Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Full Vineman 2009: part 1--pre-race + swim

I can't believe it's been a month since I did Vineman. A whole MONTH. And the last post I left here was before my training really ramped up--so I've written nothing about my longer rides (80-105 miles), runs (16-18 miles), swims (5k!!!), the dreaded triple brick...not even my experience breaking back into racing at the supposed "World's Toughest Half" in Auburn on May 31!

Needless to say...training for something this big had its ups and downs. A pesky trapezius spasm that became debilitating quickly without regular deep tissue work on my scalenes and a bout with chondromalacia patella that I am still working to ride myself of. The process of trial and error in perfecting my nutritional strategy, shoe and sock combinations, what to wear and how to change into it. Allocating precious funds into massage and chiropractic treatments, gear repair, replacement, and maintenance

It has been a journey and there have been great parts to it. I finished the Auburn Triathlon--I personally think a bit tougher than Wildflower--and I WASN'T last. Hooray. I ran a PR for a half-marathon--all by myself on a training run. I swam 5k in 1.5 hours. I cycled 105 miles on a Saturday in June and encountered 80 degree temps in the valley and 50 degree temps with blowing fog up on Skyline...all in one ride. I joined a master's swim team, which I have been meaning to do for ages. All great things.

The big weekend...

After a well-executed taper, I was pretty sure I was ready for the big day. Marla and I left San Jose at about 10am on August 31st, with a vague plan of trying for an early check-in at our hotel in Santa Rosa before heading to the mandatory pre-race meeting at 2 at the high school in Windsor. We hit bumper-to-bumper traffic just north of Novato. It lasted longer than I would expect for late morning on a Friday, and I began to get a little nervous that we wouldn't make it in time. We got to the hotel just as our room had become available, and so checked in and quickly locked my bike inside. We got back into the car and made it to the high school a few minutes before the start of the meeting. Right away we ran into Lynn, Drew, and Scott, and a few minutes later, Leigh and Meredith along with Camilo and Marnie. They had all picked up their packets already. We headed into the gym for the meeting...and I have to say, it was the most pointless pre-race meeting I have ever been to! I learned nothing that I didn't already know from carefully perusing the website and reading the race program published a few weeks prior.


After the meeting, I immediately went to stand in a long line get a temporary USAT membership, a longer line to get a wristband, and an even longer one to pick up my race packet. Luckily M was with me and went to hold a place in line for the shirts for me. I got my packet and was pleased: #575. 5-7-5--the structure of a haiku. Cool! I immediately put my timing chip on my left ankle, joined M in line to pick up my Vineman shirt, and then walked out the door over a timing mat to verfiy the information on my chip. A big screen flashed my name, age, and hometown as we exited--M thought it was pretty neat. :-)

Then we made our way over to the transition and finish area so I could set up my bike-to-run transition gear--it would be all ready and waiting for me the next day as I came off the bike. I got my bearings and found my assigned rack, checking out the pros' racks on the way. One of the had a fuel belt that had EIGHT bottle of Ensure on it! Drinking Ensure while running a marathon???? Gross! But then, they do this for a living...I don't. Anyway...the contents of my T2 bag were pretty extensive:

Sleeveless running shirt
Short sleeved running shirt
Long sleeved short (for after the race)
Running shorts
3 pairs running socks (in case I wanted to change midrun, helps with blisters)
Running shoes
Running hat
Sunblock
Race belt + bib #575
Hand-bottle
6 packets of powergel (vanilla and double latte)
2 small bags potato chips
1 tube shot blocks
Enduralytes
Body glide
Baby powder (for feet, also helps with blisters)
Omni ball
Transition towel
Headlamp (I knew I would be running in the dark to finish)
Bandaids, assorted sizes
A couple special good luck charms from friends...you know who you are! :-)

It felt a little weird to leave all that stuff in T2 overnight, but I had already done it before at Auburn in May, and no one had messed with my stuff. The site seemed pretty secure so I wasn't too worried.

