minutes before gun time, then gutted it out. The last 3 minutes of waiting were the traditional winter race misery of, "Aren't we moving yet?"
Of course, as soon as we were running I was warm enough. The plan was to treat this as a tempo run, targeting T level of effort. When I'm healthy and in good form, my T pace on the roads should be about 6:40 per mile. These particular roads were a 2.2 mile loop (run twice) of small rolling hills. I set out to hold a steady pace, and I did pretty well. Ended up finishing 4.36 miles per Garmin (race distance was not certified) in 28:46, for an average pace of 6:36 per mile. Mile splits were 6:34, 6:34, 6:37, 6:37, and a 6:38 pace for the last partial mile, which finished uphill. I thought it was phenomenal that I could hold that steady on that particular course.
I was 16th of 146 overall, 1st of 12 in the M 60-64 age group. This was not good for any bling, because there are no individual race awards in the low-budget Freezeroo series and I did not run enough races to qualify for series scoring. That's okay; it was a lot of fun.
Today marks the most miles I have run in one day since early November. I'm happy with that, and very happy that the worst thing that happened was that when I walked back to my car my calves told me they worked pretty hard today. Okay, they don't have to do much for the rest of the day.
I felt so good that when I got home, I added another race to my calendar. I like the Spring Forward route, and the idea is to use it to practice pace control for Boston. Tried that last year, with only partial success; I'll try it again this year, and see how it goes.
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)
March 24, 2018 Spring Forward 15K (Mendon, NY)
April 16, 2018 Boston Marathon (Hopkinton, MA)
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Date Workout
2/1 Rest
2/2 Glutes + Abs
2/3 Delts & Tris
2/4 Legs & Back
2/5 4.15
2/6 Glutes
2/7 Rest - Unscheduled
2/8 Rest - Scheduled
2/9 Rest - Unscheduled
2/10 3.1 Legs & Back + Abs
2/11 Delts & Tris
2/12 Glutes & Abs
2/13 Rest
2/14 Chest & Back
2/15 Plyo
2/16 Legs & Back
2/17 Rest
2/18 3.1
2/19 Glutes & Abs
2/20 Chest & Back
2/21 3
2/22 Rest
2/23 Legs & Back
2/24 4.00
2/25
2/26
2/27
2/28
Total 13.35 out of 50
This has not been my month for running. But I've been hitting my weight workouts. Tradeoffs.5 -
It. Felt. Great. Running was just the joy of running, no nag from the leg. Yeah, there was some traffic; it was manageable for running. Yeah, a shower started when I was running; no big deal. I got started with no precipitation, it was warm, the wind wasn't a factor, and I can deal with it. Took an option to finish up through residential streets, and managed a stride on the end to my driveway.
@kat_ontherun Running outside is so much more fun than running on the treadmill! Even if it's cold or raining or windy, that's usually much easier for me than just running in place.
@skippygirlsmom I'm really sorry you were so sick! I hope you will recover really quickly now.
@noblsheep Happy new year! Will it be your first half marathon next month? (sorry if you already wrote it, this thread is so long it's hard to remember/look up what was posted before)
@lporter229 I hope the skiing weather is better than the forecast! I'm planning to go skiing tomorrow too, hope for better weather than last weekend (which was still hundred times better than the dreadful foggy icy day the week before). I bought my own skis earlier this month because I got tired of waiting in line at the rental place, so now I have to go every weekend to justify spending the money
@juliet3455 Cool triathlon! Although skiing in the dark sounds really scary. I spent an afternoon skiing in dense fog with almost no visibility earlier this month, and didn't like it one bit. Especially since I just started and don't know any of the slopes well, and only finding out at the last moment if I had to go left or right or if it will suddenly be steep was not fun.
@amymoreorless Great pictures! As long as the mud is only on the outside of the shoes, who cares? Most of it might fall off during your next run when it has dried. If it really bothers you, you can always put the shoes inside the washing machine at some gentle cycle.
@sarahthes That is a very pretty sunset!
@JessicaMcB Wow, that race conditions sound insane. You are absolutely amazing for running that distance in snow like that after a leg injury!!!
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--- okay, still 6 pages left to catch up, but I'll do that tomorrow...
