Lead foot

July 29, 2008

I was asked this morning if I was ready for the next 100 as Leadville it is just over two weeks away. It is ten days since VT and while I can still notice some tiredness in my legs, all the aches and blistering seems to have healed. Over the weekend, I did nothing more than between 60 to 90 minutes a day but did also fit in a short bike ride. Yesterday it was back out on the roads for a short loop near home, while this morning we took an early morning bimble in the woods before work. Tomorrow I plan a longer road run.

By coincidence, I started to gather all my notes on the Leadville race yesterday so Guthrie and I can plan a strategy for her support during the event. It seems that she’ll be able to access more aid stations than I originally expected but there are a couple of 16 mile sections between access points, so we may still need to deploy drop bags. Being a mountainous area, the weather conditions could be a mixture of everything and the temperature range could dictate the need for warm thermal layers as well lighter apparel. The course is an out and back route with the highest climb occurring just before the turnaround. Near the climb it seems there are also several river crossing to negotiate and all the accounts I’ve read indicate that if you can make the aid station after passing the high point for the second time within the cutoffs, you should (barring injury) make it to the finish. It might be a little presumptuous to take that for granted though!


Running on empty

July 25, 2008

Someone asked this week whether planning to run a marathon and then a 50k trail race two weeks later was overdoing it. Who am I to talk? I guess the answer is, it’s certainly possible but why has there been such an increase in interest to run long distance endurance events so close together? Maybe it is sight of others doing similar activities that generates the motivation to ’see if I can do that’; I know that a curiosity to see what it would feel like was what sparked off my interest.

Over the past couple of years I’ve run a couple of consecutive race series. In 2006 a few of us traveled to Virginia ran a 50k on Saturday then after a 7 hour car ride completed a 10k trail race the following day. Later that year I ran the VT100, Dam Wakely 50k and the Escarpment Trail Race on consecutive weekends; while last fall I ran the Stone Cat 50 miler a week after the New York Marathon. Besides the obvious fatigue, recovery between each race wasn’t as difficult as I thought. I recall being feeling very stiff part way through the Wakely and the following year being able to run the course much quicker!

By Tuesday this week the stiffness in my quads has all but disappeared sufficiently to comfortably cycle. On Wednesday we ran and while my muscles were obviously tired, I ran smoothly, but that has been the sum of my training before picking up over the weekend. I’ve enjoyed the rest, sleep as much as possible and eaten like a horse. We’ll see how much energy is really in the tank tomorrow.


Antidote for sore feet

July 22, 2008

The soles of my feet were throbbing after the VT so much that on Sunday night I went to bed with ice packs wrapped in a towel to rest them on. The cool surface was bliss!

If the prospect of beating your feet up running isn’t your thing, you could always take up drumming in a rock band according to a study at Chichester University in the UK rock drummers can be as fit if not fitter than some top athletes. The point of the research? It is hoped that the results could help develop outreach programmes for overweight children who are not interested in sport.

On Sunday the prospect of an elevation measuring just a few inches brought on a mild panic attack and watching me struggle up stairs was endless entertainment for Guthrie (payback you might say after a similar experience she endured a few years ago), but this morning the quads feel amazingly good. Still a little stiff but definitely more mobile. My feet on the other hand are going to need a few more days.

I wish now I’d kept that drum kit I was given for Christmas years ago!


Blazing saddles

July 21, 2008

At last the months of waiting are over and I can write off one of the slam races! That might seem to be easily said, but it was much harder to achieve I can tell you. For now though I can breath a sigh of relief and rest. Do I need to be relived? Of course, there are certainly no guarantees in ultra running and despite all the preparations I always feel a little bit of hesitancy at the prospect of not being able to finish. In the normal course of events, to drop would just be one of those things, but this weekend my motivation to run the remaining three races depended on a successful conclusion to the Vermont 100.

We traveled up with a group of friends, some were running while others came to crewed. Of four runners, two were running a 100 for the first time. The plan was to arrive early, pitch our tents and relax and in that respect everything went to plan. The VT100 is centered in agricultural land a few miles from the nearest town, it is combined with a 100 mile horse race so the ‘race village’ buzzes with activity as competitors gather. This is my 4th 100 and 2nd VT, the atmosphere here compared to the other 100’s I’d rate as one of the best. Pre race, riders and runners gather to chat about their respective disciplines. During the race, the support from riders and their followers is a great motivator while we’re told riders appreciate the runners out on the course as our presence can provided encourage to tired mounts. Around 11 pm on Saturday I did just that to a rider from Florida.

In 2006 the conditions were described as one of the hottest in the races 20 year history, at this year’s pre race briefing we were warned to expect something similar. At the start a brief rain shower damped the dust and through the remain darkness and early morning it was humid and sticky. By mid morning the sun started to bake things up, good hydration became even more important than normal and combined with the constant downhills, my quads felt like they wanted to explode. Up to this point, I’d made good time, I was trying to control my pace while not wishing to be too slow, everything felt easy and comfortable. But that changed surprisingly fast and about half way through my quads stiffened to a degree that descents really hurt. As I tried to hold back to protect sore muscles, the soles of my feet began to blister. By mile 70 I was limited to a power walk and after that ran very little.

