February 18, 2010

DreamCrusher Century Extravaganza

training has been going good for me and it really is all just about getting out with friends and having fun. I have learned quite a few things from Gordo already and one that comes to mind is "never show your best in training". . . there are just some things you have to save it for race day.

With two big races just a few weeks away I have a nice training camp on the way with some comp days that I banked for working over the last weekend(s).
I should recover from this in just enough time to hit the dreamcrusher ride and push my ALT to a new level. Goodness.

That is really what this post is about anyways. Making our ride "unofficially... official". Would i really go out and crushing myself on a ride that has little importance to my racing in the name of nothingness and a good time with friends. Of course! I am very motivated by my friends and pushing it and mixing in some points is sure to get me to a new level. I am thinking about taping that quote to my handlebars for the day however... It is all just for fun between the dc crew ya know. I will likely need another camp and extravaganza of greater proportions sometime before St. George. Something wildly extravagant!


The ride is set for March 6th 9am start. Feel free to join us or add some more fun topics for points. There are two main route options and we will have an A and B group for speed/pacing. the 4 climb ride will allow for additional tac on extra credit for the peppy few who want to go a bit more.

100 mile ride – 4 long climbs
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&oe=UTF8&num=200&msa=0&msid=117702146361632047086.00047ffd921fa9d13ff33&z=11

90 Mile Ride – 3 long climbs
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&oe=UTF8&num=200&msa=0&msid=117702146361632047086.00047ffdf3816f3f63a26&ll=34.072,-118.77594&spn=0.354913,0.718918&z=11

  • 100 points if you finish the entire ride
  • 10 points for taking the KOM (multiple KOM's)
  • 5 points for most vitargo consumed (will be close between sean and slater)
  • 5 points for whoever brings the best post race beer (will be decided post ride, will close between james and ryan)
  • 5 points if you are riding a TT bike
  • 5 points if you run after
  • 5 points is you swim before
  • 5 points if you pull the biggest group for the majority of the day
  • 5 points if this ride is the longest ride you have completed in the last 12 months
  • 5 points for puking (needs to be 20oz or more and witnessed)
  • 2 points for every 10 miles you ride over the minimum distance (100miles)
  • 5 points if this is your longest ride ever
  • 5 points if you ride the next day
  • 2 points for helping someone w/ a mechanical (that they could not fix themselves)

Hope to see ya there!

February 16, 2010

my weekend in pictures

had a long weekend...not only enjoying the Monday holiday but full weekend of long work, family, training and food. Not always in that order or preference . . .

Friday, I got in a nice ride with Ryan at Aliso Woods. Greenery everywhere and the dirt was still wet and tacky. Ryan showed me some new trails I had never seen before and after almost two weeks off of the mountain bike I got to experience the most technical trail I have ridden in Aliso within the first 30min of the ride. Good start!

Ryan telling the climbs to "come see him!"

multitasking downhills and con-calls

Then it was off to work for the weekend... Friday night at 7:30pm until sometime Sunday at about 11pm. I was closing out a project that we had started almost 18 months ago with data center designing and nerd-o-metrics. Of course, I got to take a good break somewhere in the middle and a much needed nap but it was a good experience to have a solid plan that our teamwork knocked out like clockwork. We basically migrated a bunch of legacy infrastructure gear like the stuff below


into some pretty new scalable, virtual and a few other catchy word type redundant gear routing up to 15 terabits per seconds. I have noticed that after a solid "life" accomplishment I usually knock out a pretty good effort in sport...I guess the zeroing of stress and celebration of pulling something off that you have been working on for a while is like a tail wind when the plan works out...and you don't get fired.

I use to do installs like this all the time...long before I started racing. There are so many similarities between the two (developing a design/plan, teamwork, details, etc) and I think if I have any mental toughness it was developed during the years I was working around on stuff like this. You never know what God has you working on and it maybe overwhelming to see the big picture too soon. I would never imagine riding for 6 hours just three years ago and now it is just "a session" and usually just one of two or three for a big day of training. Funny how that works.


I was still a bit behind on sleep so I decided to hit Sunday with no plans for training. I just wanted to see how I would feel and enjoy the nice 80 degree temps and clear skies. Monique and I headed out on foot and I ended up getting in a 11.5 mile progressive run. Felt good! Then I hopped on the bike for a 140K ride with some hot laps in the canyon. I like to ride my bike.