Just a short (or not so short) note on my running day: it was ... less than ideal.
I got talked last-minute into giving some tours to students at work today, which took roughly from 8:30-11:00 and 14:00-16:30. I thought the time in between would be long enough to go for a run, but after standing outside 15min with them waiting for the bus to pick them up, I was frozen! It took me 45 minutes alternating between tea, coffee and hot chocolate in my office to defrost enough to step outside again. So I only had two hours left - which still woulds have been something, if not for the fact that 11:00-14:00 today was the time for a special pokemon go event (yes, I'm one of those crazy old-fashioned people who still play now and then ), with lots of "Dratini" everywhere. They are super rare where I live, so during my run today I stopped to catch them whenever I saw one. Strava sais for my 2 hours run the "moving time" was 1:22. Oooops!
I barely had time for the shortest shower in history, then I had to play tour guide again. Got home around 17:00, again frozen and by then also starving, since I hadn't had lunch. After dinner and a hot bath I started feeling bad about missing so much of my long run distance, so I went out for another 5km. It is a cutback week in the training plan anyway, but 27.7km for the week is a little more cut back from my usually 40km than I was planning. Oh well, next week will hopefully be better, and I might still make my monthly goal...
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Feb 24: 3 miles - and that's goal for February!
Considered running a small charity run today but the weather was supposed to be terrible so we slept in - and then turned out the weather was fine this morning after all. It was supposed to be fine until 3 pm, so we headed out to the park, and then of course it started spitting rain. Ah well! And it was too darned hot, about 79 F which I'm not used to yet, especially with 100% humidity. I wish Memphis wasn't so either/or - straight from too cold to too hot with nary a day of just right.
Today was the day we usually do a speedy mile on asphalt around the lake then head out to fartlek on trails. Our usual trail was not happening - completely under water with a flood warning - so we did our mile and then headed out onto the paved wagon trail, only come to find out the wagon trail was closed because part of it washed out into the river! So we found a nice hill and ran hills instead.
Still trying to catch that elusive 8 minute mile - today's mile was 8:23 which is getting there! And probably would have been a little faster except we had to stop and go around some people from a lacrosse tournament. We saw the team from my old high school which was nice. They were grilling hamburgers for the lacrosse parents and every time we ran past the delicious scent made us hungrier and hungrier.
Also feeling a little chuffed because I just noticed I head the leaderboard for fastest time of women running around the lake in February - out of twenty eight runners, not too shabby! This is the first time in my life I've ever been fastest at literally anything.7 -
Thanks @_nikkiwolf_
I mean...I would probably try it @PastorVincent
I was up puking a lot last night so I slept through my 3AM alarm. Got in 16k before I had to come back and make lunch- 11k easy, 5k moderate with a goal time on that 5k effort of 20:00. Apparently dragged my *kitten* too much because my back end time was 22:43. Its been five days ffs body, hurry up . Hopefully my long run tomorrow meets pacing standards better
February 1- 15+3
February 2- 17
February 3- 33
February 4- Off
February 5- 21
February 6- Off
February 7-20
February 8- Off
February 9- Off
February 10- 22 (Run off the road, *kitten* up my right leg)
February 11-17 *Hail Mary Leg Rehab*
February 18- 5
February 19- 51
February 20&21- Off
February 22- 15
February 23- 13
February 24- 16
231.5/550
787/6000
2018 Races
*Gord's Frozen A** 50K, February 19 7:08:00, 1st place Women's Open
*JAJA Trail Marathon, April 1
*Red Deer Marathon, May 20
*Lone Wolf Last Man Standing Race, June 17
*Eddie's Half Marathon, June 24
*Lost Souls 100 Miler, September 7
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2/1 - 6.5km
2/2 - strength
2/3 - 9.0km
2/4 - strength
2/5 - rest
2/6 - 6.0km
2/7 - 3.1km
2/8 - 6.3km
2/9 - rest owww
2/10 - 8.3 km
2/11 - rest
2/12 - rest & cake (hubby's birthday)
2/13 - 6.3 km
2/14 - ate sushi & watched Olympics
2/15 - 6.7 km
2/16 - stretch
2/17 - 9.8 km
2/18 - rest (stretching)
2/19 - rest (stairs)
2/20 - stairs (25 flights, running)
2/21 - 6.9km
2/22 - 6.9km
2/23 - stairs (27 flights? Something like that)
2/24 - 12.1km
87.9/100 km
What a beautiful day for a run today. Hovering around freezing, sun shining. I completely overdressed and looped back to the sledding hill at the 1km point to hand my jacket, toque and gloves to my husband since he had the kids out enjoying the weather too. Then just plodded along in slushy muck through the neighbourhood, not really sure where I was going but with the vague idea of doing about 10km. Except I got lost in a series of twisty streets and wound up doing 12.1 km instead. Oops! Was pretty slow but I'm going to blame the sidewalk conditions for that. And the almost 1500 stairs challenge I did this week.