After that, M and I decided it was a little late to drive the whole bike course before getting back to the hotel for dinner, but I wanted to go down to Guerneville and see the swim start, at the very least. I'm glad that we did; it not only gave me the chance to get a good look at Johnson's beach and the river conditions, it gave M a chance to check out the parking situation in town for the next morning and get an idea of transport times between venues. It was a pretty and relaxing drive, and I hadn't realized what a beautiful spot Guerneville is in on the Russian River. Definitely need to go back at some point.

After checking things out, we decided it was time to head back to the hotel and meet with Sarah, Neyssa, and my parents for an early dinner. To keep things simple we decided to just eat at the hotel; that way, I could get back to the room, check my gear, and go to sleep as early as I wanted. The restaurant was quiet and I can't say I really remember the food...I didn't have much of an appetite. In retrospect, I probably could have used a glass of wine to help me chill the hell out, but I had stopped drinking 2 weeks before in prep for the event. Note to self for next time... ;-)

Finished up dinner and made it back to the room around 8. I set about double checking all my gear and putting my race numbers onto my bike and helmet. Made sure I had everything set for eating as soon as I woke up. Sarah came over and asked what time I was going to want coffee in the morning. Score! No Starbucks-in-a-can for me! She is ALWAYS prepared for every eventuality. I told her 415am should do it...*gulp*

I crawled into bed around 9pm, tried to read the latest copy of Backpacker, and turned off the light at about 930. Tossed and turned until the alarm went off at 4am. I thought I had been too nervous to sleep before the Auburn Half two months before--that was nothing compared to how keyed up I was for this!

Rolled out of bed and immediately pulled on swim gear and sweatshirt. Choked down some yogurt and instant oatmeal. I wasn't even very interested in the coffee Sarah brought over! M and I loaded my gear into my car and headed out by 445. I am glad we did--transition opened at 530. I had every intention of getting there right as it opened to get set up and get in line for the portables, but we didn't anticipate how far we'd have to walk from where we ended up parking. Over a mile according to my cyclometer! I was glad I had run through my gear the night before.

We made it into transition about 6am--45 minutes to go before my wave start. People were already lining up for the toilets, so I made that my first order of business. Right away afterward I ran into Mary and then Trista. Headed into the transition area and saw Hayley and TC along the fence; then Lynnie as I headed into my row and saw that she was only about 6 bikes down from me. Trista ended up being in about the same place as me, one row over. Awesome!

I went about setting all my gear. It looked like I had a mountain of stuff compared to the [really tall and skinny fast-looking] chick next to me. I felt like a bit of a wuss, but then reminded myself that she had probably done this before. I hadn't, and I was damn for certain planning to be ready for any eventuality!

Jersey, armwarmers, cycling shorts. Beach towel so I could change without putting on a show. Helmet, gloves, and shades. Socks and shoes, baby powder for the feet. Extra water for rinsing the feet. Spray sunblock. Cham butter. Extra foil packs of cham butter and sunblock for jersey pockets. Gel + water for transition. Mountain of food for bike leg: 12 Fig Newtons, 3 uncrustables, 4 gels, and 2 tubes of shot blocks, just in case. 2 bottles of Gatorade endurance. Yikes. That is a LOT of crap!

I pulled on my wetsuit (a totally awesome sleeveless Xterra, a b-day present from Sarah and Neyssa), grabbed my cap and goggles, and got ready to head down to the water...and was stopped by Lynn. She asked if I would please go to the porta potties with her one more time. Can't say no to the training buddy, so I tossed down my cap and goggles, and off we went. There were a LOT of people ahead of us in line...Leigh and Meredith went by, and Leigh looked at us with some surprise--pointing out that it was already 630, and what on earth were we doing in line? WHAT??? 10 minutes left until we get into the water to warm up???? Amazingly, we made it through (and I ended up being glad for the second trip!!!) in time to sprint back through the transition area, grab our caps and goggles, and get down to the water!

Dee and Jack (Lynn's parents), Hayley, and Leigh (Lynn's sister) were down by the water waiting for us among the throng. One or two more quick pictures, and our wave was sent into the water to warm up. EEEEK!

