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Sunday, September 22, 2024
Blog Page 304

Runnin’ against the wind…

I had a bit of the “post-race-lazies” this past week, but I finally managed to drag myself out for my first run yesterday.  As I left, I pondered the wind whipping my ponytail around to the front of my head, how I felt like Daffy Duck with his bill spun around, and thought I ought to stay in town today.

But in my heart I knew I really wanted to run out of town, so I paid attention to the direction of the wind.  As I circled the block I thought, it won’t be so bad – it’ll be coming at my side on the way back.  As I approached the edge of town, my ponytail told me I was right; the grass, trees, and my coat, all told me I was very wrong.

You can guess what happened.

I didn’t have a set distance in my mind when I left, so every step I took away from home I thought, if I go X kilometres further, that will make my total run Y, but every step I took away from home I also knew I would have to retrace into the wind.

You know those bad dreams you get, where you’re running away from something, and you’re running as hard as you can but your legs just won’t respond?  When you lean and you strain but you just can’t make much progress?  Like you are up to your armpits in invisible peanut butter?

‘Nuff said.

Pass the Kleenex and the Race Entry Forms

I am so excited to try something a little different today!  My Aunt Dianna sent me a link to this really amazing site.  Along with this warning …”Get Kleenex before viewing!” 

I am the type of person that cries at Hallmark commericials, so the warning was not unusual.     Don’t be like me and click on the last link first. 

I started crying right then and didn’t stop.  This is a challenge the fine folks at Nova came up with a couple years ago.  Take 12 sedentary people and get them ready to run the Boston Marathon.  Then film what happens while they get ready.

The five part series was just incredible.  I love Nova to begin with, but just couldn’t believe what an amazing piece turned out with the Marathon Challenge!  It is inspirational.  And full of information. 

I hope I have given enough credit to the folks at Nova for this amazing documentary.  The site is just incredible.  It is packed full of all kinds of information.  About the mechanics of running.  About how we runners have to overcome our own minds and sometimes our bodies as well. 

There is information about the runners themselves.  And what lead them to believe in themselves enough to take on the challenge of running the Boston Marathon! Several time Boston Marathon winner Uta Pippin shares her views on the pyschology of running.

The best part about this Marathon Challenge is that it isn’t limited to marathon runners, there is information that can be adapted by runners of any distance!

Enjoy and thanks to the fine folks at Nova, get ready to be motivated! Click on watch online to see all five parts!

Nova Marathon Challenge

Runner, Know thy course

I did my final Sunday run today in preparation for next Sunday’s Ottawa marathon. It was a cool ( 3C) and windy day in the nation’s capital for my 16km run at race pace.

As I’ve done the last couple of years, I started at the marathon finish line near just east of Ottawa City Hall. I ran 8km out and then turned around to run the the final 8km of the course, back to the finish line. It’s nice to be able to run the marathon course, or at least the final portion of it, before race day.

There’s some comfort in knowing the landmarks that you’ll be passing in the final push to the finish. Ottawa is a very beautiful race course… especially over the last 8km.

With 8km to go you’re on Prince of Wales Drive moving up towards the traffic circle in the Experimental Farm. A quick downhill then takes you to scenic Dow’s Lake. It’s here that the crowds start to pick up. Past the beautiful tulip beds on your left you’ll soon come upon Lansdowne Park and Frank Clair Stadium, former home of the dearly departed Ottawa Rough Riders, and for a short time the Ottawa Renegades, of the Canadian Football League.

You have the historic Rideau Canal on your right side all the way to finish as you pass the Pretoria Bridge and a little further up you’ll catch sight, across the water, of the University of Ottawa campus.

When you start to hear the finishers’ names and hometowns being announced over the P.A. system you know that you’re almost home…….to anyone running in Ottawa Race Weekend next Saturday and Sunday, good luck!

Pounding Waves and Pounding Feet. Match Made in Heaven

The Gazelle and I walking to the start line

Is there a sweeter sound than the pounding of 348 feet on pavement?  Ok, throw in the sound of the pounding waves and you got me.

The Gazelle and I walking to the start line
The Gazelle and I walking to the start line

In a surprising twist this morning, we had to wake the Gazelle up.  Usually the Gazelle is the one up and at em!  Excitement causing him to sleep lightly through the night.  But this morning, my dad called me about an hour and a half before the race and asked what time the gun was going to go.

