Interlude

So I’ve run maybe… 15-16 miles in the past two weeks. I can’t even call those weeks training weeks. Not the best.

The last full week of January, I was still recovering from my cold. I ran both weekend days, and was ready to ease back into running while on a work trip. I stayed at the same hotel I did last time I went to Edmonton, thinking I would be able to use the workout room. It was under renovation this time. I hadn’t packed for outdoor running and I didn’t know the city well enough to run outside anyway. So that was a major downer. I did manage to walk a lot. I commuted to and from work on foot, walked to get lunch, and walked to after-work events (I went to an Oilers-Wild game on Tuesday even!). I walked in the airports to keep from going stir crazy during layovers. I did my best to eat somewhat healthy; we’ll see if I’ve gained a lot of weight since I’ve been sick and sedentary. My cold is almost entirely gone – I’ve just got a bit of a lingering cough, but my energy is back and my head isn’t stuffy anymore. I was concerned I’d catch something new and exotic on the flight, but unless I acquired an illness with a very long incubation period, I’m good to go.

Friday I got home at about 3 PM (Central), which gave me time to run, but I’d been traveling since 4:30 AM (Mountain), so I was wiped out. Saturday, I let myself sleep as late as I felt like, and then decided not to run. And yesterday, I almost didn’t run. I waffled about it for a couple hours before I finally got dressed and got out of the house. I really, really, really cannot wait for the days when I can just throw on shorts and a tank top and head out. I wanted to quit less than a mile in, but managed to hang on and run about 5.7 miles, putting my grand total for the week at 5.7 miles. Woo.

Real training restarts today. 12 weeks until Chippewa Moraine. Hit it.

Zumbro 50 Training: Week 5

Zero miles.

Already looking for a backup race. I kind of needed a backup race anyway, due to a possible trip to the NCAA Frozen Four the same weekend.

I am hoping to get back to running on Wednesday. My energy has mostly returned today, but I’ve still got crap to clear from my lungs. Tuesday is my scheduled rest day for the next few months, due to my Fundamentals of Engineering exam prep course, so Wednesday is my target date to run again. Just in time for the temperatures to start going down, but not terribly so!

The Bright Side

I’m still suffering through an unpleasant cold, which started in my chest and migrated to my head (the opposite of what usually happens, so that’s a fun twist!), and I need to change my outlook. While I’m unable at present to look on the bright side of what’s happening in this country, I can at least try to put this break in running in perspective.

I’m not one of those runners who is always champing at the bit to run, who eschews rest days, who sees “off-season” as a slur. If it was still frigid, I wouldn’t mind as much, probably. Maybe. But it has been unseasonably warm, and while the long term implications of that are downright terrifying, I am acting like a petulant, spoiled brat. I suffered through those frigid days; I deserve to be running now that it’s warmer. I have to accept reality, because clutching tightly to this frustration is not helping me. Especially since one of the benefits of being unexpectedly sidelined is:

  1. I am taking a mental break from running.
    I didn’t have to put on stinky clothes one day this week (sorry, I can’t afford to buy a ton of winter gear, and it is not good for my clothes or for the environment to wash them after every use. I will stink and that’s it). I didn’t have to ponder how slow I am this week. I didn’t have to step aside into knee-deep snow for a biker; or run over someone’s unshoveled, icy sidewalk; or run down a completely deserted road only to encounter the only car I’ve seen for 15 minutes just as I reach an intersection, leading to an awkward encounter where they try to wave me through even though they got there first, or where I got there first and they don’t even see me and then I swear at them. Running will be fresh and new and delightful when I start up.
  2. I am taking a physical break from running.
    The twinges in my knees, back, hips, and feet are going away. My skin isn’t exposed to stinging cold. This is a very good thing.
  3. I have time to run errands or do other things.
    I went to Target. I got my hair cut. I sat on the couch and did nothing. I don’t have to do an extra load of laundry.
  4. I would really feel worse if it was colder and I was sick.
    Going out in the frigid temps with the baritone cough I’ve been blessed with would be torture. I know I said it would be easier to not run, but everything else would be worse.
  5. I could be, and have been, sicker.
    I’m not breaking out into a sweat just standing. I’m not out of breath walking from my bedroom to the bathroom. I have been able to work at least part of every day this week, and I am extremely fortunate to have a fair sick leave policy. I am doing the right thing by resting, rather than trying to run through this illness or come back to running too soon. When I tried to do that, I was so out of commission I had to leave what was supposed to be a week-long training in the first hour.