I rode into the dark because of the late start but watching the sunset I had one of those moments. . . Happy. I rode home in the dark and then bagged a 3K swim, gym session and another 30min run. Good day.
Monday, we were up to head north and spend the day with Moniques parents. I love them...They just dont make American folks like they use to. I thought we were going to meet up with Paul Romero but I had my days mixed up! Still a little behind on sleep and brainpower. We packed our mtb and headed for some local trails. New trails found. We have only ridden here once before and made a left at the first trail. Big difference in the choice!

This time we turned right and right into a 4.5 mile non-stop climb of over 2,100ft. Hello! We rode until we were pooped (not very long) and then bagged a swim on the way home. Lots of good stuff to explore out there in the future. Solid ride and I am having to deal with my rest day when I am not riding with M anymore. She is getting too fast!


We also got into the Park City Point to Point Race (PCP2P) that is going to be held later in the year. There was about 9 of us who got in before it sold out and it looks to be the perfect vacation bash to end a killer year. 78 miles of 90% single track trails and 14K of climbing with friends. . . add in some T-runs and compression socks and then I will start snapping more pictures ;-)

February 12, 2010

runnin, riddin and lovin

Last weekend, I got to participate in my third half marathon race with Monique at the Surf City venue. 20K mix of people between the marathon, half and 5k. crazy.

When we first ran this back in 2006 it was the longest physical activity that Monique had ever completed. We ran side by side and finished in 2hr 20min and it was a struggle for her to just finish. After our ride yesterday it is hard to imagine Monique struggling to finish anything. She looks to get stronger the longer she goes too. I'm really stoked to be headed into our first Ironman journey together.

Last year at the Surf City half marathon we ran our own paces and I finished with a PR of 1:35:33 (7:19min/mi pace). Pretty stoked with the amount of running I had in my legs and the bike focus. I was pretty close to that time (1:39) a few weeks later running off the bike at the Oceanside 70.3 including getting a little lost in transition. Not going to make that mistake this year!

I had plenty of steady running going into the half this year. Finishing 30/30 and trying to be a more balanced TRIathlete helped. Running IS fun! While I have slowly been chipping down my slow and steady pace but I have not ran with my heart rate over 155bpm in a long time. My steady pace was dropping to about ~7:15min/mi and getting closer to 7min/mi pace. Improvement but I must admit I was a bit shocked when I saw my paces for the race. My coach Gordo suggested that I take the first 3 miles as a warmup and shoot for my best average pace over the next 10 miles.

Trying not to get caught up with "the race" and the people huffin and puffin around me in the first few miles was the hard part and I felt like I was holding back but I was running at about a 6:40min/mi pace...oops?.. Thought I went out too fast and it was faster than I was ever running but I just focused on my breathing and knew I could still turn it up if needed. Mile 5 is when I started rolling ~6:25 pace for the next 7 or so miles. Expectation exceeded and I was just stoked at any pace by then. Kind of weird how you can hold a pace even if you dont "practice" it.... Exciting! Finished in 1:25 (6:33min/mi pace) and got myself a new PR but more importantly proof that "its" working! Monique sqeeked in under 2hrs!

I need to work all weekend to close out a project that I have been working on since June of 2009. A new network upgrade that is going to start tonight at 8pm and probably finish sometime Saturday at noon. Around the clock. Brutal but good mental training and I love my job. Only bummer is I will probably be toasted on Sunday for VDay....

So...yesterday Monique and I headed out for our early VDay brick. The last couple of years we have done a pretty "adventurous somethings" for Valentines and we got an early start this year. We packed our snowshoes, crampons, h20-prof this and that and headed for the mountains!

The plan was to climb GMR with our gear to the base of Mount Baldy. The Glendora Mountain Road is one of my favorite rides and the conditions were ideal to make it an adventurous day. Once we completed the ride to Baldy ski resort we would lock up the bikes and snowshoe to the top for a tea party. We had a few routes in mind for the trek and then we could take the long or short ride back to the car. All of this "planning" took place yesterday morning and on the drive out there. We did some 6,000ft of climbing on the way to the Baldy village and it was quite the workout with all of our gear and the conditions.

As we got closer we also came upon more obstacles. Sometimes it was black ice. I learned my lesson about why it is not smart to think you can ride over it and practice your balance. We found a few downed trees and land slides too..

