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Friday, November 15, 2024
Blog Page 333

A Few Days To Go

You would think that by the time we arrived here in Chile we would have everything in perfect order and ready to go ! No way ! We have spent the last five days or so sorting through all of our gear, packing food and eliminating anything that might be extra weight from our sleds. On that note- the sleds arrived- and they are surprisingly smaller then i thought they would be. We figured out our tent- and have organized a plan where we don’t actually remove the tent poles, but rather ‘fold” the tent in half; intact. This prevents it from blowing away during 100 km per hour winds when setting up. More to come !

www.impossible2possible.com

Sleeping Bags, Pemmican, and a Tent

Today most time was spent going through our gear and weighing food. We tested out our tent by erecting it in the small courtyard in front of our apartment-and we made lists of everything that is still needed to round out our food for the expedition. A quick visit to a local hardware store yielded a small piece of plywood that will be the steady base for our stove, as well as metal clips we will use to secure guy lines to our tent for the 120 km/h plus winds !!!
Doc Affleck is busy putting finishing touches on some of the educational modules- and he has been helping us to organize our gear. The first “official” module will be posted the day we arrive on the ice.

www.impossible2possible.com

We’re Here !!!

We arrived in Punta Arenas very late last night ….with all of our gear ! It was close- we weren’t sure if Chilean border guards would let our Pemmican and dehydrated cheese through- but thankfully they did. This incredible city- the furthest south in the world- is steeped in history. The gatekeeper to the Drake Passage, in the days of travelling by sea prior to the Panama Canal- it was a main stopping point. Explorers and mountaineers from around the world meet here before launching expeditions…people like us !

Student Life Revisited

Hello everyone! Welcome to my first blog post on iRun.ca. I am a 40 year old runner living in Victoria, BC. This fall I returned to school to complete a Master’s degree in Music (Voice) at the University of Victoria after a ten year hiatus. I started my M.Mus at the University of Montreal but due to circumstances at the time, I didn’t complete the degree. If someone had told me back then that I would eventually go back to school to finish my program I would have hoped they were right. Had they added that I would also be running on a University cross-country and track team at the age of 40, I would have laughed my head off and thought they were insane. Yet, here I am! Of course, many things happened over the past five years that have led me to this point in my life. My background up until five years ago wasn’t very athletic. My undergraduate degree at McGill was intense. I ran recreationally to keep fit but my focus was definitely music and singing. Running was an on again off again thing that I did when I had time and even after I graduated I rarely ran with any consistency…that was until I met Malcolm Balk in 2001. Malcolm is a running coach and Alexander Method teacher. He saw I had some potential and took the time to teach me how to run with good running form using The Pose Method and The Alexander Technique and encouraged me to run on a regular basis.

In 2003 my husband was offered a position as the Conductor in Residence for Pacific Opera Victoria and The Victoria Symphony so we made the move out to the West Coast. I joined the Island Road Racers (IRR), a running club in town, in hopes of meeting people. Before long, I was doing workouts with the club 2 – 3 times a week and running in local races. My running times consistently dropped as I started to take training more and more seriously. I was fortunate to have had some excellent coaching along the way with Malcolm Balk, Rob Harmsworth, Ron Bowker, Matt Clout and Paul O’Callaghan all of whom gave me valuable training knowledge that I lacked having had so little background in the sport. Since then, I have competed in distances from the 1500m to the half-marathon.

Last December, on the trip home from the National X-Country Championships, Brent Fougner, the coach of the University of Victoria Vikes asked me if I was interested in running for the cross-country/track team. I was already tossing the idea around of returning to school to finish my M.Mus and Brent’s offer gave me the incentive to apply to the music program. I was accepted and this fall I began my new life as a student. I thought it would all feel strange after so many years away from school. Instead as I walked across campus on my way to my first class in jeans and a t-shirt with a knapsack on my back it actually felt very comfortable and right.