We splashed our way in, took a few excited strokes, and began jockeying for a good position. Vineman has a deep water start, so it's a bit anti-climactic and doesn't require too much strategy; still, neither of us was interested in being swum over by a bunch of crazy-aggro tri-chicks. 30-34 is a pretty vicious age-group, after all! Lynnie and I exchanged a few ecstatic high-fives and yelled and shouted with the rest of the wave. We were going to do an IRONMAN TODAY!!!!!

1 minute...30 seconds...5, 4, 3, 2, 1!!! The airhorn went off and we were on our way! As is usual for me during a race, about 30 seconds into the swim all the roiling, boiling nerves and anticipation (and stomach distress) just melted away. I was in motion and had work to do, dammit!



The Vineman swim is truly beautiful. It's two 1.2 mile loops (up and back .6 miles) along the Russian River. The river is so dammed up by the end of the summer that the current is almost negligible; there was very little difference in the feeling of swimming upstream vs. downstream. The morning fog that hangs above the river in the summer is hauntingly surreal and reminded me a bit of Humboldt.


The first 1/4 of the swim I basically just tried to settle into a rhythm. I held it in check and tried not to go out too hard. I kept reminding myself to enjoy the day--as big a task as an Iron distance race is, the day would be over and behind me before I knew it. It wasn't long before I was passing caps from waves ahead of me, and that felt pretty good. I made it to the turnaround point--a spot in the river with places where the water is literally 18 inches deep. A lot of people were actually walking around the turnaround point. Totally race legal, but a bit irritating. It's much more effecient to swim through if you can, and they were in my way!


The second 1/4 of the swim was downstream, and while I hadn't felt especially slow swimming upstream, I definitely felt faster heading downstream! Awesome. Along the way, I found myself getting caught up with a LOT of slower-swimming men from waves ahead of me. Nothing against them as athletes (let's face it, I'm sure every one of them whipped my ass on the bike), but they are no fun to swim with. For starters, their sighting sucks...even more than mine. So they are difficult to get past, because they keep zigging and zagging around. Next...well...they don't swim well--so they keep changing into breastroke to take a break from freestyle. No big deal, unless you are trying to get around them--and then you inevitably take a frog kick to the kidneys (if you're lucky, otherwise it's your face). Anyway...somewhere in the process of running the gauntlet of breastroking-old-dudes, I found myself off course in a wider part of the river. I corrected my sighting, swam under the bridge, and rounded the swim start for lap 2.

During the third 1/4 of the swim, I started to feel my shoulder complaining a bit...strangely, my left shoulder MORE than my right. I focused on the glide and it felt a bit better. I now knew the landmarks along the shore from the first lap, and so was able to pace myself and sight much more effectively. It felt like I reached the turnaround a lot faster, and this time it was much less congested by water-walkers.

The fourth 1/4 of the swim...I felt like I was on fire! I imagined the current carrying me along and could almost feel it pushing me back to the start. My sighting was the best it has ever been! I am positive my second lap was faster than the first. Too bad I'll never know. I came under the bridge to the cheering throng on the shore, sighting more frequently to avoid overshooting the swim exit. I quickly spotted it, filled with staggering disoriented triathletes and flanked by barrels from La Crema. I stroked all the way in until I could grab the bottom of the river and popped up to my feet.

As I waded to the exit, I tried to shake off the usual spinny, disoriented feeling that comes after an open water swim. It was worse than usual. Nerves? Particularly long swim? Who knows. I walked up the ramp and over the timing mats, smiling for the cameras. I saw my parents and M right away. Walked into the transition area and over to the volunteer wetsuit strippers--a bunch of familiar faces from TNT! I laid down as they instructed and let them yank my suit off. Whee!



Okay...next up, part2-- T1 + cycling! :-)


Not abandoned, I swear!

Okay...I haven't been here in a long time--training for an Ironman is pretty time-consuming, especially when you work full time and are also trying to have some semblence of a life!

I am working on a race report post.

Monday, April 06, 2009

Vineman training: weeks 3 and 4

Ah, the bloggy has been a bit neglected. I said it to a friend the other day and I'll say it again...dedicated athletes must all be either hermits or monks. Training for an Ironman is hard when you're gainfully full-time employed and coach on the side! So rather than detailing weeks 3 and 4 day by day, I'll hit some of the highlights.