I found 5 reasons to be positive! That’s pretty darn good, I think.

Zumbro 50 Training: Week 4

Monday: 8 mi, road (Minnesota Point)
Tuesday: 6 mi, road (UMD campus)
Wednesday: 6.1 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Thursday: 5.1 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Friday: rest
Saturday: 7.2 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Sunday: 8 mi, trail (Hartley)
Total: 40.5 mi

Well, another week below the 50 mile mark. This was an unintentional cutback week, but things happen.

I suffered through several bitterly cold days before a milder weekend. I am pretty proud of myself for getting my butt out there and running when it was super cold. Tuesday it snowed about 3 inches, and I still went out and ran on UMD’s campus (the only place I was certain was plowed) in a biting wind. Wednesday I ended up covered in ice pellets and had to scrape my car off. Thursday I just gritted my teeth and ran what I could stand to run, so that I wouldn’t have to run before Friday’s hockey game.

Saturday and Sunday, I got late starts. I really need to stop doing that. I had hockey games on Saturday and a movie (Hidden Figures) to see on Sunday, so I had hard deadlines to finish running. I wasn’t on time to Saturday’s hockey game, though. Sunday I had no problem getting to the movie on time, because my planned 18 mile run turned into an 8 mile run. My heart was not in the run, almost from the beginning. Running at Hartley has become somewhat frustrating as the trails are much shorter than they used to be (most likely due to the storms this summer) and I was trying to piece together a loop. After an off-leash dog (actually, a dog wearing a leash allowed to run free) jumped on me without an apology from its owner, and a group of probably 12 bikers stopped on the trail while they each very slowly went over one of the wooden footbridges, forcing me to pass them all on the side of the trail in shin-deep snow, I was done. I forced myself to make it to 8 miles (which would give me 40 miles for the week), and even that was rough.

It turned out to be best to cap the run at 8 miles, as I’m down for the count with a cold. (Yes, just as the temps warmed up, I’ve come down with a chest cold.) But this is not a good sign – 4 weeks in, I still haven’t run 50 miles in a week, but yet I still want to run 50 miles in a day. Yikes.

Zumbro 50 Training: Week 3

Monday: 7.7 mi, trail (Hartley)
Tuesday: 6.3 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Wednesday: rest
Thursday: 6.8 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Friday: 5.6 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Saturday: 5.3 mi, trail (Hartley)
Sunday: 15.2 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Total: 47 mi

Once again, I missed the 50 mile mark. However, almost every run this week was done in very cold temperatures. The only nice days were Monday and Sunday, and Sunday it was still only like 10-11 F, so my standards are very low right now.

I ran on trails for the first time since Wild Duluth! It was very pleasant. Monday was my first time back at Hartley since the huge windstorm last summer that wreaked havoc on the park. There are some noticeable bare spots (although they were also in the midst of a project to thin out the trees, so I’m not certain what was due to that project and what was due to the storm), and there are a lot of downed trees still visible off the trails. I might be imagining this, but I think some of the trails have been re-routed a bit. There seems to be about a mile (maybe more) chopped off of the Root Canal – Guardrail loops, when I compare last year’s running log to this year’s. It stinks if that means there’s still significant trail damage to deal with. It stinks on a more selfish note because that means it’s harder to get a longer run out of the Hartley trails, especially since some of the trail system is converted to nordic ski trails for the winter.

The good thing is that I’m much faster on these trails than I used to be. I never looked down and saw a 20 minute pace (unless climbing a hill). Hooray! I made a good choice to focus on speed for awhile. Well, I didn’t really focus on speed, rather I focused on running terrain that doesn’t naturally slow me down.

