Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Race Report - I survived the Vineman IM distance triathlon

On Saturday, August 1, I completed The Vineman 2009 Ironman-distance Triathlon. 140.6 miles (vineman.com). It was an absolutely amazing day and experience. I will write other blog entries about my lessons learned and a review of my training program. Check back.

The Day Before
Richard and I arrived in Windsor, CA at Windsor High School for check in and a meeting on Friday. That process was not well run, and check-in took a long time. I had plenty of time to stand in line assessing the other competitors. I felt intimidated looking at people who seemed 10x more in shape than I felt. I was amazed at the variety in ages and body types walking around. But I also felt like everyone else looked relaxed and confident and I was freaking out on the inside.

After the meeting we went out with my Mom and Carlie to drive some of the race route. One other person I knew who was racing was a girl I 'met' 2 weeks earlier in an online triathlete's forum (trifuel.com). Kim and I had been emailing obsessively the last 2 weeks, sharing anxiety and strategy (such as it was) and concerns and questions and encouragement. Kim was not only doing her first IM, she was doing her ever triathlon. Very impressive!

The ride on the route was incredibly valuable. There were a few critical elements in the race that were important to see ahead of time. You would not want to be blind-sided by some of the turns and hills. There was one hill on the end of the bike loop we did not see that was an ass-kicking, and I wish I had seen it ahead of time; it's an important part of race preparation.

Viewing the hills did a lot for my repertoire of profanity, but not for my nerves.

I had a lovely pasta dinner with Richard, Mom and Carlie, and tried to go to bed early. I had been doing so all week to get myself on an early morning schedule and it worked well...I slept remarkably well the night before.

The Morning Of
The 4:30 a.m. wake-up call was not too painful. I had been really organized with my race items, so getting ready did not take me long. I watched the news while I ate breakfast (hard-boiled egg, bagel with peanut butter, banana and a little Nutella, chocolate milk) and didn't think too much about the race other than feeling prepared (in terms of my equipment and organization).

We drove to the race site at 5:15 wondering who we knew who would be awake. We assume only those on the East Coast with kids were probably up. (sorry for you!) When I started walking my stuff toward the transition area, the nerves kicked in. The Johnson Beach-front had people walking all over, standing in line for bathrooms and getting ready. I racked my bike and laid everything out and found Kim, who was right near me on the rack. We laid our stuff out and got in line for the restroom with Richard. All the while, the nerves were growing. I was looking at the muscles on people around me and just kept thinking I was underprepared and the first thoughts that I would not finish started creeping in. At one point, I was staring at the river thinking "this is the dumbest thing I have ever done."

There have been times, early in the training, when I had delusions about having a good race – I am a life-long competitor. But I had finally, after weeks of self-talk, convinced myself that as long as I finished before the 11:00 p.m. cut-off time, I would be happy. And really, there is no other way for me to have gone into this race.

As we were in line for the restroom talking, a woman behind us asked Kim and me if it was our first race. The women had only done one other one - in Switzerland! - and she said as long as we trained, we'd be fine. Kim seemed to feel better...but I immediately started thinking about the mental health day I took....the injury that stopped my running for a month over the holidays....the track workouts I nixed for a road workout....the fact that I let my weightlifting fall off..... I was really anything but confident.

Time flew by and we were still in line when they announced that the first heat of men needed to get lining up soon and if they were in line for the restroom, they'd better move to the front. I was not even in my wetsuit yet...the adrenaline started to flow as my dreams of being late to the race started to surface as I panicked I'd still be in line for the bathroom when my wave started.

The Swim – 2.4 Miles
Time was fine and we made it through set-up and into our wetsuits and down to the beach. The first wave of men went off at 6:30 a.m., followed by 2 more waves five minutes apart before the entire field of 160 women took to the Russian River. The river was warmer than expected, which was fantastic. This race is historically hot, so the fact that it never got out of the lower 80s was fantastic! The horn blew and off we went.