At 10 I told him. 

“Your brother is still sleeping,” he said.  “I guess I should go and wake him up?”

Yep and I even offered to throw water on the Gazelle if he needed it.  Sadly he didn’t.

Me and Sid at the end of the race.  Great to meet fellow runners!
Me and Sid at the end of the race. Great to meet fellow runners!

Off we all went.  Me and the Gazelle and our parents.  They sipping hot coffee, and me wishing for hot coffee.

A little quicker than I expected, the gun went and off we were going.  The Gazelle and I didn’t even bother to attempt to run together.  Off we went to run our own race.

He was just shy of his goal.  He thought it could be because he went for a bit of a run yesterday.  But he was pretty happy with his run.  And  happy with the splits that he calculated on the Garmin.

I was very happy to have met my goal.  I went out and had a good run.  And what made it so enjoyable was the jingle of my bracelets as I ran. 

A rare sight.  Me in a picture!
A rare sight. Me in a picture!

But the topper?  Running along the waterfront.  The sound of the breaking waves on one side.  And the sound of 348 people all united in one glorious goal.

Weather or Not…

When a runner is in taper mode and the training schedule is in its final last few runs it’s hard not to start to think about the weather on race day. Over the last 3 weeks of marathon training I’ll catch myself thinking “today would have been a great day for the race” or “wow, I’m glad the race wasn’t today ’cause the wind was brutal”.

Runners can control a lot on race day…..pre-race breakfast, clothing, shoes, gels, water or gatorade, and what pace to start out at. With the weather, however, the best you can do is be prepared for what mother nature is going throw out on that day. Good running weather and perhaps you can push for a PB. Lousy weather and you might need to adjust your time goal, especially if it’s very hot.

No one likes to run a race in bad weather but when you finish just think about the bragging rights……”yeah, I ran during the big storm of ’09…..was pretty near a hurricane if you ask me….but I finished it!”

Where Can I Buy a Rearview Cycling Mirror?

There are lots of places to hide in a big running park

I didn’t scare the beginning runners off after all.  Phew that was a relief!

So when Esther asked me to lead the advanced group again, I was a little nervous.  Hmmm, would they secretly trip me?  Would I be going along at a really nice pace only to look behind me and find that I was talking to myself?

Happily neither happened.  But what it did do, was confirm for me, just how much I love running.

I found myself, laughing and smiling.  And even better, the runners were also doing the same thing.

There are lots of places to hide in a big running park
There are lots of places to hide in a big running park

When we stopped about half way to stretch, we did so with smiles on our faces.  And when it was time to start running again, we came up with a game plan that worked for all of us. 

I was very happy when just before we started to run again, someone clapped and said, “let’s do this”!!! And meant it.

For me the highlight of the run was when one of the runners said to me, “who knew two short weeks ago that we would be able to run more than five minutes at a time?  It seems like we were just grumbling about running for 30 seconds straight!”

Some of the regulars at the Den
Some of the regulars at the Den

I’d like to be able to take credit for this wonderful transformation.  Sadly I can’t.  It is Esther who motivates and tells us runners we can do it. 

She is the one who believes in us, when we doubt ourselves. 

I hope I can motivate runners someday like Esther can.  In the meantime, I’ll work on me.  And maybe I’ll invest in one of the rear view mirros that cyclists use.

Arm warmers: not just for cyclists!

I bought a pair of arm warmers at the expo last weekend.  What a great invention!  If you don’t know what I am talking about, these are basically a tube that fits snugly over your arm, from upper arm to wrist, that if you start to feel hot, you just pull them down.

Why would you want these?

I find that they’re great for early mornings, long runs (where you expect the temperature to be drastically different by the time you’re done) and in-between temperatures.  Wearing a long sleeve shirt essentially does the same thing, but if you get hot, you can only push the sleeves up so far, and sometimes fight to keep them there.   These babies are perfect because they can just bunch at your wrists, or you can take them off and they’re compact enough to tuck into your waistband or pocket.

They come in all sorts of weights, from light to fleece-lined, and there are even arm coolers to keep the sun off!

Apparently cyclists have been keeping this great secret forever, so check your local cycling and triathlon shops.  The booth I bought mine at was Cycle-ChicMEC carries them, and they’re available from several online stores – just search “arm warmers” in your favourite search engine, and you’re off!

