Showing posts with label triathlon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label triathlon. Show all posts

Saturday, January 4, 2014

2013 Triathlon by the numbers...A bunch of firsts!


Triathlon:  I love numbers! I love calculating things in my head as I run! I love seeing numbers on my watch after I finish a workout! So it comes as no surprise that watching my totals increase through the year is exciting, and seeing final numbers and be able to compare them is very exciting!

So here are my totals for the last two years:
Swim: 51h 15m 39s - 124978.01 Yd
Bike: 158h 16m 51s - 2498.32 Mi
Run: 157h 02m 13s - 905.8 Mi
Strength: 30h 16m
Yoga: 1h 00m
Swim: 29h 16m 53s - 62625.25 Yd
Bike: 143h 59m 31s - 2310.55 Mi
Run: 139h 08m 32s - 771.37 Mi
Strength: 49h 20m
Hiking: 1h 20m
Spinning Class: 45m
Yoga: 30m 

One of the more obvious things:
I swam twice as much in 2013 as I did in 2012. I am just as slow....

I raced my first half ironman triathlon.
I raced my first marathon.
I raced two sprint tri's.
     -I came in 2nd in my AG in one of them.
     -I PR'd at both of them.
I raced as the biker in a sprint relay.
     -We came in 2nd for the relay teams.
I was one of two runners in a half marathon relay.
     -We came in 5th.

It was a GREAT year for me in triathlon!








Sunday, December 29, 2013

Dusting off the blog...

The last time I blogged was my race recap for Eagleman. Re-reading that rekindles my excitement to race again! And no better time since TODAY is 6 months until CHALLENGE AC!! Booyah!

Mom: Just a recap: 4 kids - all busy. Oldest daughter,14, is on the swim team this year and loving it! It is very time intensive - they don't leave the HS until 6 at night and get home at 9:30ish. She is learning a lot about time management - which is good for her.  Daughter #2, 12, finished up field hockey with the middle school and is not concentrating on band and jazz band. Playing alto, tenor, and bari sax for the various bands. Son, 10, just turned his double digits 2 weeks ago. He is a webelo in cub scouts and has his swim class. I am trying to convince him to make the leap to swim team at the Y. He also takes a gymnastics class that he enjoys.  Daughter #3, 5, has her girl scouts and takes gymnastics and swim class. 

 Vet: I am on vacation until 1/2. Yeah! That doesn't mean the calls, emails and texts have stopped. But they have lessened.

Survivor: I have appointments coming up next month - ultrasound and doctor appointment in January. All stable for now. Considering asking for a PET scan to see if it detects anything new/different.

Triathlete: 2013 was a great year for me race wise!

RACES 2013
May 5 - NJ Half Marathon Relay
May 12 - Manassas Ladies Sprint Tri  - 2nd in AG!!
June 9 - Eagleman Half Ironman
July - Jersey Girl Tri Relay (Bike) 2nd place!
September 8 - Sandy Hook Sprint Tri
October 27 - Marine Corps Marathon

It was a year of firsts! My first HIM and my first MARATHON! Both had PR's !! Haha! I can only get better from here!

I have joined a group of triathletes swimming with a coach at 5 am twice a week. I think it will be very good for me - I have never swam the distances that she has us swimming. I am the second slowest right now, so I can only get faster. Trying to decide if I should consider a TI class or go for some private lessons. I watch videos and try to replicate what I do but I am not seeing improvement.

I am excited for 2014!

Races so far...
June 8 - Escape the Cape Sprint
June 29 - Challenge AC - guaranteed PR!!!

Considering -
Shamrock Half Marathon - March 16
Wineglass Marathon - October
Iron Girl Sandy Hook - September

There are so many races out there to try (or tri!)! I will have to do this a lot of years to try them all!


Tuesday, June 11, 2013

EAGLEMAN Race Report 6.9.13 - Great day, but I want a REDO!!!


What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.

-T. S. Eliot

PACKET PICKUP: It was a long day of travel, packet pickup, bike racking, and driving to the hotel. We found a sushi place to eat and we just had cooked sushi and appetizers. I was in bed by 8pm.




