Saturday, March 20, 2010

Another half & St George info!

Sorry I have not blogged in a while! I usually take time on the weekends to reflect on the weeks' training and such, but we were out of town last weekend for the 6 Tunnels to Hoover Dam Half Marathon and a little birthday celebrating in VEGAS! So I have a few things to update on:

  1. The Race
  2. Vegas
  3. St. George Accomodations for my "Entourage" ;)


6 Tunnels
We ran the Run for Ryan House Half the weekend before purely as a training run (Heart rate Z1 - Z2 only) with decent hills I still ran a solid 2:08. I felt good about that and thought that maybe I could go for a PR at another race the next weekend (sub 2 hours). We like running races as part of our training because it motivates me to get up and get stuff done. When every weekend consists of a 2 hour plus run, a 3000 meter plus swim and 5 hour plus ride its nice to have one of those be a race or something different.

So we left work on Friday at about noon and grabbed the dogs, bikes, running gear and one nice outfit for heading into Vegas. We got there about 6PM (5.5 hour drive). We stayed in a house in Henderson so we could have a yard and leave the dogs while we were out and about. Again, VRBO rocks! We had our usual pre-race meal of cheese pizza that night and stayed in. ;)

Early Saturday morning we made our way towards the Hoover Dam. We had to park about a mile from the race site and literally HIKE to the start. We like this though as we have learned the importance of a GOOD warm up. We got there, got our numbers and schwag and went for a 2 mile warmup run. The wind was HOWLING. If you know me, I HATE wind. I think my ears stick out funny or something because I CANNOT hear when the wind is blowing. Josh was nice enough to say he would pace me to my sub 2 hours, and in that 2 miles I told him it was just not happening that day, not in that wind. I felt I was running uphill on flats. I think it was 25-35 mph winds that day. But he told me we would see how the first half went and reassess at 6.5 miles.

The race started on a bike path, pure chaos, people walking, dodging with no where to go. GRR. And then a GOOD uphill. The course ended up climbing 600 feet. I need a flat race one of these days. 600 isn't a whole lot but enough when going for a PR.

It was also an out and back, so you ended up going against the stream at one point. OK? Anyway, it was tough on me mentally. But I have to say Josh paced PERFECTLY. We hot the halfway point at 59:00. So if I could hold my pace I would make my sub 2:00. BARELY. This last hour would be tough. At this point it changed from the bike path to the railroad path of dirt and gravel. I am slower on trails but the amount of people and narrow path was no longer an issue. Once again this part was an out and back that climbed gradually for 3 miles. I knew the last 3 miles I would have to BOOK it downhill. I didn't even see the Hoover Dam because I was so focused on making this goal.

I followed Josh's heels the ENTIRE race, I knew running sub 2 is easy for him so if I could stay with him I should be okay.

When we finally hit the turnaround and downhill it was absolutely brutal, all of the training of the last few weeks hit me and I felt like I weighed a ton. My legs didn't want to move but I was so close, only 3 miles, and I had worked so hard I couldn't just let it go. So we MOVED. In the last mile we knew we had a little bit of a cushion and we actually ran next to eachother and chatted a bit, I was able to look around and realize it was a pretty cool course, next to Lake Mead, out to Hoover Dam, on an old railroad bed. Up until that point I pretty much hated it! :p


We crossed the finish at 1:57:42. Wow. I was shocked. I was so thankful for Josh's help, without him I would have thrown that PR goal out the window. I immediately started wondering how well I could run on a flat course, all road. ;) Always a new goal! :) Always moving forward.

Vegas
That night Josh took me to see Phantom of the Opera for my birthday!!! I have ALWAYS wanted to see that. It was AMAZING, even better than I imagined. The Venetian has a theater built especially for it, a 5 million dollar chandelier for the show and despite how picky I was going to be about the acting/ singing (how many times had I listened to that CD with Kent on the way to the beach?) They were AMAZING! Even Josh was super impressed. The special effects were amazing! *Sigh* I loved it.

We then ate at Wolfgang Puck's Postrio, and stayed out late (for us!)


Ironman St. George Info
Alright, ROCKSTAR ENTOURAGE here is the info. Since this race is in (OMG) 6 weeks (BREATHE) I wanted to have this here so you know the plan:

House:

Dates:
April 25-May 2
Come when you can!

Race:
The race is May 1, and yes, it is ALL DAMN DAY! 7AM to 12AM although I will be done by about 4:30 PM (I kid I kid). I do not expect you to sit out there all day, but just the fact that you will be there at all means the WORLD to me!

Other activities:
If you come out early I hope to do Zion, and ANY other cool stuff. Think there will be snow? ;) I do not plan on sitting around - let's check the place out. OH and of course - Dinosaur/ Robot/ Barbie BIRTHDAY!

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Run for Ryan House

Less than 60 days until Ironman! Training has ramped up significantly and we continue to find ways to keep it interesting and purposeful. Today we did the Run for Ryan House Half Marathon:

Every stride will benefit Ryan House, the first of its kind in the Southwest that will provide respite and palliative care for children with life-threatening conditions in a home-like setting.

Not only a GREAT cause but a perfect training run for the IMSG course as the elevation profile and gain is almost identical! The course climbed a good 1200+ feet through the beautiful backdrop of the McDowell Mountains in North Scottsdale.




Our plan called for a 3 hour run today so we ran 2 miles before the race, and I ran 1 after (I think Josh did more). Lined up at the start about 10 minutes before. The run started at DC Ranch, a beautiful community, we have ridden bikes here plenty and knew from those rides it would be a hilly run.


The goal of this run was to practice Ironman marathon pacing and keep the heart rate in low Z1-2. I did a great job of this and have to admit it was the smartest race I have ever run. I didn't let the atmosphere get in the way of my goals as I knew if I pushed too hard on this course I would pay dearly in the days to come. With big swims and rides on the backend of this, I couldn't risk big recovery.


The course climbed steadily for the first 6.5 miles, I felt phenomenal. Maybe this "training" stuff really pays off. :) When we turned onto Happy Valley Road we were met with a steady headwind and a large, long climb. I tucked in behind someone larger than me and met his stride. My goal was to hang onto a 10:30 pace on the long uphills, and run 9:30's back for a net pace of 10:00 flat. I was pacing perfectly to plan and keeping within my heart rate goals. I followed my pacer until the turnaround at 6.5, I passed him on the downhill and he said "you're welcome!" HA! He knew I was drafting him. :p I told him I would buy him lunch at the end! Once again, I smiled at my smart tactics (staying out of the wind) and enjoyed the tailwind and the LONG downhill all the way back!


I was careful to take on nutrition throughout the run as well. Normally up to a half I can sustain on just water. This time I traded off between H20 and Accelerade. This works well for me. The last aid station the sun had come out and I was feeling thirsty so I took both, nope, that doesn't work for me and I ran the last mile with a nasty side stitch. Oh well, thats what training runs are for - to learn pacing, nutrition, etc.

Came into the finish, saw Josh and a bunch of adorable kids handing out medals. Came in at 2:08 which means I paced a net average of 9:45 ish so I was a little faster than plan but considering how I felt it was a success. Not a PR race, but that was not the intention. I think with hills like that, and having to do it 2X for IMSG I will be happy pacing closer to 10:30-11:00 for the marathon. Then again, that will be on legs that just biked 112 hilly miles too. :p



If you want to be successful, it's just this simple. Know what you are doing. Love what you are doing. And believe in what you are doing.
Will Rogers