1) Getting hooked up with some coaching through Menlo Masters and Tattersols. Already both have proved very valuable in the form of kickass swim and track workouts. It's good for me to have an experienced coach dishing out the punishment in focused doses. I have no problem getting the volume done on my own, but it is hard to hit any kind of intensity when you are training by yourself. I never knew until last week I was capable of holding a 1:30 to 1:35 pace in the pool for any length of time. I also now know that I'm strong and have good running form, but my cadence sucks and will be the kiss of death at Vineman if I don't improve it soon.

2) A couple great rides with a great group of gals. 40 miles just with Sarah, followed a week later by a headwind-laden 44 miler with Steph, Lynn, Hayley, CJ, Brigitte, Sara, and Meabon. Steph jumped right in and taught everyone how to paceline...thank goodness, who knows if we'd have gotten back by now otherwise!

3) Wildflower practice weekend with the team. This ended up being a great key training weekend for me--I went down early with the gals and pre-rode the long course bike loop on Friday. Saturday I swept the Olympic bike course with CJ, and then on Sunday ran/walked (and partly just ran) the 10k Olympic run course with Steph.

4) A couple of long runs with Sarah before she had her Achilles surgery. It was good to get those in. I can't wait until she can do it again. :-)

Monday, March 16, 2009

Vineman training: week #2

Monday, 3/9: Took an unauthorized recovery day. It was much needed after The previous Sunday's ordeal. Kept it to about 40 minutes of yoga.

Tuesday, 3/10: Spinning at Trek in San Jose. No Lynn and Hayley; as they are going back to work at the pub on Tuesdays for the next month or so. Spin up drill, followed by one short climbing drill, followed by LOTS of sprints. We did 10 sprints, 15" each, in the highest gear possible, building cadence the whole time. 1:45 recovery in between. This was right up my alley...I LOVE fast twitch stuff, really jumping on it. After the first 5, Bill looked at me and asked if I could even feel them. I said yes, but apparently he saw right through me; after that, we had to sprint in the biggest gear we could hold 100+ cadence at. Holy. Crap. Then we did 5 more sprints, only 8" long, with 52" recovery. Legs pretty much died. Then one more short climbing drill and that was it. Probably the most toasted I have ever felt after a spin--it was great.

Wednesday, 3/11: Did about 45 minutes of corrective work on my shoulder, and thenI went to my first-ever Tattersols workout. Tattersols is a all female running and racing team that meets at the Stanford Track every Wednesday evening. I had been kind of nervous about it; CJ had told me they are all really fast, so I was worried I might just get totally smoked. It wasn't bad though, I think I may have been a bit more "middle-of-the-pack." It was a relay-based workout, and I couldn't say how far I ran...just that I ran a lot. It was a lot of fun and a great workout.

Thursday, 3/12: First swim workout of training. I have joined Menlo Masters, but the heater has been broken since I joined, and I am sorry but I am NOT going to swim in a 68-70 degree pool...I don't need the swim time THAT badly. So, I went to Rinconada. It's so peaceful, really one of my favorite places to swim. I went 2300, and the shoulder actually felt pretty good!

Friday, 3/13: Took another recovery day.

Saturday, 3/14: Team workout at 8am. Riding from Edgewood and Canada. It was COLD, and I ended up sweeping the Elites (intermediate) riders on a 20 mile ride. So it was slow, slow, slow...and I was frozen. I think I burned 3 calories riding and about 2000 just trying to stay warm. Afterward, stood around at the intersection for another 2+ hours waiting for everyone else to finish practice. Then went for my own run with Sarah, 6 miles. Felt absolutely shredded but she managed to drag me through it. I pretty much went home and collapsed.

Sunday, 3/15: Rode 40 miles of rollers, again with Sarah, again feeling a bit shredded. At least I wasn't as cold as I was Saturday. Came down Edgewood into Redwood City. Scary. Not sure I am gonna do that again.