RACE DAY: We got up at 3am so that we could try to get a parking spot in the few available in the local neighborhoods which worked out well - that way Dave could use the car to charge his phone and rest between events. I took a quick shower to wake up and we quickly left the hotel that was 45 minutes away from the race site. We got a cup of coffee that I drank on the way to the race. I timed my breakfast for 2 1/2 hours before the start of my wave - had 1 cup rice with brown sugar and honey, with raspberries and almond milk at 5:30 am. I had a cliff gel at 7pm and sipped on 24oz of skratch. My wave went off at 8:05.

I stretched well but otherwise I was using the swim as my warm up.LOL

 Before the race, 83 year old Sister Madonna Buder spoke. Her message: “We are lucky to be able to do this today. Enjoy the day and the blessings we have.” Truer words could not have been spoken!

Buder continues to compete in half and full iron events and is the oldest person to ever finish an ironman; she embodies the spirit that anything is possible. Amazing.

THE SWIM:
I am just not a strong swimmer - for those that know me, they know this. I really, really try though. I started with the pack and slowly they all pulled ahead. I was comfortable in the wetsuit and felt very buoyant. I was breathing on every other stroke for the first 1/3 of the course and had some weird scissor kick (not sure where that came from). I settled in finally and was able to breathe every 4 strokes and was kicking more normally. The buoys were very far apart and I had trouble siting them easily. Most triathlons seem to have double the buoys.  By this time the next wave of 25-29 year old men tackled me. The water was clear, there was no chop, but there was a current at the back of the course that kept pushing me in the wrong direction. I kept correcting for this but I added more mileage than I needed to. In fact, being the over achiever that I am, I actually swam 1.41 miles according to my watch! This was a complete embarrassment of a swim. Three swim waves passed me when it was all said and done. My slowest swim in a triathlon yet.

What would I do differently: Consider duathlons in the future (not kidding) or figure out whatever key element I am missing that prevents me from swimming with any speed whatsoever.

Time 57:57 (2.44/100yards) UGH!




T1:
The string from the back of the wetsuit was stuck on the inside of my leg around my timing chip. I had to sit down to work that out. Otherwise, transition was smooth.
Because of all the rains 2 days before the race, the marshy transition area had turned into a muddy disaster. They laid large cloths over but with SO many people it just didn't help. The bike out was just 3-5 inches of mud to run through. My bike shoes were covered in mud completely.

What would I change: Reapply sunscreen. I had put a fair bit of water resistant sunscreen on before the race, but I should have reapplied here.

THE BIKE:
I really liked this bike course. I love riding by water and through parks so this course suited me well. I spent most of the ride looking at the wildlife. It was really flat so you were pedaling the entire time. I drank every 5 minutes for the first 2 hours and really 'worked' at my hydration. I stayed on nutrition and ate 1/2 of a honey stinger waffle at 20 and 40 miles. I felt great for the first 2 hours - I was in aero about 90% of this ride. The last hour of the ride my lower back and neck started to get really tight and bother me so I up was up and down a lot. By this time, the wind had started to pick up some - not bad but present. I stopped once at 22 miles to refill my aero bottle. I drank about 48 oz total, probably not enough. I wish I would have taken one of the waters that were available so that I could have rinsed my mouth of all the sugar. I hate that feeling and this was the beginning of my troubles.

Ave HR 142 - should have gone harder??
56.11 miles 3:10:32 Ave speed 17.7mph

What would I do differently:
Take a water bottle when I start to get that 'feeling' in my mouth.
More training rides in aero more so my neck and back get more accustomed to it.
 I really wasn't sure how hard to push the bike and still have energy for the run. I have heard so many people go too hard on the bike and leave nothing for the run.  I think I could have gone harder as my HR wasn't that high.





T2
The run in with the bike was worse than getting out. Really bad mud. Ankle deep by the time I got in - like a little tough mudder thrown in the middle of a half ironman.