Then when we thought we could enjoy the last few miles of downhill to the village but we had snow, snow and more snow. I did not realize how much work it would be to ride through the snow but it was a unique experience and a ton o fun.

Unfortunately, I still had to get on some con-calls later in the day and we were running out of sunlight, food and time so we had to cut our adventure short. bummer. No snowshoe action after packing all that crap for 5plus hours and 6K of climbing! We did get to test our gear and pack list and now have a itch to get back on the route soon and bring some friends along.


until then...

February 04, 2010

home bound...

sitting in the airport in Oakland waiting to catch my flight and get back home. ramble, ramble...I have started a few posts recently but I have just been super busy with work and training and hitting those key dates.

I just finished up three days of tech training here in SF and 2010 strategy meetings for our quarterly company goals, etc for work. I had my review about a month ago and my expectations were just not to get fired and keep the flexibility that I have been given to train and be able to get creative with my time. Turns out just doing what is required scored me in the top 90% of the company and i even got a little award and a little something special from Tiffany & Co. Grateful I just didn't get fired ;-)

In November, I decided to make a switch and go long with my training and racing for next year. My 2010 challenges will take on some exploration in an area that I feel is a good fit for me. Keep my mind as interested as my body and I have always felt like I start to feel better after 3-3:30 hours into training or racing. Looking back, I have also done pretty good at longer races even if I was not specifically training for them so maybe this is where I can be competitive at...we shall see. I set out to get a much frequency in Nov-Dec and see how I responded to it... Double my swim volume, run more than I ever have in my life and bike the long rides that I love. My goal was to see if my body or mind would crack or if I wanted more. I love it! I want more! . . . and more importantly it is "working". I have gotten faster at all three sports but more specifically I am able to hold my steady pace for a much longer time... an appropriate theme for going long.

I have also kept in contact with Gordo since I attended the St. George camp back in November. I knew Gordo was a rockstar for long course racing, coaching and repository for endurance fitness but I was very pleasantly surprised at what a nice guy he was when we met in person. The time that he took to address and talk with every athlete and meet their needs was just a natural expression of how he operates. This was very refreshing to see and a big motivation for me.


I have been working with Gordo Byrn and the Endurance Corner team now and I am honored to be a part of the EC team and get some of what I consider the best coaching out there. No excuses now! Time to take my energy and use it at the right times with a structure. Something I have never had before in training but I am actually finding that I really enjoy it. Gordo makes that part easy. I have a tremendous amount of respect for Gordo and I cannot think of a better coach to have for me in my attempt to go long.

My running has been going well...No injuries from the ramp in volume for the 30 days of running and I am even mixing in some more intensity here and there. This weekend I am running the Surf City half marathon and I am excited to see how things shake out. I have no time goals and just looked up my time from last year 1:35:33 or a 7:18min/mi pace. Not bad considering the amount of running I had going into it and the ride the day before.

My only goals for this year are to have fun with it and beat my time from last year. Whatever time I get for the half this weekend I want to beat that time running off the bike at Oceanside in a few weeks so I will be running somewhere between last years time and a manageable pace that I will try to crush running off the bike. Hopefully I don't go out too fast!

January 18, 2010

2010 Challenges

Three or four years of racing and I think I am starting to figure things out a bit... What works for me, what i like about racing, training and what draws me to these challenges. Monique and I have had some amazing experiences over the last few years with trips and such but this year we are focused more on "challenges" than just getting out to race.


A "to do" list of some goals for the year that we are adding too for personal, financial, and fitness goals that we are both excited to get crackin' on. I believe this year will be very different than anything we have experienced in the past . . . you will see what i am getting at soon. However, if everything goes according to plan we will probably be a bit disappointed because we like surprises and we welcome change ;-)

As far at fitness and racing goals...here is a growing list of some key races that we want to get out to for 2010. We only planned some actual dates for the first 6 months and the rest are just some fitness challenges I want to try to fit in on the way.

  • 30 runs in 30 days
  • Expedition Adventure Race
  • Ironman St. George
  • 500 mile bike week
  • Vermont 50 mile Ultramarathon
  • The Vision Quest
  • Paddle till your Pooped Loop
  • Hiking on the JMT
  • Off-Road Ironman
  • Cactus to Clouds
  • Super Duper Multisport Loop
Looking forward to seeing YOU out there and wish you the best in 2010!

