Saturday, July 21, 2012

LD: 8

Today's long-distance run according to the 1/2-marathon training schedule was eight miles. This was my new longest run by 2.5 miles. It felt great mostly good.

Miles 1-4 were kind of a slog. Not sure if that was because it was so early, my bike ride was last night instead of in the morning, I was running with my new water belt the kids gave me for my birthday, I was listening to a podcast instead of music, I was subconsciously pacing myself for the new distance ... or all of the above. Mile 5 was a bit faster, and then Miles 6-7 were great. I could feel the endorphins infusing my system and felt like I might be home in a second (I'd also switched over to music). Mile 8 was ridiculously tough, but I think if I had been doing a nine-mile run today, Mile 9 would have been toughest, or Mile 10 and so on.

All told, I finished in about 1:48, or 13:30 miles. Much slower than where my general 5k pace has improved to, but I know that the LD days are not about time as much as distance. Today was about getting my body used to being out there for eight miles. It was a good run. And I was done by 8 a.m.

Rest of week
The rest of last week, I did a two-mile run on Wednesday at lunch, and then a 15-mile bike ride in the evening. Usual swimming on Thursday morning and then an 11-mile bike ride at lunch and Friday's 10.5-mile evening ride.

I seem to be back on track with double-workout days, and it showed on the scale today. I lost three pounds this week. I could be well into the 230s by Labor Day. I would love to be in the 220s by the 1/2 Marathon.

Coming up
I've got a rest day tomorrow, and then will try to hit double all next week. The next LD is 9.5 next Saturday.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Midweek

Since Sunday, this week has been a good exercise week. Following Sunday's long run (5), did biking on Monday and Tuesday, swimming Tuesday and I'm set to do a run (5k) today at lunch and then I need to do a bike ride tonight.

Bicycling was 10 miles on Monday, and the first time I'd ridden since the tri. Pace wasn't too bad though, as I averaged 16.2 mph. Yesterday's ride was longer and a bit more of a slog, as the heat index was near 100 when I headed out for the 16 miles. I averaged 15.2 mph and got home drenched in sweat, but not breathing too hard. That ice bath was crucial...

Tuesday swimming was good. I was solo as far as students, and did a 100 swim, 100 Individual Medley, 100 swim warmup, followed by 16 x 25s at speed, diving in from the race platform, with walking lunges out of the pool and back to the platform each lap. Then a 100 kick to cool down. I'm able to IMs now, because we've used part of the alone class times to work on butterfly (a stroke I never learned). My upper body is there, but my legs try to do a modified breast kick rather than a dolphin kick. With fins I'm fine, without it's a struggle.

The rest of the week, I've got swimming and a bike ride tomorrow, either bike or run Friday morning, and this week's long-distance (LD) run of 8 miles. I'm planning to wake up by 5:30-6 a.m. and get that one done before people wake up here.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Week recap

It's been a hard week to get up and exercise. Not sure if that's post-tri slump or depression or whatever, but all I did last week was my two regular swimming lessons and a hill workout (3.8 miles) with Fleet Feet Sports in Milwaukee.

Actually, aside from the race, the Fleet Feet run was the first time I've run with a group. I met Running for Connor team partner Erica there, and it was the first time we ran together too. It was pretty awesome to run with a group. I love running out here on the country roads by myself, but the change up and companionship really got me jazzed. I also think it pushed me to up my pace from what I generally do on my own.

Next big race is the Brewers Mini Marathon on Sept. 22, and the Galloway plan to train for it was to start in earnest yesterday with a 5-mile run. (It got bumped to today.) The crux of the plan is to do pretty much what I did for the triathlon, except the long weekend workouts will be progressively longer runs instead of bike-run bricks. The weekly workouts will still be a mix of cross-training with swimming (2x week), biking (12-20 miles, 2-3x) and running (2-4 miles, 2-3x).

I'll try to keep up with the training blog as well as I can; this Saturday is supposed to be an 8-mile run, which would be my new longest run.

Thinking about signing up for the Oceanside 1/2 Ironman in March 2013 to make sure winter training stays on pace.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Race recap


What a day yesterday was. I’m still processing everything I did and learned, and am already looking forward to the next tri. I’m going to do my best with this post to try and encapsulate everything I can about the day.

I woke up at 4 a.m. after some fitful sleep and put on my tri-suit and made a bagel with peanut butter. Beth woke up too, long enough to take a pre-first triathlon photo. I look more bemused than anything. Truth be told, I was starting to worry about the swim.

After a bagel and some Gatorade Prime the kids got me for the race, I headed out to the wagon for the 20-minute drive to Pewaukee. My transition bag and pre-checked bike were already in the car. As I drove, I noticed that the sun was already starting to rise; at least there were visible pinks and purples in a small area of the northeastern horizon. Very lovely. There was some kind of sports or other talk radio on in the background, but it was just white noise for a guy who was obsessing about the swim.