So...things I clearly need to figure out are eating a bit better for improved recovery, and fitting in some more resistance training.

Monday, March 09, 2009

Vineman training: week #1

Here's how the past week of training went.

Monday, 3/2: Sign up for full Vineman at 4pm. Immediately start freaking out. Frantically start texting Stephanie, who advises me to sign up for a half-iron distance sometime in May. Sign up for the Auburn Half. Freak out some more.

Tuesday, 3/3: Meet with Stephanie to set up training program. Realize I can probably do this. Go to Bill's spin class at San Jose Trek at 7pm, wherein I find that Lynn and Hayley will now be regular attendees, since Lynn is going to be training with me.

Wednesday, 3/4: Have every intention of going to Tattersols in the evening, but realize that my schedule needs a little reworking for me to make a 630pm track workout for the next 5 months. Opt for a 5 mile run/walk with Sarah.

Thursday, 3/5: Session with Kristi-the-insanely-strong-massage-therapist to reset my dials for some serious training. She spends her time, in order of most important to least important, on right calf, left calf, right IT band, left IT band, and right shoulder. It was so intense I thought I might puke once or twice. Coach track in the evening for TNT.

Friday, 3/6: Everything is still very tender to the touch from Kristi's work of yesterday. No working out.

Saturday, 3/7: Coach swim/bike workout for TNT in early am. Then head out for 5 mile run at the dish (again with Sarah). Kristi has done great work as usual, everything feels great, nothing tightens up...however, in the evening I notice that my IT bands are covered with bruises. Holy mackerel.

Sunday, 3/8: Meet at Piedmont and Sierra to ride Calaveras loop with Lynn, Hayley, Caroline, Brigitte, Denise, and Ivy. About 5 miles up, Ivy falls over while trying to clip out and breaks her ankle...badly. Luckily we are still low enough to get decent cell phone reception, and a couple off-duty police officers stop to help us. The paramedics get her taken care of quickly with stabilization and pain meds, and then transport her and Hayley to the hospital. Now there are 5 chicks with 7 bikes--5.3 miles away from our cars--and nobody feels much like riding anymore. CJ and Brigitte hop a ride down the hill with one of the police officers. They came back up in their cars and somehow we manage to stuff 7 bikes and 5 women into a sedan and an SUV, with a total of 2 actual bike rack slots between them. Pretty amazing. We all meet up at the hospital to see that Ivy is getting good care and that her family is arriving to take care of her. We take off one by one and I head back up the peninsula a little freaked out, but with the pressure of needing to ride another 25 miles in the back of my mind. So I head to Sarah's house, and bless, her she is willing to head out and back with me for 25 miles on Foothill, just for the saddle time. I am shaken but I think it is good that I got back onto my bike right away.

Now, it's Monday...should be a swim day, but I was so tired after yesterday's ordeal that I just wanted to sleep in and ditch the 7am masters workout. Got an email from Ivy, and she was prepped and ready for surgery by 4pm yesterday afternoon; today she has 2 screws and a plate in her ankle, and clearly, she will not be doing Wildflower this year. :-(

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

This just in...

Wow. A lot has happened since I ventured here.

The long and short of it:

I have signed up for and am now training for Vineman 2009, a full Iron-distance triathlon to take place on August 1st in Santa Rosa, California.

I still have a broken wing, but according to physician, swimming, biking, and running are all still okay. I will probably need shoulder surgery, but I really won't be delaying it that long, if at all...I would probably have scheduled it in August anyway, as that is my slowest month of the year at the gym.

Right now, I am frantically writing a workout schedule and signing up for "tune-up" events leading up to the big day. I have a lot of details to work out. I will post more when I have a bit more of a fence around it.

Oh, my lord. Five short months. What have I done? :-D

Monday, January 19, 2009

broken wing

So...I gotta have shoulder surgery. It hasn't been 100% confirmed yet, but I know it's true. Curse my education. I went in and had it examined last Wednesday. 2+/3 laxity in all directions on both shoulders, and a positive O'Brien's test on the right. What's that mean you say? Well...it's not very good.