I had never done a straight 2.4 mile swim, and frankly swimming in a pool is not the same as swimming against and with currents and over the 3 waves of men in front of me. I had done 2 Olympic tri’s this summer and on the .9-mile swim I was just under 25 mins. So, adding in the distance, I figured 1:15 at best and 1:30 at (hopefully) worst. I did not see a clock out of the water, so I went out on the bike having no idea how I did. Only at the end did Richard tell me I had swam it (climbing over tons of people and walking 25 yards when the river got to be about 2 feet deep at the turn-around point) in :59.

The Transition
I got out of the water intent on following the advice I had read that said that a slow transition is best, to allow your body to adjust to the shock of having swam that distance and then getting on to a bike. I had a ‘stripper’ take off my wetsuit (one of the fun moments of the race) and went off to look for my bike…which strangely was not on the first two racks I looked at! I was apparently discombobulated. But I found it eventually and changed and headed out. Transition, even with the brainfuzz: 5:59. I’m pretty proud of myself for that….and happily surprised. Here was a piece of great advice….there was a small hill right off transition….I ran it instead of biking it….good decision.

The Bike – 112 Miles
The bike started at the beach, headed out for about 8 miles and then into a loop racers did twice, passing and then ending at Windsor High School, 15 miles from the start. There was a nasty sharp turn 5 miles into the race (just past the Korbel winery…had it been opened, I might have stopped!) and as I approached it, the volunteer directing traffic told me I was about 6 minutes off the lead women. I thought “don’t tell me that, I am here to finish, not to be competitive.”

The hills I had seen on the scout the day in the car were somehow not as bad on the bike, though I am guessing it had a lot to do with adrenaline.

I was wearing a watch and I completed the first half of the bike in 3:15. I was initially thrilled, but I kept trying to convince myself that I needed to dial it back or I was going to die on the run. Turns out, my legs don’t listen to me. I did the second leg in almost the same time.

The bike went through some gorgeous country and beautiful wineries. I was thinking of Richard, mom, Carlie and my friends Debbie and Scott, who might have been out wine tasting. I had given them an estimate of my time - I was hoping to average 15 mph - but I was doing much better than that, so they did not see me at any points until the transition to the run.

Among the advice I had gotten was all about fueling and hydrating, and it was advised to try to do a lot of the solid food fueling on the bike. Now, my road bike is ‘older’ – i.e., a 2001 model. It’s steel, not carbon, and is heavy compared to most contemporary bikes. This is likely to be the only IM I do, so I did not see the point in investing in an expensive new bike. I had trained on it, I was comfortable on it and, while I was tempted by lighter bikes, I had bought into the “I just want to finish” mentality and I did not figure a new bike would make a significant difference. When I was training, I carried all my fueling and hydrating sources in a commuter bag. During the race, there were 4 aid stations on the bike and at one you could leave a ‘special needs bag’ with food that you could stop and pick up. This was perhaps an area I should have done more investigation.

During my Olympic triathlons this summer I tried some ‘new formula’ Gatorade at an aid station and it was TERRIBLE and upset my stomach. But I was lucky that it was only a 10K run, so I was fine with just water. I was concerned that the supplies at the aid stations in the race would not be compatible with my stomach…which would be a race ender. So I hauled all my own stuff. I got a few remarks on my stuff, but I carried the commuter pack to have all tools for tire changing, 3 water bottles and food for the race that I was used to.

It turns out that would not have been needed in this case. The Gatorade Endurance and the food would have supplemented 2 water bottles and food I carried in my bike shirt just fine, but I didn’t now…so I had the extra weight on my bike. But how much it might have affected me is speculation at this point….I had hoped to finish in 7:30 – 8:30 hours, and I finished in 6:25.

This was also the point at which my lack of driving the entire route hurt me. Near the ending of the loop was a nasty hill that was bad the first time around….the second loop I knew it was coming and I feared it…and it hurt.

This was my first IM, so I cannot say if maybe I just went too fast, expended too much energy. I was concerned about my pace, but I was kind of excited about my time. That damn competitor in me coming out. My inexperience rearing its ugly head. Richard and crew were at the school waiting to see me off on the run. I decided to change into dry clothes, though I may not have needed it….but I had already pinned my number to a new jersey and so I changed. I had an idea of how well I had done on the bike, but still no knowledge of the swim and so no real knowledge of overall time.