Upcoming Races:
1/1/18 Resolution Run 5K ~38:00 (no official times)
3/4/18 MEC Road Race #1 10K
4/7/18 Jasper Half Marathon
4/22/18 MEC Trail Race #1 5K
5/20/18 MEC Trail Race #2 10K
6/24/18 MEC Trail Race #3 15K
8/18/18 Edmonton Marathon 10K
9/2/18 MEC Trail Race #4 10K
10/7/18 MEC Trail Race #5 15K7 -
Skimmed 100+ posts. Lots of chatter about diabetes and blood donation. Don't know much about managing diabetes.
@PastorVincent - Anecdata re: blood donation. I had been giving blood like clockwork, every 8 weeks, when I became a runner. For a while, no problem. Then I got serious about racing. One year (2015? 2014?) I donated on a Monday before Thanksgiving, and ran the 10K on Thanksgiving Day. It was not a good race, and I blamed many different things; but in hindsight, the fact that I had donated blood 3 days earlier was probably the biggest thing.
I didn't see it making any difference in easy runs, and it didn't make enough difference to grab my attention before I started watching race times for PRs and doing well. Later, my regular doctor (not a sports doc) told me to back off to donating 4 times a year, and not within 2 weeks of a race. Other stuff in my medical history may have been relevant to this, and you have stuff going on that I don't which is probably relevant to what's right for you.
The postscript: Last time I went in to donate, my iron was too low in the Red Cross test for them to take a donation. This was after years of being borderline low, close to the limit every time. I haven't been back; I think I may have saved enough lives before I got to that point.
I used to do the same thing. The day the called I went to donate blood. My iron count actually went to 0. I went to see all kinds of specialist until *I* figured out I was giving too often. Now I limit my self to 1 or 2 a year at most and my iron stays at good levels. Good enough that I normally give doubles - which is actually less stressful on you cause they put back much of what you are loosing.0 -
Also, @MobyCarp welcome back to the grand world of running!0
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02/01/2018 - 7.2 MPH for 7.2 Miles @ 4% grade
02/02/2018 - Shoe Shopping
02/03/2018 - 17 miles @ 9:50
02/04/2018 - Family trip to DQ instead
02/05/2018 - 10 miles at 10:04 pace
02/06/2018 - Meetings and such
02/07/2018 - 7.5 MPH for 10 miles @ 4% grade
02/08/2018 - Meetings
02/09/2018 - 7.5 MPH for 10 miles @ 4% grade
02/10/2018 - Shoe shopping - again
02/11/2018 - 10 miles @ 9:01 pace
02/12/2018 - 10 miles @ 9:33 pace
02/13/2018 - 10 miles @ 9:22 pace
02/14/2018 - Rest
02/15/2018 - 7 miles @ 8:31 pace
02/16/2018 - 7.5 MPH for 8 miles @ 4% grade
02/17/2018 - Nada
02/18/2018 - Car Show with son
02/19/2018 - 11 miles @ 9:29
02/20/2018 - 15 miles @ 9:45
02/21/2018 - 9 miles @ 8:41
02/22/2018 - 9 miles @ 8:49
02/23/2018 - 9 miles @ 8:48
02/24/2018 - 17 miles @ 9:37
Big Hairy Audacious Goal: Sub 4 hours in Pittsburgh 2018!
Official Marathon PR: 4:11:28
Next Races (more as I find them):
03/17/18 - Shamrock Shuffle Half Marathon + 5k + 1mile
04/07/18 - Achilles 9.3 Challange (10k and 5k back to back)
05/06/18 - Pittsburgh Marathon - aiming for sub four hours.