The entire Vikes running team has been extremely welcoming and even though they are half my age (I have fillings in my mouth as old as most of them!), I am enjoying their company. I love to tease and razz…it’s from growing up with four brothers. It took a few practices for them to feel comfortable about teasing me back but now the “senior citizen” jokes fly as soon as there is an opportunity; it’s hilarious! I run two workouts a week with the Vikes team. The rest of my training is overseen by my coach, Jon Brown. He schedules my daily runs and keeps tabs on my volume and intensities in between workouts.

I will be posting regularly on iRun Nation and will be sharing my experiences as a…ahem…mature varsity runner. I hope you enjoy it!

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

While I may have had the day off from work today I should have known better than to expect anything less than a butt-kicking on the track.
After a few 80m accelerations, Coach Nicholls broke the news to me. Yup, 4 x 500m

“Don’t think ‘ugh! I have 500s’,” she says, “ Think of them as 100m, 200m, 200m.”Yea,  I think to myself  — all at once … FOUR times. 
*hangs head*

Thankfully all workouts have one thing in common – they end. 🙂
I did manage to get over the distance and run well for three of the 500s … but I also may have happened to feel a little too sorry for myself on the 3rd rep.  Bad Cassie.

Getting faster everyday!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

“Yes, we can,” he proclaims! “Yes, we can,” the people chant!
As of last night, Barack Obama is the new President of the United States of America.
What an amazing historic moment in time
Even at practice, people were buzzing about it.  I am so proud to live in a country that is just as interested and excited about change – for another country – as Canada is.  Plus, it’s not like I’m blind to the fact that Canada also shares some serious relations with our neighbors to the south either – this change can/will affect us all.

In ”celebration” – let’s do some speed endurance. Yeehaww!
5 sets of 5 x 50m with a 4 minute break between the sets
The workout burned my lungs, but in the good way.
Sprint the 50m … decelerate slowly … then walk for 10m and hit it again with the next 50m. This pattern repeats until the five 50s are complete.
A grand total of twenty-five 50s …. What a treat.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

A mid-morning weight session at the gym, and I’m feeling stronger than ever.
However, just so we didn’t quite get to feel too fresh on a Saturday, Coach threw in some long skipping A’s, long skipping B’s and a few sets of hard Running A’s too.

All this speed and power work lately has left my legs feeling a bit like a pair of baby deer’s so I slotted in an ever-important session with the hot/cold tubs.
Start cold. End cold.  Stay in each temperature for 60 seconds.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Hallowe'en 2008

From myself and everyone at iRun, “Have a SpOoooOooOoOoky Halloween!!”

Hallowe'en 2008

Friday, October 24, 2008

Wait a tick – isn’t this workout  … ? … Yeah, you can’t fool me! It totally is!
It’s another installment of: “Thorny (in my side) Endurance Day (See: September 26, 2008 blog entry) but of course, the goal times are a touch faster! … yay.

My group decided to take advantage of the good weather and run at 3pm. Unfortunately, my job requires me to typically stay until 5pm, and so …  I was extremely thankful to my one training partner – Kassandra  – who met me just after 5:00 to brave Saskatchewan’s gale force winds with me and risk being blown away together — all in the name of Track and Field.

Let it be known – this workout sucked.  However, our running did not.

200m ran in less than 33 seconds. <5 min break> A 600m (coming in at 70 seconds at the 400m mark) <15 min break> then a dreadful 3 x 300m < 3 min breaks between> all run under 56 seconds.  UGH! The wind made it close to unbearable and Kass and I both admitted later that quitting mid-way through each 300m seemed like a better option than finishing …. But, we didn’t quit …. it may not have been pretty – but we still finished!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

8 x 250m (sprint 100m – jog 50m – sprint 100m) <3>
Great workout – done with me and three other girls.  Outside – on a beautiful fall day.

It was nice to be able to really focus with the girls on making out sprints count – but all be laughing and joking around on the breaks.  Track totally CAN BE a team sport!