The Run – 26.2 miles
The marathon was a 3-loop out and back from the school along some fairly country roads. It was a great route for spectators to see participants multiple times, and an excellent opportunity for participants to feed off the excitement of the crowd. People lined the last first/last half mile of the run and it made for a great energizer.

My first loop hurt. I chalked it up to the challenge of running after biking that distance. I felt okay – my fueling and hydrating strategy on the bike had worked. I did it in 1:31. But the muscles were sore. I walked the hills and the 4 aid stations (which I hit on both the out and back) and was rather unhappy about my progress. The second loop felt a lot better than the first and I felt like I was going faster than on the first. At a minimum I was running more. Yet, it was almost the same: 1:32. The third loop was a killer, 1:44. When I walked, I tried to walk no slower than 15-minute miles. I know I was good at that until my watch battery died. Then I THINK I kept up no slower than that pace. I still did the marathon in under 5 hours, but I won’t lie about my disappointment. I blame my training. I should have done more track workouts…..I should have pushed my running harder.

Because of the course design, I saw my personal fans on each loop and I saw a lot of the same people on the run. It was inspiring to see all the people I had seen at check-in – all ages, all body types – pushing themselves, working to finish, fighting their own demons, achieving their own goals. There was the para-athlete, there was the guy with the prosthetic, there were the Team-In-Training members. There was the 19-year-old I had traded positions with on the bike. There was the 71-year-old who impressed the hell out of me. There was Arkady, the leader of my running group, who had offered advice and support that made all of the difference, kicking butt for Team-In-Training. (Thanks Arkady!) I tried to cheer them all on. I tried to exchange pleasantries, supply encouragement. I saw Kim on each loop…and we shouted at each other with enthusiasm. We were Ironwoman.

The Finish
When I was within that last mile, I wanted to run. I was pushed by the crowd. I fed off the noise and applause (more cowbell please!). More than once that day, I was moved to tears, and now the waterworks started. Within sight of the school, I looked for my personal cheerleaders. In the last 50 yards, my mom handed me some pom poms my dad and step-mom had given me for Christmas as a show of support. The announcer proclaimed “there is nothing wrong for cheering for yourself” – not that I needed it….there were all kinds of supporters and I soaked it in. I paused at the finish line for the professional photographer, and finished with an official time of 12:20:49. 4th in my age group, 20th out of the women, 147th out of 683 athletes. The I hugged Richard, and bawled my head off.

The End
The end, and the days that follow, are strange. When you think about it – tell someone, look at your finishers medal, write a blog – you feel pride. But the rest of life goes on. You don’t have a scheduled workout, you’re not feeling stressed, you’re just done. It’s a weird feeling, almost anti-climactic. But when I feel weird, I think back to the moment I crossed. To my friends supporting me. To the feeling of accomplishment. I will now always be an Ironman Finisher…..it is a feeling I wish on all of you.

Major Thanks
This would not have been possible had it not been for the myriad people – both close to me and ‘strangers’ on chat boards – that expressed support and encouragement. I did absolutely think about that during the race. It is invaluable - and I hope I have the opportunity to pay it forward in spades. But some should be singled out:

Suzanne, Sunghee and Wendy – I greatly appreciate your mementos….they were in my transition pack before the run….and I did look at them and it did move me. Make no mistake….your gesture was very much needed and appreciated. Your thoughtfulness is powerful.

Kim – you came into my life on the internet, nothing more than a screen name and then an email. But you supported me in my darkest moments of doubt and I appreciate that immensely. Sharing this with you made it even more special….I am so proud of your accomplishment.

Dad and Ruth – I’m not sure which was more helpful, the pom poms or the Entra Strength Tylenol, but I greatly appreciated them both!

Arkady – Your willingness to share your experience and fantastic advice made the difference in my day. You are a mentor in every sense of the word and I know so many people owe their success to you…..including – especially - me.

Scott and Debbie – seeing your smiling faces cheering me on was more helpful than you know. The fact that I could smile after running those loops was because of your presence that lifted me up. I am touched by your support for me and you must believe me when I say your presence made a huge difference.

