Saturday, September 26, 2009

Pre-Gold Coast 100 cram

Back to the usual Saturday morning ride, trying to cram some miles in before the Gold Coast ride on October 11.

Usual format - leave at some absurd early morning hour, ride to Toowong to meet a mate, ride a loop around the uni and Chelmer, back to meet the main grop at Indooroopilly/St Lucia, do the group ride (lap of Chelmer, Tennyson, Yeerongpilly, Yeronga, up the Corso to Dutton Park and then up Highgate Hill and then down to Hill End, up to Montague Road and finishing up at the cafe strip at Southbank. Rode home through Highgate Hill, Dutton Park and Fairfield before cutting west through Tennyson to hit Oxley Road and make my way down to Oxley and across to home.

Covered around 88km for the morning at around 28km/h average or so. Quads pretty much shut down at about 80km, making the last of the ride a bit uncomfortable, but overall went okay.

Tossing up whether to go for a ride or run tomorrow. Heck, might even be both.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

After the dust clears...

Was planning to run on Wed afternoon, but with the dust storm rolling through Brisbane there was no way I was going to head out in that - memories of January 2004 in Sydney when bushfire smoke shrouded the city. I went out for a run in that and was coughing up soot for a week - no thanks.

So, back on the indoor trainer this evening, resting HR 42, weight 82.8 (down a kilo on Tuesday?). Pretty similar session to Tuesday, with a couple of little variations - just wante to spend a little more time on Level 5, rather than spin myself silly @ 120 on 4 and 5:
Time Interval Level Cadence
0:00:00 0:05:00 1 Easy
0:05:00 0:05:00 2 Easy
0:10:00 0:01:00 3 90
0:11:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:12:00 0:01:00 3 100
0:13:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:14:00 0:01:00 3 110
0:15:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:16:00 0:01:00 4 90
0:17:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:18:00 0:01:00 4 100
0:19:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:20:00 0:01:00 4 110
0:21:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:22:00 0:01:00 5 90
0:23:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:24:00 0:01:00 5 100
0:25:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:26:00 0:01:00 5 110
0:27:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:28:00 0:01:00 4 90
0:29:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:30:00 0:01:00 4 100
0:31:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:32:00 0:01:00 4 110
0:33:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:34:00 0:01:00 3 90
0:35:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:36:00 0:01:00 3 100
0:37:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:38:00 0:01:00 3 110
0:39:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:40:00 0:01:00 3 120
0:41:00 0:03:00 2 Easy
0:44:00 0:02:00 2 Easy
0:46:00 Total

28.15k according to the bike computer, average HR 125 (down a bit on Tuesday, cooler conditions I suspect), peak HR 170. Good hit out.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

On The Road To Nowhere

Well, 45 minutes on the indoor bike trainer in the garage, which amounts to the same thing.

I've abandoned plans to do long, steady state sessions on the indoor mag trainer - I just can't do it, even with some sort of video distraction. I find it even worse than the treadmill in terms of boredom factor. Doubtless, if there is an afterlife, there is an indoor trainer sitting in a particularly airless and hot part of hell with my name on it. Probably with an uncomfortable seat.

Anyway, with the Gold Coast 100 coming up in a couple of weeks, thought I'd keep the theme of crammed preparations going by restarting my interval training on the aforementioned indoor trainer. I find I can do up to about an hour of these sessions, as long as I keep the reps between 1 to 5 minutes.

Took a quick resting heart rate (43 - good, considering it's late afternoon after a day at work on my feet), weight (83.8kg. Oops), so as to establish a baseline for the coming months. Whacked on the heart rate monitor and fired up the trainer.

I use the fifth gear on the rear derailleur, and the big cog on the front - a cadence of 90 gives around 30km/h. Effort at a cadence works out to low 40's or so, which feels commensurate with the effort.