January 15, 2010

my 30 days of running

Why would you want to run 30 days in a row? I got that a lot over the last few weeks. I never considered myself a real runner. . . Over the last few years I have been able to build a pretty good endurance base that was spread over a few different sports but I have always lacked the running volume to perform where I felt like I could on two feet. This became painfully obvious at the end of triathlons when I was in survival mode just trying not to get run down. As I now know, my lack of discipline to control my intensity while training lead to never gaining the frequency to hold a steady base of miles in my legs. This opened me up to injury and fed my lack of focus for running. Never following a structured training plan only made it easy to make running the sport I left out . . . usually the case for ones limiters. It was time for me to change that.


A couple of months ago, I decided to try a different approach to running that my buddy Sean had been telling me about for over a year now. Frequency first! Even if it was 20min, I was trying to run more than 2 or 3 times a week and not increase my volume as much as I have tried to in the past. Oh, and I was not running ALL OUT every time I headed out of a run. It was not until sometime in October that I finally put together 10 (injury free) weeks in a row of about 20 miles a week before I added anything more. It was working.

Just at about the last week of that 10 week block I came across the 30 Runs in 30 Days Challenge on Gordo's website and then saw that “the game” was starting Jan 1st on Twitter. I had just finished up my biggest weekend of running all year in December and thought it would be a good time to keep it going for another 28 days! Why wait until next year? This looked like the perfect challenge for me to focus on frequency, build durability and learn to control my intensity. Just having the thought of running day after day put a damper on those accelerations that I had ingrained in my running habits.


The “game” was pretty simple. The goal was to try and run 30 times within a 30 day window with a minimum time of 30min of running to count as “a run”. You didn’t have to run everyday. If you ran a double (a.m. run and p.m. run) you could “bank a run” so you could skip a day. What I like about the game is that it rewards consistency over the “go big or go home” approach. You get credit after just 30min of running. Miles do not count. Speed does not count. Running over 30min does not get you any additional points unless you are running 30min twice a day. Then there is bonus point for every 5 days of running that increment as you go along encouraging frequency and consistency. Good lessons to learn from a “game”.

It was not like I was racing a country or something and people do run much more. Dean ran 50 marathons in 50 days. I remember Kevin Patrick on his way to running 100 days in a row. Ultramarathon runners could probably run the minimum miles on their easy weeks but for me it was just beyond what was reasonably possible. I had just wrapped up the two of the biggest training months of my life and after the longest weekend of running all year decided to keep it rolling for another 28 days playing the game. Just doing the minimum of 30 minutes of running seven times a week at about a 10min/mi pace would get me 21 miles a week.

Something that is as simple as a “game” but is just beyond my reach of fitness, experience and expectations for me in running. I love it. It scared me enough to focus on the task at hand and push me to pull out all the stops to make it happen. I have never taken things like keeping my HR down, focus on form, getting adequate sleep, food and recovery more seriously. Until this game I had never ran more than 4 days in a row and there was only two weeks in 2009 where I ran five times in a week. Needless to say I was worried about injury and my pride of not finishing the 30 days (this is where my rules come in below) but this is exactly what I liked most about it. It kept me praying, eating and recovering harder than ever so that I could back it up day after day. That is the something that extends beyond just a game, running or training itself. Love it!

I spent plenty of time in the cold pool after running

I had some simple goals for the challenge and some rules to follow to keep my goals on track, injury free and having fun with it.

Don’t get injured – Goal #1 and Rule #1 - Many things wrapped around this like pace/stretching.
Run everyday – even if I could bank double runs I wanted the mind frame of running day after day
Progress my long run – I didn’t want to survive on just 30min runs each day
Keep the balance with swimming/biking
Finish strong / negative split

I set my watch to just display my current heart rate and overall time. I also had it set to “auto-lap” every mile to start recording pace throughout the 30 days. I didn’t always have my heart rate strap on to collect my HR stats…Sometimes it was not working and sometimes I didn’t want the tan lines from the winter sun in SoCal ;-) Yes, it is pretty good down here. I set my “alert” on my watch to beep whenever my heart rate got to 155bpm or higher to warn me to slow it down.



Although it is not completely accurate (my max HR is about 191bpm and I doubt I ever got over 165bpm) it gives a good outline for where my watch was beeping at me and how I would tend to run right up against the upper limit. If I really wanted to watch my intensity I would set my watch to start beeping at 150bpm or due to the drifting as you can see there is always the desire to run it up right to the end.