My cool new arm warmers (oxymoron?)!
My cool new arm warmers (oxymoron?)!

UPDATE: Poodle to 5K Program

VICKY:  
How is it going with Ébène’s running program?

GRANT:
Great.  I have to admit that I have strayed from the exact details of the 5K kick the couch program.  I did that for 4 weeks and then adapted it.  I found this set of trails near my house.  There are several kilometers of trails and great for running.

VICKY:
Awesome.

GRANT:
Yeah, so I have increased her mileage a little bit because we’re not running on pavement.  The only downside is the smell.

VICKY:
The smell?!?

GRANT:
Yeah, she found a dead animal out on the side of the trail.  A fox I think.  She was rolling around in it.

VICKY:
That’s disgusting.

GRANT: 
Actually it is because of her strong instincts as a hunter.  They do this in order to disguise their odor and they also use it to communicate messages to other members of the pack.

VICKY:
Get out of town.  How do you know that?

GRANT:
The first place anybody would look.  Google.  Here’s a good link with people arguing about it.  It’s funny how intense people can be.  Oh Ébène, she smells so awful I want to barf, but I respect her proud heritage as a huntress.  What a great dog!  Bonne fille Ébène.

Mmmm, that smells good. What was she rolling in?

 

Road2Hope Half-Marathon Training Plans

The Gazelle crossing the finish line at the Around the Bay Road Race

“You’re really not gonna like me today,” the Gazelle said to me.  “As a matter of fact, I think you might just hate me now.”

“Oh no,” I thought to myself.  “Did he sign us up to run a marathon in Manitoba?  Not that there is anything wrong with Manitoba.  After all Gramma is from there …. Hmmm I wonder what he did?”

Rather than straining my already strained brain, I just asked him.

The Gazelle crossing the finish line at the Around the Bay Road Race
The Gazelle crossing the finish line at the Around the Bay Road Race

“Ok what did you do this time?”

“I ran a 4:20 kilometer,” said the Gazelle.  I wasn’t sure if he was yanking my chain.  And he continued.  “Then I ran another 4:20.  On the way back from Parkdale.”

And even though I can’t do splits, I figured out all on my own, that was pretty fast. 

“Ha” I said to the Gazelle, “I was asked to lead a group last night!  Top that!”

And he did. 

“I checked my work schedule last night.  I double and triple checked it,” he said.  “I can’t do the Old Mill, I can’t do the Downtown Dine and Dash and I can’t do the Double Crown either.”

The world famous dome of St Paul's Cathedral. The finish line from the marathon  movie Run Fatboy Run.
The world famous dome of St Paul

That just took all the smug out.  Who am I going to run with.

“Who am I going to run with?” I pleaded.  “Couldn’t you call in sick?  Not that I condone calling in sick to do a race.  I had such plans for us”

He brightened up. 

“Well, kid.  You’re on your own.  Besides that I have signed up to do the half at the Road2Hope.”

Alright, the sibling rivalry is back on!

Training Update.

As usual it has been a few days since I actually wrote about running so I wanted to give a very quick update on my progress.  For a change it is all good stuff to report! In addition to my 12km run on the weekend that felt great I have gone out for a few more ‘little’ runs of 7 & 6.2km, the latest being today. The 7km run was very uneventful, pretty straightforward out and back route, nothing too exciting to report. (Which is not a bad thing)

Today however was a little shorter run with a few minor ‘incidents’.  To begin with I decided to run through the neighborhood, I figured I may have to watch out for kids getting ready to get on the bus and people rushing off to work. What I didn’t plan for was the number of landscaping trucks I would have to navigate through, (who says the economy is suffering, last time I checked professional landscapers weren’t cheap).  Oh and I didn’t realize that I wore my invisible running shorts and shirt either, I mean how else do you explain a van (with trailer) pulling out right in front of me just before I crossed a street, I actually had to slow down or I would have ran into the side of the van. (Would have made for a good story, but no thanks) Its one thing if the guy didn’t see me, but c’mon, I’m 6 feet tall, wearing a bright white shirt AND he made EYE CONTACT.

Anyway, I survived and did finish my short 6.2km run, without further incident and feel great going into the rest of my day.  Which I consider to be a bonus considering I woke up dead tired with a pounding headache! 

I guess I would say I am right where I need to be to begin a formal Marathon training schedule, now all I need to do is pick a race and keep running!