Tag Archives: middle-age

1/1/24 Scary Goal…Check!

The 14,500′ elevation gain doesn’t scare me although it will be a record by 2,000′ in one race. I just have to figure out how to get the hill strength I had back in 2019 when I did the 12,500′ Killington Spartan without any issues at all (doing hills). I’ve been trying to get stronger with crossfit and will definitely do the 2x/week hill training I did consistently then also which I think made a big difference. I was out of breath doing the TMB and think it was a combination of work stress/general beatdown plus lack of consistency in fast hillwork. I had done a lot of elevation training on weekends but think I lacked consistency in the second set of hill intervals (cycling).

The 102 mile distance will be double what I have done before (record now is 52 miles at Hamsterwheel in 2022) and I have to figure out how to reduce foot swelling and do a little more prep for when the wheels start to fall off…..Talk to some folks with more experience than myself in the 100 mile distance. I am not sure the training will be that different.

19:24/mile cutoff times (33 hrs overall) is what scares me the most. I have never been slower. I haven’t been this out of shape since 2018 with weight – must drop about 30 lbs. Average pace in the relatively flat Hamsterwheel was 17:24/mile and I was slowing each 10 miles – need to figure out what to expect for slowdown and minimize that and aid station times. Back in 2019 I could run 7+ miles with 180 cadence as a “slow” run in zone 3 at 11:00/mile. I have really slowed down – not sure if it is due to weight or stress or training (not enough intervals).

Whatever the different factors are, I know consistency is key so am starting on a regular 6 day/week with one real rest day (not a Monday which is a stressful work day) including 4 strength sessions.

The other major change I am implementing is diet moving to primarily vegetarian plus fish which makes for more interesting meals. Harvey Lewis does it pretty successfully!! Limited alcohol on special occasions only.

Sleep must improve – no phones in the bed and a solid 8 hrs. Retiring and reduced work stress, better rounded life should help this a lot.

I plan to work on my ultra community so my long days/training aren’t so alone and I foster those friendships. Good thing is I have a few friends I can learn from locally and train with much more easily once retired. One of my friends who is a beast has already offered to pace me through the night during the Nobiz race! In 2022 I was getting very lonely on the long bikes/runs. Building my local community and better mental health will be key to my success this year – working remotely just doesn’t work for me and I have lost my local communities I really need for support. I spend my days in meetings all day and am still lonely without someone to talk to at work informally. A few months ago I cleaned out my contacts and deleted at least a thousand mostly from work. It felt like cleaning house and getting ready for the next chapter, which is already starting adding my new scuba contacts!

As David Goggins says, fight for each second and I am just going to start by going out for a run with a few intervals in my new shoes back on the old Nashua rail trail where I started this whole thing back in 2018 to reground. I’ll be meal prepping today to get that in order as well! Good thing I ate all the chocolate covered pretzels we got as a Christmas gift yesterday 🙂

Another back to back weekend, Pack Monadnock and N/S Twins + Galehead 7/2 and 7/3… on Little Sleep

Another long weekend of back to back runs. Saturday run and up and down pack Monadnock 4x (again) but felt way stronger than last weekend. Didn’t have cramps, was consistent on each loop. Pack Monadnock gave me 10.08 miles, 3261′ elevation and took 4:05 hours.

That evening Kenny and I went to a Tedeschi Trucks concert – which was awesome! …. but allowed for little sleep (<3 hrs) before I had to get up early Sunday to drive up to the N/S Twin trailhead to meet Amy Wilson.

Amy and I did the N/S Twins + Galehead (most boring peak ever) which was 14.3 miles, 5285′ elevation gain and took us 10:13 hours on an 80F day. Pretty tired when we ended – has a long flattish part along a stream for a mile or so at the beginning and end.

N/S Twins – from S. Twin you could see the Galehead hut which seemed far away and had a brutal steep ~0.5 section just before you got there:

Galehead is the most boring summit I’ve been at so far, truly a waste of time except to mark it off the list!

The hike down to the hut was scary because I kept thinking we had to go back up! In reality, going up wasn’t bad at all – one foot in front of the other.

Longest Run in 36 Years…New Bedford Half Marathon AAR

March 17, 2019 marks the first day I am starting to prove I am better than at 17 or 30. I ran the New Bedford half marathon today and felt great.  I ran slightly too fast (11:18 mile pace) but still pretty slow so no wind blocking behind the crowds during the middle of the race windy stretch!  Last time I ran a half, in high school, I think I ran a 10k the next day and somehow wiped myself out for the rest of the running season.  I think it might have been the absolute absence of knowledge on nutrition, or just mental – who knows.  But I’ve been afraid of this happening again and also what used to be the total unpredictability of how I felt running races.  My vote is nutrition and I am way better at that now.

Except for the Friday night before this Sunday race where we had a scuba reunion and I had chips/queso and 2 glasses of wine.  Somehow I’m now up 10 lbs over where I was pre-Bonaire – crazy and I hope water.

Results:

IMG_3439

Pre-race nutrition strategy:

  • Race at 11am.  6:30 breakfast of oatmeal, maple syrup, eggs, milk (normal) and one cup coffee.
  • 10am fuel for fire (typically eat this before running)
  • During race starting around first hour per hour, 1 endurolyte, 1 hammer gel
  • Post race:  Hammer recoverite

Followed except post race I had orange, banana, and chowder/fish sandwich provided by the race instead of recoverite.

Back/stretching Status:  Back was a little crickety going in.  Had done a few ROMWODS Saturday and stretched before the race.  Post race I give it a 6/10 – feeling way better than I have in the past after my last 11 mi run months ago (where I was so crippled I couldn’t move the rest of the day).  Working yoga today (Monday).

I carpooled down with a few of the local runners from the Nashua Gate City Striders running club and as I introduced myself and talked with them before the race had the following comments:

  • “You’re wearing that?”  My typical mid weight fleece vs this singlet thing everyone has to advertise their club
  • “We all have garmin watches”  with a tone when I asked about gear and mentioned I am using my iphone
  • “Did you look at the course?”  That would be a no!  But I learned a lesson and about the huge hill evidently around mile 9 and had good advice about fueling up in advance of that and not just at it.  Now this hill turned out to be a bump – had no effect on me.

Lessons Learned:

  • I cannot take this hair in my face all the time, it is going up with however many bobby pins it takes next time
  • Love chocolate hammer gel, hated grape.  Still couldn’t tell any noticeable change after eating them.
  • Look at the course in advance to plan nutrition around hills and to set expectations for hills – don’t get caught off guard
  • Trust clothing/layers you wore before in similar conditions.  It seemed a little cold so I brought gloves when I might not have.  Am not sorry but mostly they were in my pocket.

 

 

I did also go into my cookie jar for mental support for pre-race jitters – thank you David Goggins for this advice.  Also read the book “Nowhere Near First” by Cory Reese (an ultra runner) and in one race he passed someone who had told their running mate “the race doesn’t start until mile 70”, which he later realized was true.  So I thought of this as I finally passed for good the women in the sparkly (awesome) skirts who kept racing past me and then walking.  This was no ultra, but good practice for staying to my plan, which was 11:45 avg miles.

Train on my friends!  I am looking forward to a glut of strength training this month.  I am also busy buying sandbags and finding hills to run up.  Next race is my first Spartan May 11!

Laura