Given my age and my long history of shoulder issues, this is probably what I've got.

Cycling, running, and believe it or not, swimming are okay. Probably plenty of yoga, although I've identified a few poses that make me pretty uncomfortable. Aside from that...it'll be lots of superlegs. I've got a 30 minute lower body blitz scheduled with a colleague tomorrow. Oh, yeah...and lots of shoulder pre-hab.

So...no Olympic lifting, limited kettlebells, no pushups, no pullups, and probably no crossfit either. Boo. Hiss.

What really sucks it that it is starting to bug me at work.

I was pretty bummed at the outset, and believe me, I'm still pretty unthrilled...but I just read and article about Dara Torres. Five knee surgeries and three shoulder surgeries.

So someday I can be Supergirl again. :-)

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Fun with heart rate monitoring

For several years I have been perched on the edge of the heart rate debate. Train with one or without one? Heart rate based training can be a powerful tool to increase your lactate threshold and enforce periodization...on the other hand, I think many ahtletes become overly dependent on their heart rate monitors. It's important to remember that your heart rate provides only a small picture of what is happening to you physiologically when you train. A number that is a bit "off" that day doesn't necessarily mean a bad workout. The heart is a muscle, too, and just like your quads and hamstrings, it has limits. It can get fatigued. Sometimes it needs a day or two to recover before it can rev back up to 90% of your max.

Anyway, enough of all that. I got one for Christmas, and I've been playing with mine for the past few workouts and having fun:

Sunday: Rode about 30 miles with one significant climb. At a comfortable working pace, it hovered around 144-146. During the hardest efforts of the climb, it got to 162. According to the monitor I burned about 1200 kcals.

Tuesday: Did some yoga in the afternoon. Downward Facing Dog: 75-80. Flank Stretch: Got up to 102. Corpse: 53. All others were about 82-84. Only burned maybe 80 kcals. Then went to my evening spin class: During the spin-up drill: got to 154. During the drill that came after that which was REALLY REALLY hard: got up to 159. During the sprint series: got up to 162. During each 3 minute recovery: got down in the 120's. During the 1 minute recoveries: lucky to get down to the 140's.

Thursday: Quick 2+ mile run. Comfortable working pace: 148-152. Did four 15 second pickups at about 80% effort: got to 159, 160, 161, and 162. Then did shoulder prehab: 120-130. Who knew.

Should pre-hab is another issue entirely, for another post.

interesting

I actually felt my abs all day yesterday after my Tuesday night spin class. Cool!

More posting to come later today. I have much that I am thinking about.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Spin FAIL

I was so excited about making back to Trek to spin last night after week after week of illness and being out of town...it seems anyway. I had a slow leak in my front tire that had needed to be addressed for several weeks (yeah yeah, not riding enough, see previous sentence, okay?) and figured I could just re-inflate it and have it hold well enough for a 90 minute spin...and then just deal with it, um, this weekend.

Yeah, that didn't work. Couldn't get the sucker to hold air, no matter what. Changed the tube. STILL would not hold air. Why? Because the stems on the spare tubes I kept around for Eddie are, as it turns out, to short for the wheels on the new bike. Yeah...those nicer lightweight racing wheels have deeper rims. So I need to replace all my damn spares.

Anyway, at this point it was 655 (spin starts at 7) so I had to throw in the towel. Did an hour of yoga instead.

Then today I ran about 2 COLD miles, and then made up my own little W.O.D.

10 rounds of:
2 pullups
4 knees-to-elbows
8 burpees

When I'm feeling a bit stronger I think I will make it 3/5/7.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

no more sick!

I have been down with a nasty cold TWICE since 11/1. Rotten luck. Between that and Turkey Day I have missed 10 days of work since then. even MORE ROTTEN. Ending pity party now.

So today I worked out for the first time in 10 days.

Easy 2 mile run
Scaption/Scap-push/S-man plank/SA squat row to warmup
5 rounds of:
7x jumping pullups + knees to elbows
7x 65# hang cleans

Monday, November 17, 2008

in transition

Fall season has been interesting, to say the least.