Most of the week, I ran in frigid temps, sometimes below 0 F. Yes, I am a total bada$$. I’m not even going to pretend to be humble. I bought new gloves (they were very expensive but TOTALLY WORTH IT, my hands are never cold anymore), a pair of long underwear bottoms, and a balaclava on my rest day. I was able to survive running on Thursday and Friday in the bitter cold, although my butt and thighs were still frozen. I can’t seem to figure out how to fix that. Even wearing shorts over my three layers of pants isn’t working. I might have to try wearing some pants that aren’t tights. The balaclava is ok. Even with the breathing holes over the nose/mouth, my glasses still fog up. I have to pull the nose/mouth covering down, which defeats the purpose of the balaclava. A few times I ended up having to take my glasses off and carry them, because I needed to warm my face. Surprisingly that did not end up with my glasses getting crushed under my foot after I dropped them.

Sunday’s long run went ok. I would like to run a long run NOT on the Lakewalk, but with the condition of most sidewalks and roads, that isn’t going to happen anytime soon. If it is warm enough I could do a trail long run, but when it’s cold, I need to finish the run as quickly as possible. It actually felt decent out for most of the run, and I never truly felt COLD. However, my water bottle did freeze up and become useless after about 2 hours. I dropped it at my car after 11 miles (and swigged a few glorious gulps of vanilla Coke) and finished up the final 4 miles without anything in my hands. It started snowing at that point, stinging little pellets that have left me with a red nose this morning.

I’m vacillating between confidence and pessimism regarding my ability to cover 50 miles on foot. I’ve got 13 weeks to go, but so much can happen between now and race day – illness, injury, mental fatigue, major life events, college hockey national championships (ok that’s a major life event). No matter what, as long as I keep working and training like I am going to run this race, I will benefit, even if I am in Chicago instead of the Zumbro River Bottoms on April 8th.

Room to Grow

2016 was a marvelous year for me as a runner. I ran farther and more frequently than I ever have in my life. I ran faster than I have run in over a decade. I became a marathoner and an ultramarathoner.

While 2016 was marvelous, 2017 has the potential to be even better. I don’t like to set running goals for the entire year, because I know they can change based on my own personal whims. Maybe I won’t feel like running a certain race or focusing on a certain distance. I thought at the beginning of last year I would PR at the Park Point 5 Miler, and I ended up choosing not to run the race, instead focusing on a marathon I ended up not running. Although I don’t want to set goals for the year, I do have some general principles I’d like to follow.

In 2016, I ran 228 times for 1537 miles, or thereabouts. My GPS watch isn’t always very accurate. My average pace over all of that was 16:38, which is better than I expected. It’s partially better than I expected because originally when I was working on my spreadsheet, I had entered a time wrong. Instead of 0:59:31, it said 59:31:00. So originally my average pace for the year was 18:54. Good thing I double-checked.

Since I ran 228 times, that means I didn’t run 136 times. That equates to about 2.6 days off per week, but that’s not really how it worked out. I had several long stretches without running, largely due to illness or due to mental fatigue/laziness.

I raced 9 times, did not start twice, and had no DNFs. I am actually surprised at how few races I did – even if I had run all of them, that’s still only 11 races. I lowered my 5K time three times this year, culminating with a 29:21 PR at the Jingle Bell 5K, finally completing one of my major goals (a sub-30 5K). Both DNSs were due to lack of sleep.

I spent a lot of money on running last year. I don’t really know how much, but it was a lot for a hobby that seems so minimalist. My treadmill broke. I went through I think 5 pairs of shoes. I ate a lot of gels. I found an electrolyte tab I like.

When I think about what I’d like to achieve in 2017, I have some fairly simple ideas. I’d like to run more miles. 2000 seems like a nice round number. If I don’t run 2000 miles in 2017, I won’t be sad. If I run fewer miles than in 2016, I’ll most likely be disappointed (who knows, maybe something fabulous will arise that will take my attention away from running?).

I’d like to have fewer rest days. Not by a lot, though. 37% of my days in 2016 were rest days, I’d like to bring that down to about 30%. I’d like to minimize unplanned extended breaks (defined as 7+ days) from running. I want to be able to add in planned extended breaks (like after a goal race). I’d like to say I’d have no unplanned extended breaks, but work travel sometimes pops up, and I don’t always have the time or energy to exercise while traveling. And of course I get sick sometimes.