Mom and Carlie – Your support from the beginning and on-going encouragement carried me through. Your willingness to come all the way from Florida and spend part of your vacation tracking me around Sonoma was amazing. Seeing your faces at the finish made my day. I am so happy that I shared this experience with you both.

Richard – I know you think I am nuts and I don’t have much evidence on my side to argue against that. But I never, ever, would have accomplished this without you and I will forever be grateful for the love and support you give me. I love you most.

Thanks to you all for reading…….AJ….Ironman Finisher.



Wetsuits do not equal sexy!


Off we go!!!


Out of the water and out of the wetsuit!


On with the bike shorts! Quality shorts = good investment for 112 miles!



That was POM bike shirt courtesy of Richard....I love it! Powered my POM Wonderful!





I am not in this picture, but here's an idea of the bike.





Really...he could have NOT taken this picture. But I had to change!!!







Trying to push the transition!






Back on the first loop of the run. See all the spectators? Fantastic!









I loved the finishing line. Crossed with the pom poms....celebrating for myself!





J Sparkling Champagne.....the only way to celebrate!

Monday, July 20, 2009

Taper!

This week - keep time up but back off intensity. Next week, slow it down and rest.

This is not easy to do. Rest is a hard concept to come by. Especially when one feels unprepared. Like if I work hard this week I can make up for it.

But I keep reading and re-reading articles about the importance of rest and am trying to take it to heart. Afterall...it's still a 3-hour bike Saturday...it's just pulled back from the speed. We're in the home stretch. I had a pretty good last long weekend, I do feel strong...just wish I had done longer workouts. Mentally I feel like I should have done the whole IM already to know that I can on race day...but that's not how it works. So at this point I am trusting in the program and the adrenline.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

17 days left and the mental battle emerges

I wish I felt more confident, but the truth is I am scared to death.

I am honestly terrified I won't finish.

I am looking back and nitpicking the day I slacked here, the mental health day I took there. I've biked 100 miles one day, ran 18 another day - but don't feel like it's enough. There will be several more of these posts with increasing fear and anxiety I am sure and I apologize now for being whiny about something that - yes - I voluntarily signed up for and am paying to do.

This is the last week of 'intense' training before the 2-week taper. I am already thinking of modifying the program a little bit since it only calls for 4:45 biking this weekend and I think I should do another Century. (Which will take me more than 6 hours) I admit I am having a hard time thinking that what I have done is enough. But these are the mental things I cannot let pull me down.

I got some great advice from an article lately I desperately need to remember...#1 especially:

The Four Keys of Long-Distance Triathlon
1. Execution
It bears repeating: Race day is about execution, not fitness. We measure good execution by your ability to run well off the bike. There is no such thing as a good bike followed by a poor run. The simple fact is that the difference between a "slow" and a "fast" bike on race day is only about 15 minutes. If you've made the mistake of riding too slowly, you now have 26.2 miles of running to fix that mistake. But if you have made the mistake of riding too fast, that mistake now has 26.2 miles to express itself. And it will, usually to the tune of walking 18- to 20-minute miles for 8, 10, 14 miles as opposed to just continuing to run. Now you are going backwards through the field to the tune of hours!

2. The Line
Everyone will reach a Line on the last leg where continuing to run at the same pace, or just continuing to run at all, will become very, very difficult. Your focus on Execution above is critical to help create conditions for success at the Line. Success at this point it defined as not slowing down.

3. The Box
Your method of executing and creating conditions for success at the Line is to use your Box. The space inside this Box is defined by what you can control. Nutrition, for instance, is inside the Box because you can control when, how, and how much you eat. Weather and other athletes, on the other hand, are outside of the Box since you can't manipulate these factors, only adapt to them.

4. The One Thing
As your race day continues, you will eventually hit the Line. It's at this point that your body begins to debate, very loudly, with the mind. Unless you have a very clearly defined goal or compelling reason why you must continue, your body wins and your day will start...to get...very...long. Keep this goal or motivation in mind and use it as a lifeline that will bring you to the finish.