So, the session went as follows (level refers to the level on the mag trainer:
Time Interval Level Cadence
0:00:00 0:05:00 1 Easy
0:05:00 0:05:00 2 Easy
0:10:00 0:01:00 3 90
0:11:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:12:00 0:01:00 3 100
0:13:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:14:00 0:01:00 3 110
0:15:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:16:00 0:01:00 3 120
0:17:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:18:00 0:01:00 4 90
0:19:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:20:00 0:01:00 4 100
0:21:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:22:00 0:01:00 4 110
0:23:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:24:00 0:01:00 4 120
0:25:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:26:00 0:01:00 5 90
0:27:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:28:00 0:01:00 5 100
0:29:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:30:00 0:01:00 4 90
0:31:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:32:00 0:01:00 4 100
0:33:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:34:00 0:01:00 4 110
0:35:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:36:00 0:01:00 3 90
0:37:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:38:00 0:01:00 3 100
0:39:00 0:01:00 2 Easy
0:40:00 0:01:00 3 110
0:41:00 0:04:00 2 Easy
0:45:00 Finish

Average heart rate 133 (inc warm up and cool down), peak 173. Pretty warm in Brisvegas today, so sweated up a storm.

We're on our way.

Oh yeah, the massage went okay. Hips are a little rotated and the right hammie niggle was a little more serious than I initially thought, but feels like it's sorted. Back in three weeks.

I use Kath Phillips at Toowong Village Physiotherapy Centre (but she also practices in the city now), in case anyone was wondering.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Back in the saddle

Had a pretty self-indulgent week post-Glasshouse. Oh well.

Intended to ride Saturday, but ended up staying in Toowong on Friday night, and was all set to go, to the extent of being dressed and poised with the bike at 4:50am, when I realised I felt a bit 'exposed'. No helmet! Frak!

So, after an offer from my usual riding companion on Saturday afternoon, I lined up at about 6:30 Sunday morning for what had been promised as a 'long slow ride' of around 2 hours. A couple of the Saturday group somehow got involved, so the long slow ride involved leaving Toowong for an immediate attack on Mt Coot-tha (failed to make it to Channel 10 by about 400 metres) and then a lap of the river loop - basically back to Indooroopilly via the NE end of Chapel Hill, over the bridge to Chelmer and then Tennyson, and up the east bank of the river to West End for coffee (as you do) and then back to the start at Toowong. Did a touch over a marathon (42.2k) at reasonable pace considering the mountain climb at the start.

Got a few niggles (left hammie, quads, etc) and a massage lined up tomorrow that will hurt. Oh well, suck it up. Back on track now.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Glasshouse 50k (east course)

Off to Beerburrum State School for the 50k run of the big weekend of the Glasshouse Trails calendar, which includes the main event, the 100 miler, a 100km, the 50, and on Sunday a 30 and a 12. I was travelling with the leader of our Kokoda Challenge, who although training well of late had copped a stomach bug during the week, and a friend from her gym who had never gone past 21km. They would be in for an interesting day!

There had been a fair bit of toing and froing the week prior about the start time and location, which was originally intended to be at Checkpoint 8 at 10am, about 11km WSW of the school which was the finish point. It was a little inconvenient but we had planned appropriately, but it became apparent that the beleagured race director was under considerable pressure to change the start time and location.

I'll refer to the checkpoints, which can be accessed here (PDF file). Note this shows the original 50k course. The new one went Checkpoint 2, 2A, 3A, 4, 5, 6 (via south route), 5 (via north loop), 1A, 3A, 2. This is my Garmin plot.


So, the start time was changed to 7am, now starting and finishing at the school. This was a better solution for a number of reasons - earlier start, interaction between us and the 100km/100 milers, start and finish at the same location, good tour of the east course, which means between this event and May's 50k I've seen almost the whole course - but I'm a little annoyed that some people appear to have entered the event without planning transport to Checkpoint 8, and making plans to get back to that transport after finishing, and then managed to get the event changed to suit their needs, adding further load to the race director's already heavy workload and forcing those who had planned appropriately to change their plans.

To be fair and honest, it ended up being a lot more convenient, and to be frank, better, but the circumstances leading to the changes were not what I'd call ideal.

Anyway, caught up with a few people I knew at the start, and got ready. I wasn't taking the event super-seriously, feeling that I was a bit underdone post-Kokoda, but had trained well in the couple of weeks leading up to the event, and had had a good carb-load. I hadn't really formulated a race-plan, but thought something under 6 would be nice, and that something between 6 and 7 would be satisfactory.