How did it go? Well, the good news is that I reached all of my goals. Running and my habits just started to roll by day after day. It was one great sunset after another and I noticed a shift at about day 10. The easy runs were . . . easy. I started absorbing the running rather than just trying to survive it so I started to increase my long runs and had a few days when my intensity was a bit higher but nothing “hard”. By day 20 I was running near my race pace but at a steady effort. I am learning that life training at steady is a good place to be.


I could go into more details than you would ever care to hear about my running details but my “steady” pace basically progressed by dropping a little over 1min/mi in pace. In addition, that pace I could now hold for about twice as long and feels really comfy holding it. It was working!

I am now about a week after and am running injury free and happy. I didn’t miss a day of running during the 30 days and even added some double runs and progressed my long run to finish with a negative split. I was stoked to run most of the days with friends and my super encouraging wife Monique. A team effort!

...and Monique herself ended up banking more running miles than ever before just getting out with me for some time on two feet between our dinners and breakfast feasts. Good stuff!



This post could have been titled how to destroy yourself in 30 days… Not only did I start this at the end of the biggest two month build of my training ever but in trying to focus on swimming I ended up just about doubling my swim volume during December. I met my goal of “keeping the balance” between the other sports. My bike volume dropped considerably from the month before (55hrs in November) which is one of the reasons why I think I got away injury free. Dropping my intensity was also a huge help and relieved just how inappropriate my intensity was before.

In the 30 days ending 2010-01-10:


activity # timemileskm+ft




Trail Running23 20:45:42 150.02(8:18) 241.43(5:09) 18154




Road Bike11 20:33:05 345.77(3:33) 556.46(2:12) 13480




Swim19 20:15:00 35.82(33:55) 57.64(21:04)





Mt Bike7 12:25:06 109.69(6:47) 176.53(4:13) 17827




Road Running8 5:12:48 35.96(8:41) 57.87(5:24) 2407




Yoga8 3:30:00









Strength4 3:00:00









Paddle2 2:13:00 11.93(11:08) 19.2(6:55)





Trekking1 1:00:00 3.83(15:39) 6.16(9:44) 1432




Total
88:54:41 693.02
1115.3
53300




I had one more super secret goal for this challenge. IF I was running niggle free, absorbing the running and not just surviving it and IF I was getting stronger and building my long run I would try for my super secret goal on my last day of running. Day 30 I would try to run longer than I had all year (only 13miles). It turned out that I was not planning on running that long on the last day but I was stoked to get lost in Aliso Woods and run in just under 16 miles on day 30. I’ll take it!

Below is a look at my miles for the year and the 30 day wrap up. I banked more miles during “the game” than all of the summer months combined. Killer!
...and some more nerd graphs from WKO+. This one basically shows my “training stress” for the 30 days of running. This does not include other sports but just the TSS (Training Stress Score -red) from each run and my CRL (Chronic Training Load -blue) as the 30 days progressed. The larger spikes at the end are the days when I ran “doubles” and my long run. Time for some rest!


Is running 30 days in a row the best way to train for you run fitness? I don't think so... I know there is a lot of benefit to a rest day and I look forward to that more than ever now. They say that it takes 30 times of doing "something" to build a habit and that is what I was after. While I struggled to run more than 4x a week all year I ended my last two weeks running 8x a week. I developed some habit(s) during the 30 days that I hope I can keep for a lifetime. THAT is the good stuff! You don't need to be an ultra this or that to challenge yourself into a new habit or two and like Gordo says with the 30 runs 30 days, people always end up doing more that they set out to do. The hardest part is getting started!

Success isn't how far you go, but the distance you traveled from where you started.” -Anonymous

January 06, 2010

bringing in the new year

Our new years was a good time as always... Got to hang with some friends and keep the running going at altitude. I cannot believe how fast 2009 went by and all the crap that Monique and I did. No wonder we are broke!

For 2010 we are looking at some good "challenges" that will take us to our next level. Sometimes it maybe a race, a trip or maybe even a family. Time will tell. We are excited for the journey and that we get to spend it with such good company.

Paul, Monique and . . . that guy

Snowshoe hike above Big Bear lake under a full (blue) moon

P and Super K heating it up as normal

Monique and Jessi taking it all in

Hope to see ya out there in the new year!