Monday, June 29, 2009

5 weeks to go, another Olympic Tri

I ran the Dina La Vigna Olympic Triathlon in St. Buenaventura Beach State Park in Ventura CA. A VERY well-run race. Professional, good volunteers, nicely executed. The course is pretty good, although I saw 7 people on the bike changing flats and it made me wonder about the roads. Having the run on a boardwalk that was technically open to the public was a little annoying, but there were no real problems.

I improved my time, though the courses were not entirely comparable. This was an ocean swim (so NOT a fan). It was a MUCH flater course, but every leg was also faster:

20:48 1.5K Swim (4 mins less)
1:25:43 40K Bike (11 mins less)
51:17 10K Run (1 min less)
2:37:49.8 OverallA very special thank you to Richard, who did not need to get up at 4:30 a.m., particularly after the week he had, yet did anyway. The swim shocks me in particular, since swimming in the ocean has a high suck value....mostly in the form of salt water gulps.

I got a Neoprene Wetsuit. It's a little big on me, I'm not thrilled about that (ordered online).But the bouyancy is still nice to have, and makes a pretty big difference in the race.

Monday, June 8, 2009

End of Week 28 - First Olympic Tri

Learned a lot.
Like I am not a fan of swimming in wetsuits.
Like my bike is old.
Like I am not the best biker.
Like I am still a huge chicken at riding down hills (and get passed by a LOT of people!).

But it was a good set of lessons to learn...less than 2 months until the IM!

Los Angeles Triathlon Series Frank Bonelli Park San Dimas, CA
June 7, 2009

1.5K (.93 mile) Swim 24:42 pace: 23 min/mile
40K (24.85 mile) Bike 1:36:28 pace: 3:52 min/mile (15.45 mph)
10K (6.2 mile) Run 52:20 pace 8:25/min mile

Total 2:57:47

I think the only reason I ran so fast is because I was SO pissed about the bike.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Nine weeks and counting....

Went to Vegas this weekend and got my arse kicked in the heat. But it was important. Not that it was Vegas...but that I pushed myself in heat. Apparently, race day could be hot.

Am comtemplating biking back to Vegas for the long Saturday bike...4:35, holy crap!

This week's butt-kicking:
Ultra Distance Group Competitive Season Week 6 Swim 3:00 - Bike 9:50 - Run 5:10 -- Total: 17:00

Monday
Total recovery day -- relax, recover, stretch out, and enjoy...

Tuesday
SWIM 0:45
WARM UP 400 Swim, 200 Kick, 300 Pull MAIN SET 4 x 400 @75-85% w/30 sec rest - every 4th length Choice COOL DOWN 200 @under 60%

BIKE 1:30 20:00 gearing pyramid as follows: - 4:00 in easy gear @50% - 6:00 in next harder gear @55-60% - 6:00 in next gear @60-70% - 4:00 up one more gear @75% MAIN SET 3 x (6.2mi / 10km / 17:00) as follows: - #1 @75%, followed by 3:00 recovery spin - #2 @84-92%, followed by 10:00 recovery spin - #3 @84-92% -- go straight into the cool down: COOL DOWN Continue spinning, bringing your HR down slowly until it's under 50% by the end
DAILY TOTAL: 2:15

Wednesday
Today's total is three hours -- the maximum that we'll ever ask you to do on a weekday -- and you'll need to keep your focus on making it through as easily as possible. Remember, high training volume = low training intensity!

RUN 1:15 15:00 warm up jog, allowing your body to slowly get up to 60-65% 4 x 7:00 steady tempo runs @70-75% w/3:00 @60-70% after each - focus on holding proper running form Bring your HR back down gradually, to 60% with 5:00 remaining down to 50% by the end.

BIKE 1:45 WARM UP 20:00 spinning @90-95rpm DRILLS 2 x 3:00 Isolated Leg Training w/30 sec recovery after each 3 x 4:30 Variable Gearing ("VG") set w/30 sec recovery spin after each - each repeat goes 3 x thru the following: - 40 sec in moderate gear @95-100 rpm - 20 sec in easy gear @110-115 rpm - 30 sec in hard gear @85-90 rpm repeat the following: 2 x 3:00 Isolated Leg Training w/30 sec recovery after each MAIN SET 2 x (6.2mi / 10km / 18:00) @75% w/2:00 sec easy spinning - hold 90-95rpm cadence throughout COOL DOWN 15:00 easy spin (small chain ring) @95rpm, allowing your HR to return to 50% for the final few minutes.

