Monday, December 25, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/24/2023

This week was 61 miles of running, 18 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

Last week of this training cycle.  It admittedly didn't go as well as I would have liked.  Tuesday's track workout was in frigid conditions on a slightly slippery track before dawn.  I just could never get warmed up and felt like I was going to pull a muscle if I forced myself to do the track workout, so I bailed and just ran easy.  

The next morning I headed over to the gym to run a workout on the treadmill (my own treadmill is awaiting a replacement part).  I went with tempo intervals as both a bit more relevant to marathon training and a bit safer on the treadmill.  

The workout went well but was tiring.  In retrospect I should have kept the mileage lower on Thursday in the name of recovery, but I didn't.  

Saturday's long run was sluggish and slow - I suspect that this was at least partially due to inadequate recovery.   I also wore a pair of shoes that had lost their bounce and are now retired, and I suspect that played a role too.

I'm now 3 weeks out from Houston, so my focus is on recovering and then sharpening.

Monday:  Upperbody weights/core and 9 "miles" pool-running. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles, including a failed track workout (dropped out during first lap); streaming yoga and foam rolling in afternoon.
 
Wednesday: 10 miles on the treadmill, including a workout of 7x5 minutes at tempo effort (8.4 mph) with one minute jog.  Followed with leg strength work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 10 miles very easy on trails (10:36) and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 12.5 miles very easy (9:40) and upper body weights/core Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 18 miles progressive, split as the first 5 miles averaging 9:40 pace, next 5 miles averaging 8:32 pace, and next 8 miles averaging 7:50 pace.  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  90 minutes pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, December 17, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/17/2023

This week was 65 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and ~1000 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

I've now been off of the Lexapro for 3 weeks (which is how long I was on it) and I feel like my old self again, which is a great feeling.  Saturday's long run was a good confidence boost, especially given the fact that I (intentionally) did it on tired legs.

I'm now 4 weeks out from Houston, and so I'm going to start pulling back slightly on the mileage while increasing the intensity over the next few weeks.

Monday:  9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday:  Upperbody weights/core and 7.5 miles trail running (10:26). Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 11 miles very easy (9:27) including some grass running, plus strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  10 miles, including 8 Iwo Jima hills (alternating 2:00-2:50 of uphill running with 30-40 second downhill stride).  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 11 miles very easy (9:41) including some grass running, plus drills and strides.  Streaming yoga and foam rolling in the evening.

Saturday: 17.5 miles, with 2x5 miles at marathon effort with 1 mile float in between.  Splits were 37:24 (7:37/7:27/7:30/7:20/7:30 - average pace 7:29) and 37:13 (7:37/7:26/7:29/7:27/7:14 - average pace 7:27) with 1 mile float between the two in 8:32. Followed with injury prevention work and 500 meters recovery swimming.   Foam rolling in afternoon.

Sunday:  8 miles trail running (10:17).  Foam rolling in afternoon.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/10/2023

This week was 60 miles of running and 1000 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

If you're wondering about Tuesday's workout, our local track is a mess. The infield is being replaced, which means metal fencing in lanes 1 and sometimes 2 and a weird plywood/tarp "road" across the track for the machinery to use to get to the infield.  (Pictures can be seen here). So, on Tuesday we did one lap repeats that started after the plywood track crossing and finished before, with the laps being run in lanes 2, 3, and 4.  I'm not sure what the exact distance was for each repeat, but that's fine - the effort is what matters most in a workout.

On Sunday I ran a 15K as a tune-up race for Houston.  Not the time I wanted, but I was happy with the placing and the effort, so it was overall a good day.  Race report.  I think I'm still bouncing back from the three weeks that I was on Lexapro, so that's another reason not to worry too much about the paces.  I did feel like I could go forever, which is a good feeling before a marathon.

Two more weeks of marathon training, and then I taper.

Monday:  8.5 miles very easy (9:29) and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles, including a track workout of 15x ~400, starting at 1:40 and descending down to 1:36.  Recoveries were 1:40 to 2:00 at first, and shortened to 60-70 seconds by the end.  Followed with leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 8.5 miles very easy (9:41).  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  Upperbody weights/core and 6 miles trail running (10:24).  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 8 miles, including a 1600 in 7:06 and some strides.  Followed with injury prevention work. Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 4 miles very easy (9:37) and streaming pilates. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  3 mile warm-up; Jingle All the Way 15K in 1:08:04; 2.5 mile cooldown.