The season culminated with Treasure Island and Silverman on Nov 8 and 9. I made it to what I could before crawling home to bed, sick as a dog. By and large, our team was very successful...most participants finished their events happy and empowered. I was very proud of them. A couple wrenches fell into the works, but that's the norm. Tri is complicated enough for an experienced athlete. There are bound to be mishaps in a group of twenty-or-so newbs.

And now, onward. I've been asked (and I've agreed) to join the spring coaching staff for 2009. Looks to be a good lineup again--Dave, Denise, CJ and me so far. Waiting to hear from the others for certain. We're meeting next Monday to set the schedule as well as we can ahead of time.

In the meantime...I'm going to enjoy my Saturdays for a little while. Tuesday spin classes at Trek have started up again. I'm giving serious consideration to joining a masters' swim team to kick start my suffering athleticism and waning enthusiasm for being a cheerleader and spectator. The holidays are upon us all already--and I'm going to give it my best go to avoid picking up any extra lbs. along the way.

Friday, October 17, 2008

this could be love



Thanks to Quoc, our web captain this season, here is a picture of me on one of the first few rides on the new steed. Damn, I look good on that bike. And I go far faster than my current fitness level should dictate. And carbon makes a really cool sound when you coast downhill: rumblerumblerumble.... She is as yet unnamed (though distinctly female) and she far exceeds my skill set when it comes to cycling. Hey, nothing wrong with a bike I can grow into, right?

As far as Eddie...he continues to languish in my dining room, still in search of a new rider. I reposted on craigslist last night, and once again, a new hit within 24 hours. Hooray. Hopefully someone [smaller] will see hime and love him as much as I have.

Monday, October 06, 2008

the verdict is in

After all was said and done, I went back to the guys I trust and who know me best.

I picked up my lovely new Trek Madone the day before yesterday. Ouch...$$$!!! However...I am looking at it as an investment in my health. The cumulative effects of riding a bike too small for me for 2+ years were no longer worth saving the cash... Before I could go 10 miles, my back hurt and my neck hurt. My knees bothered me on climbs. After long rides my traps would be in spasm for days. I just didn't want to ride anymore, and my beautiful [little] Bianchi wasn't doing me or anyone else any good just sitting on the storage rack.

Anyway, I went out yesterday afternoon for my first ride on the new steed. Holy crap. The bike practically rides itself. I cannot WAIT to see what I can make it do when I am back in racing shape. I did not feel my neck or back even once....and the descents! Even though they were pretty mild, I still felt a huge difference. This bike just felt like it rolled lazily along, whereas the little bike always felt too fast, like I was on the verge of losing control. Only downside...on the way back in, I blew a spectacular flat on Woodside Road. Like, a hole ripped in the tire--so a new tube wasn't going to cut it. I managed to rig a MacGuyver style patch from a Fig Newton wrapper that was stable enough to get me back to home base. Headed back into the shop today...Two hard-case Race-Lite puncture resistant tires, two new tubes (running low) and a new CO2 trigger....cha-ching!!!! Oh well. What's another f#$king $100, right? :-{

Meanwhile, Fast Eddie, my lovely little Bianchi, did not even sit on craigslist for 24 hours before somebody inquired about him. I'm showing him off (and possibly saying a sad goodbye) tonight.

Friday, September 26, 2008

test ride #3

Bill called last week to let me know he gotten in a 56 WSD for me to test ride. I had some time to go in a try it out today. I walked in the shop about 1145 and immediately ran into Kelly--we had some trouble locating the bike and he ended up having to call Bill to straighten things out. Turns out he had ordered a 1.5 instead of the Madone 4.5 for me to try, just to get the fit dialed in. I don't blame him--it's a pretty weird size to be ordering a high performance bike in, just for a test ride.

Anyway, Kelly pulled the 1.5 and got me on the trainer for a quick fit. Man...a WAY taller bike than I have ever ridden! Believe it or not, after watching a few pedal revolutions he raised the seat even higher. Felt pretty good. The reach was appropriately short, but I still felt like I had to reach "downhill" to get to the hoods, so he took it upstairs and switched out the stem. Then I was ready to roll.