DAILY TOTAL: 3:00
WEEK-TO-DATE: 5:15

Thursday
SWIM 1:00 WARM UP 400 Swim - 200 Kick - 200 IM MAIN SET 8 x 250 w/30 sec rest (Alternate set: 8 x 200 w/30) - descend 1-4, 5-8 - the first one in each set of 4 should be @75%; the last one at race pace COOL DOWN 600 Pull, long and relaxed

RUN 1:05 As usual, this session is designed to be done at a track. The durations are included in case you need to run on the road instead. 15:00 easy jog, gradually raising your HR to 70% This first intermediate set is designed to elevate your HR for the main set: 4 x In & Out (100 / 20 sec) -- 800 total The main set is designed to get your HR elevated relatively quickly and then held in the suggested zone for the entire period -- the rest intervals will only be enough to allow you to catch your breath, not fully recover. 3 sets of: 4 x (400 / 1:45) @84-92% w/(100 / :30) easy jog after each - take an additional (800 / 4:00) between sets Jog easy @60% or below to the end
DAILY TOTAL: 2:05 WEEK-TO-DATE: 7:20

Friday SWIM 0:45 WARM UP 400 Swim - 200 Kick - 200 IM MAIN SET 2 sets of (5 x 150 @75-80% w/30 sec rest); w/1:00 btwn sets - set #1 is Swim; #2 is Pull (ALTERNATE SET: 2 sets of 4 x 150) COOL DOWN 200 easy swim
BIKE 1:00 This is an easy recovery workout designed to give you some relief before the long weekend. If you're dragging and need some additional recovery, feel free to skip this one -- but make up for it tomorrow! WARM UP 20:00 spinning @95rpm gradually raising your HR up to 65-70% DRILLS 3 x 3:00 Isolated Leg Training w/30 sec recovery after each Continue spinning @65-70% intensity & 90-95rpm cadence Bring your HR down under 50% by the end.
DAILY TOTAL: 1:45 WEEK-TO-DATE: 9:05

Saturday This is one of the epic "Iron Days" that you'll have prior to your race, to instill confidence that your body, your equipment, and your fueling strategies are going to be where you need them to get through your big day. Approach this weekend as one big challenge, and have fun with it!

SWIM 0:30 This can be put in either first thing in the day -- to simulate the order in a triathlon -- or last in the day, to enable a more complete recovery. And, if you're completely shot, you can also skip this entirely (believe me, I've been there!). 800 warmup swim, gradually getting your HR from 60-70% If you're doing this workout last, then reverse the intensities (80-75-70-65%) 400 @65% - 300 @70% - 200 @75% - 100 @80%

BIKE 4:35 Get psyched, be prepared, bring along enough spare tires, and test out your fueling strategies here. I've always found it more realistic and manageable (though mentally challenging) to break this kind of ride into multiple loops, with each one ending back at the house, to help simulate an aid station -- more like the "turnaround point"! If the weather is awful today, then feel free to switch the Saturday and Sunday schedules. Get out there and enjoy!

RUN 0:50 Remember, the duration is really what counts, and you're all teaching your bodies what they will need to do to keep going and going... Again here, plan to have substantial aid available before and during this effort. You're likely dehydrated after your ride (it's much harder to gauge how thirsty you are on the bike), and you'll benefit from your run much more if you approach it slowly and gradually. Break this into multiple loops if necessary, and keep going! DAILY TOTAL: 5:55
WEEK-TO-DATE: 14:00

Sunday, 6/29 What's in store after yesterday? You can view this as being the "rest of the run" -- or a "bike sandwich" as it's been known to be called. You'll begin with essentially no legs, and slowly you'll find life returning to them. Then you'll hop on your big for an extension of the run, which will hopefully also help circulate the blood and help you feel stronger. And finally, you'll finish with your final "victory lap" to the finish...