When I got to Pewaukee, I pulled onto a street near downtown where I saw other cars with bikes and such parking, and just pulled off there to park. (Forgot to ask at the race walk-throughs where they recommended participants park, but it was a good spot anyways close to the start. A little closer to the finish would’ve been cool too.)

Transition area.
I grabbed my bag and walked my bike the couple blocks to transition. I found my rack (wave 21) and my spot (no. 1048), and placed my bike and started to unpack my bag and setup my transition items on a bright blue towel just how I wanted them. It was warmer than I thought it would be, so I took off my shirt, socks and shoes, but left my new sweats on with my tri-suit and wandered off to get marked with my numbers.

(There was something relaxing about wandering around the lot in my bare feet. Weird.)

After I got marked, it was about 5:20. Still an hour before they closed transition and moved all the athletes to the beach for wave starts. I walked back over by my bike. Since it was over by the rear of the transition area/parking lot, I found a spot to sit quietly and think about the day and people watch.

Timing chip on the correct ankle. 
Then I noticed my bike was askew and my water bottle was on the ground. I went over to fix it and the guy next to me apologized and said it fell while he was racking his bike. It was too much trouble to pick my water bottle back up I guess. Then I noticed my swim cap and goggles were lying a couple spots over too. (How hard did he knock my bike?) So I put the bottle back in, straightened my bike and transition items, and took my swim cap, goggles and timing chip back over to my spot and relaxed.

When the place started to get busy, I decided to put on my timing chip which goes around the ankle with an “unbreakable” strap. Within a minute, a volunteer began walking through transition yelling, “Timing chips go on the left ankle!” Three guesses which ankle I’d done… In my head, it made sense. Numbers written on the left bicep and calf, timing chip on the right ankle for balance. Right?

So, I did my best to undo the “unbreakable” strap without breaking it so I could switch ankles. That went as well as you’d think. So, I got up to go over by the mark-up area and see if they had extra straps. Of course they did. Everything about this race was very professional and well thought-out; and all the volunteers were smiling and a joy to see. When I saw a woman standing with a box of extra straps, she already knew I was headed over. I guess all the broken-strap people must have the same hang-dog facial expression. I smiled a “thanks” and switched straps (and ankles), and walked back by my bike one last time.

Finally, it was close to 6:05 or so and I headed over to the beach. I found the area for nos. 1000 and above, and stood in the sand, stared out at the swim course and picked up where I’d left off with worrying about the swim. I tried a few times to distract myself by eavesdropping on the hundreds of conversations going on around me, or blocking them out and staring at the moon or the tree line in the distance. None worked for long. I said a few prayers too, to St. Brendan (I couldn’t think of the patron saint of swimming, but figured navigation and sailing and my name-saint would be good enough).

Eventually I struck up a conversation with a calm-looking athletic type near me and asked ho many tris he’s done. This would be his second, he’d done this same tri in 2011, and was a runner at heart. He gave me some great advice for the run, and said not too worry much about the swim (how could he tell?)

Then the elites were in the water (and it seems like right back out), and the waves started going in about every two minutes. I could feel my heart rate going up, but it didn’t feel much different than the nerves prior to a football game or track meet. Finally my wave was in the start corral. I stood at the back, crossed myself, and hit the water slow.

I found a quiet place to swim and sight behind most of my wave, and was able to do some good front crawl. I weaved a bit left and right, but not too much. I swallowed some water when I was sighting on the first turn buoy, and that got me switching to breaststroke for a bit. Then back to crawl. I flipped back and forth a few more times as it felt right, pending breathing and nerves. It seemed like it was taking forever. I couldn’t believe I was still going to try and bike and run after, as fast as my heart seemed to be going.

Then I was far enough to stand up. As others (from wave 22) started to run past me, I walked smoothly exiting the water, up the beach and to transition. The cheers and encouragement as I went were awesome! The swim was done. My time later showed that despite placing myself at the back of my wave, and exiting at a walk rather than jog, was still under 15 minutes.

I grabbed a water, got to my spot, dried my feet and put on my socks and running shoes, helmet and sunglasses. I put some GU in my tri-suit pocket and went to hit the road. Transition time was a little over 4 minutes, and I was on the street pedaling hard. And still breathing hard from the swim, too.

The 16 miles for the bike course were fairly uneventful. I pushed myself at a pace that felt comfortable, which was all I could do since I decided to do the race technology-free. I wanted to be as in-tune with my body and the whole experience as possible. That meant no tunes on the run course either. I wanted to hear every cheer, and push my body on my own.

Every so often on the bike, I would fall back a bit if I felt I was working too hard (always trying to be up cadence rather than mashing those pedals) … shortly thereafter I’d berate myself, “You’ve worked too hard to be happy ‘just finishing.’ Step it up son, it won’t kill you!” The course had a couple good hills, but overall was a nice ride. I finished in 58 minutes on a 15.8 mph pace, which is dead-on what my training rides have averaged.