05/12/18 - Glacier Ridge 50k Trail Ultra (I must hate myself)
2020 - Disney World Dopey! (if can raise funds)
Got started an hour late so only got 17 miles instead of the 20 I was considering. This time I ran with Tailwind. Soon I want to attempt a 4 hour run with just Tailwinds on my back and see if I can do it non-stop without any gels/chews/etc. Today I drank 1 24 oz water bottle with 1 1/2 scopes of Tailwind which I drank over the 2:45ish run. which is well below the recommendation. (They recommend for endurance workouts, mix 2-3 scoops per 24 oz of water per hour) - but since it was in the low 40's I was not nearly as dehydrated as I could be. I think that will be much different for my May Marathon PR attempt.
4 -
Day 1 of Gasparillo Amber Challenge. Hot and humid down here in Tampa. It started getting really warm around mile 7 of the 15k. After that finish I had about an hour before the 5k start and it was hot by the end of it. The half is tomorrow.9
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Soooo....on a day almost as hot as an early summer day on the planet Mercury (yay Florida!) Gasparilla! I always leave several hours early, I usually try to park, check in, then walk through the expo before my run, give me a chance to "calm down" after fighting that hour's worth of traffic. Knowing my wave time was 0945, I left my house about 0700, to get up there in oodles of time. Sha right. Not the case today. Over 45 minutes stuck in traffic, multiple parking lots full, trying to do u-turns on 1 way streets whentheotherdriversarethisclosetoyou...I finally found a single spot - at $20! - on the OTHER side of the area I needed to be in, 10 mins before my wave time! I finally made it through the throngs of staged runners over to check in, totally forget my bib number, have a mini-break down before getting in with the next wave. That's when I realized my stupid mistake: I totally have been in the "Florida summer" mindset (since basically, that's how it has been), and making sure my runs have all been done early. I haven't been training in the heat. Great! Added to that - of all the days to forget sunscreen!
Due to the heat and multitude of walkers, strollers, and precious little children, there were several walks. About half way though, I did roll my ankle due to uneven pavement, and almost stopped on the side for a few, but I recalled the encouragement y'all gave another a while back when she did the same..so to just walked, ok, limped it off till it went away. After the turn around (yes, where the Rough Riders were passing out donuts...) cruising along...and my mother decided to call! WOW! So now, I have to slow to make sure all the apps are still running, turn the music back on...carry on. Between mile 2 & 3, I slowed to a walk, and a gentleman came up to me & said "Oh no! You can't slow down now! You've been my pacer for the past half mile!" Funny, I was using someone else!
So, when it all came down to the end: I accomplished my goal! Even with all the "walk breaks", I did it in 44:52, pace 14:03. Secretly I was kinda hoping to beat my 39:43, but I feel good about beating last year (45:44,14:42) The "struggle" part, I honestly think, it was heat and "slalom" related. If it was done earlier in the morning I'm sure I would have been able to run longer. And I'm kinda curious...I know it SAYS 3.1 miles, but with all the weaving in & out, just how far DO we really run?
Feb: 25 miles
2/2 - 2.1 miles
2/3 - 2.15 miles
2/5 - 2.41 miles
2/7 - 2.44 miles
2/12 - 2.5 miles
2/15 - 2.55 miles
2/20 - 2.75 miles
2/22 - 2.76 miles
2/24 - 3.19 miles - 24.65 run, .35 to go (oh man! Had I known....!)
Races:
2/17 - Susan B Komen Race For the Cure 5K DNS
2/24 - Gasparilla 5K - 44:52, 14.03
Yearly goal: 200 miles - Jan 17.61 - 22.65 = 159.74 to run!11 -
dreamer12151 wrote: »And I'm kinda curious...I know it SAYS 3.1 miles, but with all the weaving in & out, just how far DO we really run?
In a 5k you do not pick up that much distance, but in longer races, it can really make a difference. For example, last year in the Pittsburgh Marathon, I picked up over a mile extra in running. If you have a smartphone you can use an app like Strava, RunKeeper, or etc to track your run and find out. Or a GPS watch like Fitbit and Garmin.
2
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