RUN 1:20 I've found it easiest here to break this into 40 minute segments, preferably as loops that begin and end at the house -- it's sometimes even better if it's broken into one 50-minute and one 30-minute segment following different routes. Keep your HR below 70% throughout, which after yesterday shouldn't be too tough...

BIKE 1:00 This can be done on the road for the sake of more scenery, though the intensity (hold it under 70% here as well) will be easier to control indoors. If you're inside, break it up as follows: 3 aerobic intervals @60-70% intensity w/3:00 recovery after each: - #1 (8.4mi / 13km / 22:00) - #2 (5.6mi / 9km / 17:00) - #3 (2.8mi / 5km / 9:00) RUN 0:40 Then it's back outside for your final "victory lap"! DAILY TOTAL: 3:00 WEEK-TO-DATE: 17:00

Sunday, May 17, 2009

10 weeks to go...

And one of us is getting scared.

It felt a little better after a week of pretty great workouts....55 miles biking yesterday (plus run and swim)...14 miles running today...then I looked to the week ahead. Note Saturday's notes...

Weekend Note: This is the first "serious" weekend of activity. The optimal layout involves a long ride on Saturday (anywhere from 60-70 miles -- though you shouldn't worry about the total distance covered) and an extended run-bike-run (a "bike sandwich") on Sunday.

REALLY??? First SERIOUS weekend? That scares me....but off I go....


Ultra Distance GroupCompetitive Season Week 5 Swim 2:30 - Bike 6:00 - Run 3:30 -- Total: 12:00
This is designed to allow recovery during the week with some extended long work on the weekend. Since we've begun to add significant high intensity work -- and will be adding more in the future -- it's important to take some extensive recovery time every 4-6 weeks to enable the body to rebuild completely before progressing further. This week's hard intervals will be shorter and the durations of most of the workouts have been significantly reduced. By the end of the week you should be ready to tackle the weekend, as well as the next cycle.

Monday Total day off -- relax and allow your body to rebuild. Remember, rest with as much intensity as you train!

Tuesday SWIM 0:45 WARM UP 6 x 150 continuous, alternating Swim (#1 & 4) - Kick (#2 & 5) - Pull (#3 & 6) MAIN SET 3 x 300 w/30 sec recovery #1 @80-85% #2 @85-90% #3 @90+% COOL DOWN 600 Pull @70% -- use perfect technique and minimize your stroke count

BIKE 1:00 10:00 getting your HR up to 60% -- straight into 5 x 20 sec fast spinning (100+ rpm cadence) w/40 sec recovery spin @90 rpm MAIN SET We're going to play around with this set a bit, asking your legs to recruit different muscle fibres by adjusting your cadence in the middle of each repeat. Forcing this adjustment serves two purposes: it simulates real riding more closely, and it helps promote pedaling efficiency. It's tougher, for sure -- have fun with it! 2 x 10:00 @84-92% w/10:00 @60-70% after each each 10:00 repeat should be done as follows: - 2:00 @85-90 rpm (hard gear) here's where you adjust your gearing (6:00 total) - 4 x (30 sec @95-100 rpm -- 10 sec @105-110 rpm -- 50 sec @85-90 rpm) - 2:00 @85-90 rpm (hard gear) COOL DOWN Continue spinning @~100 rpm, bringing your HR back down gradually to 60% with 5:00 left, and finally below 50% by the end.
DAILY TOTAL: 1:45

Wednesday
RUN 0:40 15:00 warm up jog, allowing your body to slowly get up to 60-65% by the end. 2 x 7:00 steady tempo run @70-75% intensity w/3:00 recovery jogging @60% in between - focus on holding proper running form Bring your HR back down to 60% with 5:00 remaining & 50% by the end.