(That 58 minutes needed to be train-adjusted, as I was stopped by a freight train just 30 yards from the end of the bike ride. There was a volunteer who took down the race numbers of everyone who was obstructed, and I’m sure they adjusted our chip times accordingly.)

Tom's sign
Jack's sign
Colleen's sign
Beth's sign
One of the smart things I did during the day, started in transition 2. I jogged with my bike to my spot. This helped with some of “jelly legs” syndrome going from biking to running. It helped acclimate my quads and hamstrings, and by the time I was out of the port-o-john and on my way to the run start, I was running and feeling ok.

Coming out for the run, I heard Beth call my name and looked up in time to see Jack (waving a spatula at me, in a “Run Fatboy Run” reference for motivation), and Colleen holding a sign with Sonic the Hedgehog on it that said “My Dad is faster than Sonic!” Big smiles. I felt great. I wandered through the run course, trying to equate distances with my typical 5k here, running up to the horse farm and back.

I tried to give high fives to all the kids I saw, and every resident who came out to cheer and every helpful volunteer were great. I tried to say “thank you” to every volunteer and cheering spectator I could. At one spot on the run course, a family had setup a mister by the street and put out their own waters and Gatorades and cheered runners on from their balcony above.

At home a few hours later, and I still look gassed. 
When I finally rounded a last corner, the cheers from the park where the finish line was got louder and deeper. I picked up the pace and egged myself on. I saw dad and gave him five, then heard Brian shout my name just before I crossed the finish line at 2:50 (since wave 1 started) and heard them call “…and Brendan Dooley of Helenville, Wisconsin ….” I pumped my arms, enjoyed the cheering and mom came up to give me a nice birthday hug and congratulations. Run time was just over 39 minutes.

That’s all for now. In about an hour, I’m going to get a nice relaxing professional sports massage.

Tomorrow morning, it’s back to swim training.

Thanks to all the race sponsors!

Sunday, July 8, 2012

2:01.2

I did it. I can officially now call myself a triathlete. What a day today. More later ...

Friday, July 6, 2012

Holy crap

Just got done picking up my race packet and listening to the course talks and walk-throughs. After the swim talk, we were allowed to swim the course. I was astonishingly slow swimming in the open water. 


Swimming in a melee of people, the murky, warm water and plenty of weeds was way tougher than I would have guessed. I got kicked a few times, swallowed a bit of lake water and switched to (poor) breaststroke for most of the course. It probably took 20 long minutes to do the 450 yards. I just couldn't get my breathing even enough once I was shook up. 


I'm so glad I decided to go out tonight for the course talks and to do the swim trial. It would have been completely deflating, and possibly harmful, to get in the water with the full complement of other racers and combat the full race-day adrenaline ... only to discover how different the swimming can be from training. 


I never would have thought a year ago when this journey started that I'd be dreading the swim more than the run on Sunday. New plan of attack: Find a way to stay calm on the swim, use it as a warmup for the day and get out of the water safe and ready to crush the bike. 


I've said all along this one is about finishing, not time. (I only thought about times in my head, but never said anything.) Now, again, this one is about finishing it, savoring the full first tri experience and learning. 


There will be plenty of time later when I can start looking forward to the next race. 

Monday, July 2, 2012

1 week!

Tapering began in earnest today. (It should have started last week, but I cheated to get more work in following the minimal amount of work I did the week prior in N.Y.) The tri is in less than a week on Sunday; I feel extremely ready for it and am looking forward to getting past it now, getting it done and under my belt. I want to see what my training has done for me (aside from great weight loss!), and put these new skills and equipment to the test.

But first: Quit working out so hard for a week! This is going to be tough. Fortunately I have an understanding wife who has been extremely supportive throughout the process and continues to be so.

So the week of training looks like this: 30 minute light bike ride today, swimming tomorrow, 2-mile run on Wednesday, swimming Thursday, off on Friday and very light 15 minutes bike ride and 5-minute run brick on Saturday. Then it's off to packet pickup and pace nervously until I fall asleep.

Sunday, I'll get up about 5 a.m. for a quick breakfast and then head over to the course for check-in to setup my transition area. Wave swim starts at 6:30, and I may even be done by 9 a.m.

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New shoes

I received an early birthday card with some wish money in it, so I decided to go to Fleet Feet Sports and get my stride analyzed and buy the right shoes. After about an hour with a truly knowledgeable and attentive staff member, I came away with Saucony Hurricane 14 shoes, that I took out for a 6-miler the next morning. They were great. The whole experience was terrific and I look forward to supporting that store as often as I'm able.

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Emotional ride

I wasn't supposed to exercise yesterday, but last night I had some extra emotions to burn off. I took off on the bike for about 7.5 miles until I started to feel winded. I averaged 20-plus mph! Then I took a more relaxed ride back, but still got back with an average speed of 17.3 mph over the course of 58 minutes. And I felt better. I really believe that hard exercise is good for the body, brain and soul.