I headed outside and struck off in the direction of the nearest climb (not far at all). Immediately I noticed how much more upright this bike had me sitting. The ride was pretty responsive, even though it was an aluminum frame. Not very aggressive, but definitely comfy. I even felt upright in the drops. I hit the hill and shifted down (nothing remarkable there--a 1.5 is spec'd with Tiagra, YUCK), then climbed up the ~1/2 mile climb to the top. Felt pretty good--handlebars were wider than I am accustomed to. I cruised around a bit at the top, and then turned around to head down...the true test.

Descending...was pretty good! I felt stable enough that I didn't ride the brakes much at all, and I didn't have to shove my butt way behind the saddle to take pressure off the front wheel.

Despite the fact that it was an aluminum frame spec'd out with lower end components, fit-wise it was possibly the most comfortable bike I've been on.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Two posts in one day!

Just to keep it all straight, while it is fresh in my mind.

Test ride #1 (last weekend): Trek Madone 4.7, standard size 54. It felt weird--my first experience on a full carbon frame. I could feel definite "squishiness" which I am now informed is "vertical compliance." Definitely responsive--I could feel it jump forward when I first hopped on the pedals. Was I in love with it? I'm not sure. Bill looked me over on it pretty thoroughly and then ordered a 56cm WSD for me to try. It just came in yesterday, so I will go back Sunday and see if it sings to me.

Test ride #2 (20 minutes ago): Specialized Roubaix Expert, standard size 52. I was a bit skeptical of the smaller size at first, but it turns out that Specialized geometry is designed to set the rider in a more upright position, conducive to longer rides. I took off on this bike like a shot--it damn near jumped out from under me when I first hit the pedal. I have to admit--this is a damned sexy ride. Light, responsive, crisp shifting. A little more $$$ than the Madone--in fact, way outside my original budget. And I feel a bit guilty--sorta like I'm cheating on the Trek boys with a bike that is younger, hotter, and can go all night (day?). Hmmmmm. Maybe I should have them build/spec out something a little more upscale for me to compare the Roubaix to. Argh.

Argh. Shopping for big expensive toys is fun but it also makes me want to tear out my hair.

finally a blip on the radar...

After a busy summer, I think it's time I re-enter the blog-o-sphere...

Fall season is in full swing and I'm coaching again.

After coasting on WF long course fitness for close to a year, it's finally fizzling out and it's time to recharge to training program. I'm on an extended hiatus from training for any events and from long runs in particular. Instead I'm going to try and bring up my cycling skills a bit.

First...get back to strength training. Started a new 6 week cycle yesterday of single-leg strength and flexiblity.
SS #1: (SL squatx12 each + GH raisex12) x2
SS#2: (12/12x horizontal woodchop + 12x b.board plank) x2
SS#3: (SL HF squatx12 each + 45#GMx12) x2

and, um, ow...my butt totally hurts today. Sigh.

Second...replace my blasted tiny little bike. I must say goodbye to little Eddie. I'm having a potentially sweet ride assembled for me at Trek (turns out I am a funky size, who knew?) and in the meantime will try to test ride a few comparable bikes made by Bianchi, Specialized, Cannondale, and Felt.

Third...ride more. Yeah, need to figure that one out.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

today's WOD

X-fit style ripped from Fitness Conduit.

For time:
21 box jumps
21 kettle bell swings (35#)
21 pushups
18 box jumps
18 KB swings
18 pushups
15 box jumps
15 KB swings
15 pushups
12 box jumps
12 KB swings
12 pushups
9 box jumps
9 KB swings
9 pushups
6 box jumps
6 KB swings
6 pushups
3 box jumps
3 KB swings
3 pushups

13:38.

Great for blowing off a little steam in short order.

Monday, June 02, 2008

At last!

I'm done coaching the spring season!

Our last team workout was Saturday morning at Redwood Shores, aka the Green Mile, for a swim and run.

Friday morning 29 members of the team are off to Maui to race King's Trail. I get my first Saturday off since February 1st!

Hooray. :-D

Of course, fall season is just around the corner--and I'm coaching again.