So, after watching a few of 100 mile boys come through, we started. From the start at Checkpoint 2 (?!) it was up the concrete path to the top of Mt Beerburrum. This was horribly steep, and my legs were fearfully stiff. On the way down, dumb-dumb here stood on some leaves on the inside of one of the hairpins and become very unbalanced, and after stumbling down the path for 20 metres, finally managed to fall. Fortunately I was wearing gloves and fell forwards, but one of my bottles came out and fell into the scrub, so I had to get that as well as endure the humliation of falling on the only paved section of a 50k trail run. I'm fine, but I do look like I've been in a fight with a small wildcat, perhaps a serval. Hands are fine, though, thanks to the gloves.

I won't go into too much detail about the course, but it is generally flatish to rolling, except for the horror sections in the loop from Checkpoint 5 to 6 and back to 5, which were steep, in very broken up condition with huge ruts, mud in a lot of places and rocks in others - really jungle like in a few places.

In terms of the event itself, I felt in great shape pretty much up until Checkpoint 5, where I'd been holding between 9.5 to 10km/h very comfortably. I was thinking sub 6 was in the bag.

At Checkpoint 5, I made mistakes. I took a mouthful of Endura (mistake) and half a cup of Coke (huge mistake). I came out of the checkpoint and within 5 minutes felt oversugared and like my heart was racing. I felt nauseous pretty much all the way through the 5-6-5 loop, and coming out of the off-road loop on to Connection Road I was pretty much out on my feet, and had resigned myself to pulling out on my return visit to Checkpoint 5. My legs were gone, I felt crook, I was done. The final climb up on to the road felt like my final effort - I had to stop twice on the way up.

I managed to self-talk myself into thinking that once I got on to the road (unsealed) I'd probably feel a bit better, and logically it had to be downhill for a while (going on the profile of the ridge I could see as I climbed) so I might be able to get it together. Not far behind me, Tuttle emerged as well - he'd been 3-400 metres in front between Checkpoints 3 and 4 and disappeared - I'd assumed he'd gone ahead during a section in deep scrub, but he'd missed a left turn that I must confess I nearly missed, so had done about an extra 1 - 1.5k or so in getting back on track.

He said he was stuffed as well, also being underprepared after Comrades. I think the combination of seeing a friendly face and getting back on the roadway lifted me to the point where I could see myself finishing, and so off we trudged, walking punctuated with stiff little jogs here and there.

We ground it out and managed to jog the last 500 metres or so to preserve some dignity, crossing the line in just over 6 hours 31 minutes.

I guess the time was pretty much what I'd expected, but I'm disappointed in how it was achieved - some dumb errors plus falling for the sucker punch of feeling good early.

Having had a good carb-load I really should have laid off any additional sugar sources until much later in the event. The Endura they serve doesn't agree with me, I mixed my Staminade too richly (although you can get around that with appropriate supplementary water) and I should have gone with my small Camelbak rather than my Fuel Belt. The Coke was a massive error, and is now banned.

I was underdone, but I knew that. I don't know that going out more slowly in the first 20 would have made much of a difference - I don't know how much energy I would have conserved, although I could have walked some of the uphills early on.

In terms of training and preparation for next year:
- lose 10kgs. Seriously.
- try to do more 'solid state', constant running. Training at Gold Creek Reservoir is well and good, but from a running point of view it becomes an interval session. Looking at the area, South Boundary Road seems to be a better bet to actually run on, and I need to look at doing actual long runs there rather than just time on feet/distance covered.
- continue with one speed session a week, plus an interval session on the bike just for cardio fitness
- for future events, take a few days annual leave beforehand, and get a massage. I think half the reason I felt tight, and later quite weary in the legs was that I'd been on my feet on concrete surfaces in the week prior. My calves were particularly tight.
- think a bit more about my nutritional strategy through the event.

Oh well, two finishes at Glasshouse know I've seen most of the course. Two coffee mugs, I won a watch in the lucky dip, I learned some things and have some things to address. A mixed day for my travelling companions - my Kokoda leader had her stomach bug catch up with her at about 25k or so, and she had to DNF, whilst our 'anything north of 21k debutant' did very well, finishing in around 7 1/2 hours, and was rightly quite pleased with himself. It'll make his first road marathon a doddle!

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Mid-week bash

Haven't done much since Sunday's run. Back's been a bit angry, probably as a result of smashing the downhills in my vain attempt to catch my training partner. Did some exercises on Tuesday which seemed to help.

Also started carb-loading as per the AIS plan, and feel enormous. And gassy. So very gassy.