If I’m honest I contemplated not finishing but it was never a serious thought and the idea of ending my slam quest at the first race wasn’t something I desired. As I entered the aid station Camp 10 Bear for the second time a volunteer offered me a pacer, it seemed his son was keen to experience an ultra and was keen to join in. I declined and felt a little guilty at doing so. Using a pacer is to some a key element to finishing one of these events, my personal belief though is that depending on yourself to keep going is as much part of the race as the distance to be covered. Last year I read an article that compared ultra running in Europe and the USA. American running European races expressed frustration that some competitors appeared to take ’short cuts’ because they were navigating by line of sight. The Europeans on the other hand thought the use of pacers and the number of aid stations provided in American ultra races detracted from self sufficiency which they saw as a key element of the competition. Like many of these types of debate, neither is right or wrong. As pacers joined up with their runners there did seemed to be a renewed impetuous to their pace and as I made ground as best I could several bounded passed.

When the finish finally came into view, I was naturally ready to stop, my feet were throbbing and my legs ached. I was a little disappointed that I hadn’t been able to run more in the latter stages, the last person to overtake me was in my age group and crossed the line less than a minute ahead. But I was finished. I had set three goals for myself; to finish within the 30 hour limit (OK option), to finish inside 24 hours (acceptable option) or better still to finish inside 20 hours (best option). I’m OK with 21:15:18. When I think that my average pace was 12:45, the early part of the race was perhaps too fast but it also shows I was bale to maintain a good power walk for a significant distance despite discomfort. One of my friends didn’t finish after receiving medical advice for severely blistered feet, that could have so easily been me. No, with a little more time to reflect, you just have to look to the next one and for me that is now less than 4 weeks away!

As a footnote, the loudest cheer at Sunday’s award ceremony was for Karsten Solheim from Glendale, AZ; he squeezed under the 30 hour cutoff in 29:59:49. He was joined in the last few miles by another runner who had stopped hours earlier but on hearing about Karsten’s plight offered to pace him to the finish. Like me Karsten has signed up to run the Slam this year. But unlike me, Karsten is 71 years of age - now that is impressive, I wish him well!


From the inside out

July 17, 2008

The bags are almost packed, besides a few food provisions I think we have everything we’ll need for a weekend camp and the gentle run on Saturday. You’d think running is a simple sport until you see how much stuff that will be packed into the trunk! Being a road trip though does allow for more leeway in what you can take, besides as both crew and runner will be out for many hours, you might as well try and be as comfortable as possible. This is after all supposed to be fun! :-)

I hope it isn’t a sign of complacency but while I am looking forward to VT, I keep thinking about Leadville. Getting up into the mountains above the tree line always gives me a buzz and the more I read about the course, the more excited I get at the prospect of doing the race. Yesterday a friend directed me to a series of articles written 1996 by Dana Roueche that describe the route and detail the writer’s personal strategy for successful completion of the race (the average drop rate is nearly 50%). Like many personal accounts, the reality when you see for yourself might be very different, but it is still an interesting read.

In one section Dana talks about calorie intake;

You will burn a good 12,000 calories in order to finish Leadville. Your body can provide around 1,800 from Glycogen and possibly another 2,200 without much trouble from fat. That means you need to consume 8,000 calories from outside. If you don’t, the body needs to continue burning fat but you won’t feel like moving at a rate that’s worth much. In addition, your body will also be using muscle for protein requirements. If you use an energy drink, you can get another 3,000 calories if it isn’t overly diluted. The remaining 5,000 calories must come from food. That’s 500 calories per aid station. That is a lot, I strongly suggest you have a plan to eat that much.

Twelve thousand calories seems a lot, but I’ve read many other accounts of endurance exploits that have referred to the metabolizing of muscle and it is strange to think on your body consuming itself from the inside out!

Judging by the weekend weather forecast, the conditions at Vermont will be humid with the threat of thunder storms - and there is nothing like the crack of thunder close by to motivate tired legs! So besides fuel, hydration and cooling will be key. The last time I did this race, we rolled ice cubes into a bandanna which was then worn around the neck. With the simultaneous horse race that takes place, local residents also place lots of water tubs a long the route and provided you can get to them before the horses, they are great to dunk your head into. However, if you’re not first in line the equine snot floating on the surface is a little off putting and if your not careful can cause all that food you struggled to consume to reappear from the inside out!


Can run, will travel

July 15, 2008

Received official confirmation of acceptance into the Arkansas Traveller yesterday. Since the announcement was made to add this race to the Slam series I discovered that 70% of the course is on dirt roads. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a trail running snob who belittles roads, but 70 miles on a very runnable surface won’t be easy. OK, so any 100 mile event isn’t exactly easy! I just find the more mountainous courses more absorbing mentally because of the constantly changing terrain. But hey, it is what it is, I’ll take what comes!


Something different

July 14, 2008

The first Slam race draws closer, it doesn’t have quite the same edge since the cancellation of WSER because of the long wait getting to this point. My training over the last 3 weeks has also felt less focused, in some ways I’ve been training with an intensity almost as if the WSER took place. Maybe I’ve been complacent or it is simply my body is trying to tell me something, but my right knee has been sore for the last few days. On Sunday it bothered me sufficiently not to run but exercise through other means.

Since it began I’ve been watching the Tour de France and marvelling at the stamina and endurance of the riders. I haven’t owned a cycle for many years but the race has motivated me to want to rider again. On Saturday I splashed out on a new road bike. I’d had been thinking that between Slam races cycling might be a nice alternative from running. After completing the purchase, I collected the bike and rode it home. Yesterday we cycled up to a lake 3 or 4 miles from our house, swam across it and back and then took a longer more leisurely route home.

I think, I’m hooked, the feeling of freedom and speed was great! Unfortunately, I did discover two small bones in my butt that had been dormant for a few years and each time I got back on the saddle after a break they protested loudly. But, I can’t wait to get out again and you never know, it has already got me thinking about doing a tri for something really different!