THE RUN:
I will start by saying that this is my slowest HM time ever and I was so disappointed. In retrospect, I think I figured out where I went wrong. My first mistake is that I gave Dave my running bottle filled with skratch because it was so hot I couldn't handle the thought of drinking HOT anything by this point. The run started well and I was pacing at 9:50's, exactly what my coach had predicted. I stopped to use a port o potty after the first mile - I had to pee really bad. I still had that bad sugar taste in my mouth and I couldn't wait for the first aid station to get some cold water. I rinsed my mouth out and spit it out and felt much better. It was getting hot by this point (I think someone said it reached 86 degrees and it was muggy/humid by the marsh) with the direct sun and I had some mild cramping and a dull headache. I ran to the next aid station and drank a cup of water and put ice down my shirt. I chewed on ice in between aid stations. My pace started to slow at this point. I was supposed to eat a gel at 4 and 8 miles but couldn't get over the thought of putting more sugar in my mouth. In my head I kept hearing Coach Scott say 'Keep to your nutrition plan even if you don't want to' - and although I really, really wanted to, this is where my mind won out and things got bad. I decided I would start drinking gatorade (for calories and lytes), putting water over my head and ice down my shirt at each aid station. I was still running between aid stations, but even though my mind wanted my body to go faster, for some reason I couldn't when I tried - my body just wouldn't respond. I ran with my head down and just kept shuffling/passing all the people who were walking. 90% of people were walking at this point. I think that played into my mental status as well. I told myself I would only walk the aid stations and I did stick to that plan. I also told myself that at the turn around I would force a gel down and I wish I had stuck to that plan. I somehow convinced myself that drinking gatorade was keeping my calories up. The last half of the run was just a shuffle all the way back. I really couldn't understand at the time why my body couldn't get up to at least a 10m/m. My feet started squishing also about half way through - between the mud that got into my socks from the bike and the water I kept putting over my head that got to my feet, I could tell I was getting some blisters (which I never get) - and yes, both big toes have blisters!

In retrospect, I am sure I was terribly hypoglycemic during the run. By that point in the run, I had only taken in my rice concoction, a gel, and a waffle for solids the entire day. I was like a zombie by the end of the run and although I was functioning I knew I didn't feel right. I did not want any of the food that was available after the race so we just packed up and left. We were about 2 hours away when we stopped to get some food and I felt IMMEDIATELY (like within minutes) better after some hot chocolate and cheetos (of all things). I think I was craving sugar and salt! I couldn't believe how much better I felt and I was talking and thinking much more normally. I was really stupid during the run and should have just stuck to the plan. It is clear now that I needed more calories to keep running. I would have cut at least 20-30 min off that time.

Ave HR 145 - I tried to get that into at least the 150's and just couldn't.
11:41 min/mile - 2:33:15 - that is just hard to write.....

What I would do better: Follow my nutrition plan and take in more calories!!! Maybe add more calories to the bike in preparation for the run.



OVERALL:
I think this was a great race! I loved this distance and would like to go back and have a 'redo' so I can do it better with better decision making! I couldn't have asked for better weather conditions!! I have a pretty bad sunburn that I am nursing right now though - damn Coppertone didn't work the way it should have!

Total time 6:50:40
Age group rank 85/125
Gender rank 438/680
Total rank 1516/2100










One of the things I need to get over is the fact that I am not that good - not that I don't try hard, because I do. I am just not a person who will ever 'win' at a big race like Eagleman and I really know that is OK! Band Geek to Triathlete?? LOL It is just part of my personality to 'be the best' at what I do and in this sport, unless you pick your race correctly, I will not win. So really I just participate in triathlon, not really 'race', especially at events of this size! I worked hard! AND I HAD FUN! And I loved the journey to get here!

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Introducing Coach Hedgehog!

I consider myself very lucky that I am coached. A friend, that I met online, recently earned her USAT level I coaching certificate and took on several of us from her mentor group. She shall be known from hereon out as Coach Hedgehog for her love of hedgehogs.

 Recently, Coach Hedgehog made my day!!! I told her of my frustration with swimming in the cold and dark days of fall and winter and she said I can take a break!!! Yeah!! I tried in October and swam once - it really wasn't that bad, but I am excited to get rid of the guilt of not having to do it again until 2013. In fact, I already went to the gym and put my membership on hold! She is going to have me do some dry land exercises that will mimic some of the actions of actual swimming.