Finally got out for a bit of a run around my 8k or so course around the back of Mt Coot-tha. I'd meant to go yesterday, but forgot my runners. D'oh. Finall got out there this afternoon around 4, in very pleasant conditions.

My little course starts at the Bielby Road entrance to the Mt Coot-tha west trail section, and heads west along the Bellbird Trail to Gap Creek Road Reserve, through the everpresent dust cloud that covers Gap Creek Road and into the trail complex there, towards the Boscombe Road exit where you pick up the Curlew Circuit Trail and then head immediately left into the Ironbark Trail, which you continue to follow north until it dips into a little bridge over a creek and cut left up the hill on to the Coucal Trail which takes you to the northern most part of the gravel section of Gap Creek Road. You follow the now sealed Gap Creek Road up two particularly nasty hills into Highwood Road and then hook left into the 1 mile predominantly downhill Quail Trail which plugs into the north end of the grassed section of Gap Creek Reserve. You run south through the reserve, resume the Quail Trail except now you're heading east, back to Bielby Road.

The Garmin typically reads around 8.2k or so. It has some good climbs, but is runnablem, and indeed I 'ran' the whole lot of it tonight. Managed a little under 44 minutes tonight, which is my best time around there, but I haven't done this course since before Kokoda.

Truth be told this was kind of a conscience thing - I was feeling a bit guilty about not doing that much in recent weeks. So we're going okay, just a bit concerned about what the back 15k or so will be like at Glasshouse on Saturday.

Sunday, September 06, 2009

A PB, and still beaten home...

Little to report over the last week - took the week off after smashing myself up last weekend, and work was pretty physical which didn't help much. Still, felt like I had earned it.

Last week, my training partner proposed a challenge - I would give her a 45 minute start, and we would see who would complete the anti-clockwise version of Pinnacles first. Her best time around there is about 2:42, mine 1:54. So, basically, to be first home, you had to do a PB. Seemed a good race simulation, with the added bonus of not knowing where the other was.

We were joined by the third member of our Kokoda Challenge squad, who was the one who actually completed the event with me. I think she'd been suffering a bit with the old post-event let down, but news during the week that she was pretty much qualified for Six Foot has apparently perked her up and given her new focus. She is very strong and should go very well there - some work to do, but we're six months away...

So, they set off at 5:30, which is when I was getting up. I arrived a bit after 6 on a slightly overcast, cool and humid morning, got set up and did some stretching, and at pretty much 6:15 on the dot, I went.

Managed to jog the first mile or so of what is basically all climbing from the start. The first target is the old gate at around 10.3k or so, and when pushing I'm generally looking to hit this gate in under 65 minutes - today it was about mid 63, which is a touch outside my best to this point (long term goal is to get through there in under an hour) but I knew was only a matter of seconds, so well in touch.

The next target is the second gate, at around 12.6 or so. There are some nasty climbs, and some good downhills through this short stretch, and I'd normally be a little over 16 minutes through here, today it was a bit under 15 minutes as I was starting to imagine catching my quarry. Amazing what a little competition will do.

From there, the course pitches and rolls a lot, with some of the tougher climbs, but also with some of the sharper downhills. The good thing today was that with the rain on Friday and Saturday the surface was much more stable so I was able to attack the downhills much more confidently, even sections I'd normally crab down.

So, on top of the 2 minutes I'd gained between gates 1 and 2 on my best around here, I picked up another 3 1/2 minutes over the last 5 1/2 km, desperately pushing to see if I could run down my opponents. I feel a lot faster on good quality downhills now - even the small amount of speedwork seems to have helped my form here.

Into the last stretch it became apparent the girls had beaten me home but it was still all to play for, with a major personal goal of sub 1:50 around here attainable. I made it home with a bit to spare, at 1:49:22, so a great result, the outcome of the handicap race notwithstanding. Credit where credit's due - the two girls had huge PBs today and should be very pleased with themselves. The comment was made that they were dawdling along at one point when one of them raised the spectre of my bearing down on them (must have been around when I was starting) and mentioned that I wouldn't be slowing to chat or showing any mercy. So they motored off...

Which I wouldn't have, and didn't. That's the point, right? Competition improves the breed.

This should become a regular part of our training - it worked really well, and to be frank I'm not 5 minutes faster than 10 days ago. Just properly motivated!