On that note, I’d like to avoid getting sick. My extended breaks from running due to illness are all due to respiratory illnesses. I don’t really know how to fix that beyond getting adequate sleep, eating well, and washing my hands a lot. I already wash my hands, but the other two I can work on. I started using a generic immune-boosting effervescent tab after long runs or on days I feel more run down. I’m trying to eat better. We’ll see. Most of my one-off days due to illness are from stomach issues (which are generally minor/overblown by me). Eating better will help with that, although generally I end up missing a planned rest day rather than adding an additional rest day when those problems arise.

I’d like to run faster. Responsibly and sustainably. That’s probably going to happen naturally, since I won’t be hindered by such strict heart rate zones. I still plan to run easy most of the time.

I’d also like to be smart about how I spend my money. I’m going to try tracking my running-related expenses this year. I like making spreadsheets so this should be no problem. The only things I won’t track are gas (too much of a pain to figure out mileage) and food that isn’t running-specific (i.e. I will track gels but not bananas, electrolyte tabs but not delicious nectar of the gods vanilla Cokes). The actual transaction also has to occur in this year, so the jacket and running tights I ordered with my holiday gift cards don’t count, even though I don’t have them yet, because they were ordered in 2016. And they need to hurry the f up and get here, because it is gonna be cold.

As for specific goals, I like to stick to setting them by season. Naturally I have races picked out for the whole year, but I did that last year too, and then I changed things up quite a bit. I’ll set my spring (well, spring and late winter) goals in February or March. My goal right now is just surviving January.

Zumbro 50 Training: Week 2

Monday: 5.4 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Tuesday: rest
Wednesday: 8.1 mi, road/trail (Lakewalk and Park Point)
Thursday: 4 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Friday: 9.2 mi, road (UMD campus)
Saturday: 7.2 mi, road (Park Point)
Sunday: 13.7 mi, paved trail (Lakewalk)
Total: 47.6 mi

Monday’s run was tough, because of the ice storm on Christmas. It was really slippery, so I just took it slow and hoped for the best. Monday night I ate some frozen pizza that gave me horrible indigestion so I was down for the count on Tuesday, which was annoying since I had the day off, my final day off before I returned to work… for 2.5 days. So glad I hoarded my meager vacation days so that I could have a nice long time stretch of time off at the end of the year to just chill out.

Running on Wednesday was just as frustrating as it was on Monday, possibly worse, since people still had not cleared their sidewalks or salted them. The sides of the streets aren’t plowed very well either, so I had basically nowhere to run that wasn’t slippery, slushy, or covered in ankle-deep crusty snow. Only like 3.5 more months of this!

Friday our office closed early, so I thought hey, I’ll get out and run while it’s still light out! This didn’t happen. I farted around at home for awhile and then had to go out while it was snowing. I ran to campus and then did some loops through the streets on the campus, because the sidewalks are pretty well-maintained compared to the rest of the city.

Saturday I zipped through a run on Park Point as best I could (still a lot of shoveling issues) so I could get home in time to watch the USA-Canada World Junior Championship game (spoiler alert: I did not get home in time to see the whole game). Sunday I was similarly pressed for time. I planned on running 17 miles to kick off 2017, but I chose to sleep in (I was really tired and if I’m tired in week 2 of training, I’ve got to re-evaluate) and had to get my butt in gear to even run the 13.7 (the entire length of the Lakewalk, both ways) with enough time before I went to see Rogue One with my family. (Still a good movie, not as good of an experience as last time, since there were a bunch of kids in the theater and they wouldn’t stop asking their parents questions about the movie. It’s PG-13 for a reason, people.)

I’m still undecided about signing up for the race, but I am in the lottery now for the Superior Spring 25K and the Moose Mountain Marathon! I really hope I get into both, I am looking to have a nice PR in the 25K, provided it is not 80 F again. And heck, even if it is 80. I’ve almost forgotten what warm weather feels like.