 The only downfall to her telling me that I don't have to swim, is that I really need to swim. It's a double edged sword. I am a terrible swimmer and I made very little progress despite the 62,625 yards that I swam in 2012. Maybe I made a little progress as I didn't freak at the triathlons I did this past season. Speed wise though, I am not a natural and I am not fast. Even with a private coach, I didn't see the progress I had hoped to. See, that is why I need to swim.

 I did present some evidence to support that not swimming in the off season is OK. I read this article from EN. http://www.endurancenation.us/blog/training/return-on-investment-series-part-ii-the-swim/

One of the great things about being coached is that she has a training plan for me everyday on Training Peaks. She tells me what to do and I just do it. Intervals, Tempo runs, sprints, long bikes or runs....it doesn't matter. I love not having to think about what I need to do. Thank you Coach Hedgehog!!!

 I have been heartrate training with her now for over a year. I am not sure it really is for me. I keep trying, but my heart rate never seems to ever lower at faster speeds. Let's just hope my heart stays strong at 160-170 bpm for 6 hours at Eagleman!

 Are you coached or do you train by heart rate? Do you swim in the winter/off season?

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Isn't it Ironic?

How ironic is it that the day I sign up for my first 1/2 ironman distance triathlon, I find out that my cancer is back. I went to Dr. Jerk today for a 3:00 appointment. Mind you, I called yesterday afternoon and this morning to confirm that all my test results were in and was told they were. I had Adventurist #3 with me because he also had a doctor's appointment.

I did not speak to the doctor until after 4:00. He tells me that the cytology and flow cytometry are both negative! Yeah! So far, so good. But the rest of the results are not there. Mad doctor leaves the room and has the receptionist on the phone trying to track them down. He goes in with another new thryoid cancer patient to set up her first surgery.

Now it is 5:00. Still no answers, just a lot of phone calls with a new lab worker who doesn't know how to work a computer. We find out the test is not run in the hospital, it is run in Iowa. They call Iowa. They have results but still haven't sent them out. They finally send them over but only one page transmits. 5:15 - after telling them my cell phone number for the doctor to call  me tomorrow.

Game changer. It is positive. He thinks. He can't reach the lab to discuss normal vs abnormal levels because they are in a meeting. But he thinks its positive. He says that there is not supposed to be ANY thyrogen in the lymph node. Ok, are you sure? Then he tells me that Dr. Genius of Thyroid Cancer is coming to speak at a conference next Tuesday night and he wants to discuss my case with him. REALLY? Why? Why am I so special that we need to consult him? He doesn't think I will need surgery....yet. But when? If? Do I? 

So I am left with two things. 1.He is talking to Dr. Genius next Tuesday night and I should hear from Dr. Jerk (who turned out not too bad today after I waited nearly 3 hours) on Wednesday. 2. He is having the cytologists re-read the initial cytology now that we know there is cancer in it. A little backwards, isn't it? I love human medicine.
Choices beyond next week - surgery with 2 major unsightly incisions or monitor every 3 to 6 months.

Let's see what the phone call next week brings.....Oy.

Ironman Eagleman 70.3

IT IS OFFICIAL!!! I am signed up for my first half iron distance....
The emotions I feel right now.....
EXCITED!!!
Crazy
Nervous
Crazy
Scared
Crazy
Can I do this??
Glowing
Quivering
Heart Throbbing
Overwhelmed
Crazy
Bonkers
Delirious
Unsure
Unglued
Afraid
Irresponsible
Nutty
Apprehensive
CRAZY!!!!!





Monday, October 8, 2012

The glass is half full!

This video is one of the best triathlon videos I have seen and one of the few about cancer survivors! I love the Danskin series because they always have a cancer survivor wave at their races - and I always participate. I really think I am going to do this triathlon next year - the Rev3 Half Full Triathlon, because you always have to see the glass as half full!
What a great video! Watch it and let me know what you think! Just copy and paste this link - I can not, for the life of me, get this linked in!
http://vimeo.com/50963563