BIKE 1:00 WARM UP 15:00 spinning @90-95rpm - get your HR up to 60% in the first 10:00 and closer to 70% by 15:00 DRILLS These drills are designed to help smooth your pedal stroke for greater efficiency: 2 x 3:00 Isolated Leg Training w/30 sec recovery after each MAIN SET 3 x 7:00 @75% w/2:00 easy spinning - hold 90-95rpm cadence throughout COOL DOWN 10:00 easy spin (small chain ring) @95rpm, allowing your HR to return to 50% for the final few minutes.
DAILY TOTAL: 1:40 WEEK-TO-DATE: 3:25

Thursday

SWIM 1:00 WARM UP 800 Swim - every 4th lap Kick MAIN SET 12 x 100 w/15 sec rest alternate 2 Swim - 2 Choice - 2 Pull w/Paddles (twice through) 4 x 75 w/10 sec rest - each 75 is (25 moderate freestyle - 25 choice - 25 fast freestyle) COOL DOWN 600 easy swim, minimizing your stroke count

RUN 0:50 Standard track workout format -- use the suggested times only if you can't get to a track. 15:00 easy jog, gradually raising your HR to 70% - finish with 1-2 laps of accelerated running down the straightaways to get you ready for the main set: This set totals slightly less than 5km and should be done at a relatively high intensity. Challenge yourself to push toward faster times -- this is where progress is made! 4 x (1200m / 5:00) w/(400m / 2:00) easy jog after each - use #1 to elevate your HR up close to 84% by the end - #2, 3, & 4 should be hard efforts within the 84-92% AT zone Jog easy @60% or below to the end -- walk 2-3:00 to complete your cool down
DAILY TOTAL: 1:50 WEEK-TO-DATE: 5:15

Friday
SWIM 0:45 WARM UP 400 easy swim MAIN SET 3 x 200 (50 Kick - 25 Right Arm - 25 Left Arm - 100 Swim) w/20 sec rest - concentrate on maintaining a low stroke count per length for the final 100 Swim 4 x 100 IM w/10 sec rest 6 x 50 Swim (25 easy - 25 fast) w/5 sec rest COOL DOWN 300 easy swim
DAILY TOTAL: 0:45 WEEK-TO-DATE: 6:00

Weekend Note: This is the first "serious" weekend of activity. The optimal layout involves a long ride on Saturday (anywhere from 60-70 miles -- though you shouldn't worry about the total distance covered) and an extended run-bike-run (a "bike sandwich") on Sunday. The idea is to offer your body a solid idea of what an extended duration of activity feels like. Ideally these kinds of weekends will begin with a ride that will help you test your fueling strategies (you should stop as little as possible), and finish with a run that puts you solidly in the aerobic zone for an extended period of time. In future training cycles this weekend will get slightly higher in intensity and will even include an extra run on Saturday (we'll even include a short swim once or twice to give you the total triathlon experience). This extension of activity should also be building your confidence that you can complete a full Ironman distance race, if that's what your future goals include. You'll notice that we haven't included an indoor alternative for Saturday -- this is because we want you to ride outdoors, if at all possible. If the weather is cold and rainy on Saturday, feel free to switch the two days and try for Sunday; if Sunday's weather is equally unattractive, then go ahead and choose an indoor alternative from a previous weekly schedule. The bottom line is that we'd really like you to get outside this weekend, on both days, for an extended "Iron Weekend" of great outdoor training. Have a great time with it!

Saturday
BIKE 3:30 You should still be scheduling all of your longer weekend rides outdoors, weather permitting. In fact, if the weather is poor on Saturday and the forecast calls for improved weather on Sunday, then we'd recommend that you switch the two days to enable you to get some long "road time".

DAILY TOTAL: 3:30 WEEK-TO-DATE: 9:30

Sunday
RUN 1:10 You might find it helpful to mentally break this run into 35:00 chunks. I always find that to be more manageable than a full hour, for some reason, and it helps maintain the focus throughout this longer duration. Spend the first 20:00 getting into it, watching your HR slowly get above 60% 2 x 20:00 @75% w/5:00 @60-65% in between

BIKE 0:30 Immediately after the run...hold the intensity @70-75%

RUN 0:50 I'm going to ask you to really challenge yourself here -- time to up the tempo and close out your week with a bang. Remember, you've got tomorrow off, so go out there and make this a strong effort. You'll be starting with a fast tempo right out of the blocks: 2 x 15:00 above 80% w/10:00 @60% after each

DAILY TOTAL: 2:30 WEEK-TO-DATE: 12:00