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Race Report: Jingle All the Way 15K, December 10, 2023

I ran the Jingle All the Way 15K this morning, finishing in a time of 1:08:04 - good enough for 6th female overall and top master female.

This race was a tune-up for the Houston Marathon, which is now 5 weeks away.  I personally prefer to use a half-marathon 3 weeks out from the marathon as a tune-up.  However, 3 weeks out from Houston is Christmas weekend, so there aren't many options.  So I went with this race instead.  Just like I did last year before Houston.

When I signed up, I was also hoping I could run significantly faster than last year, since I'm now in a far better place running-wise.  However, two different wrenches fell into that plan.  

The first was that in the past few weeks I've tried and then abandoned a new-to-me medication - Lexapro.  The Lexapro really helped dampen down some hyperactive reflexes (good) but also made me really sluggish, with fast running being particularly challenging (bad).  So I stopped it about 10 days ago (at the neurologist's instruction). I've felt a bit better every day since, but I'm still on the upswing.

The second wrench was the weather.  Last year this race had perfect weather.  This year, it didn't.  The forecast was for a big weather front to roll through during the race.  Heavy rain, wind, etc.  Lovely.  But....also a good chance to test out the shoe I intend to wear for Houston - the Adios Pro 3 - in less-than-ideal conditions.

[side note: yes, I also considered wearing the Adios Pro 3 for Chicago last year, and then decided I hated that shoe.  So why am I giving it another chance?  Because the shoe I wore last year was a women's 7.5 - the smallest size I could get.  I finally managed to get hold of a women's 7 in that shoe, and it fits much better and feels better as a result.]

***

Race morning dawned unseasonably warm and muggy - temperature and dewpoint in the high 50s.  This would be great weather for a summer or early fall race, but not so great after training in the 30s for several weeks.  At least I didn't have to debate tights versus shorts.

The forecast was still for rain, so I wore a hat.  I also tucked a folded plastic poncho in my sportsbra so that I had it for the corral if the rain started pre-race.  And...remembering the advice a friend gave me when I whined about foggy glasses, I wiped my running glasses with an anti-fog wipe. 

Just like last year, I found a great parking spot.  From there, I jogged to the starting area where 17th street was once again closed to traffic (just like last year).  I did my warm-up fartlek there (3:00 at marathon to half-marathon effort, 4x30 seconds at 5K effort, 4x10 seconds at mile effort) and then made my way to the corral, entering with about 10 minutes to spare.  Once in there, I navigated to the correct proportion of supershoes versus hydration packs. 

The first mile of a race is always rough for me in terms of balance and gait - it's just life now.  For a while I was deliberately seeding myself on the far side of the corral in hopes that I could stay out of the way of others once the race started.  However, I've learned that running on the side is actually more chaotic than in the center, since the side is where people who started late or too far back in the corral sprint and swerve to try to get past the masses blocking them.  So now I'm a centrist in my corral placement.

***

The race started.  As I expected, my gait was wonky the first mile, and a downhill plus a stretch of rough pavement didn't help.  But things did feel smoother than last year, so that was a bonus.  After the first mile, my gait did start to level out, and I started to work my way through the runners in front of me.

It was noticeably warm (at least in a relative sense - again, this would have been A+ weather in August), and 7-8 minutes of running was enough to realize that I needed to be conservative here rather than run as if it was a normal winter day.  

That conservatism only lasted a few miles before the wind picked up.  And then we turned at the Kennedy Center, and the wind became a real factor.   But the positive side was that I was no longer worried about overheating, so I picked up the effort.  At this point, I could make a bad pun about "throwing caution to the wind" but the truth is that the headwind actually ripped the caution away. There were a few women ahead of me, and I got to work chasing them down.

The wind was a factor for most the next three miles, as we headed towards the tip of Hains Point.  Luckily, I managed to find a group of three guys to tuck behind (who were running faster than the women I wanted to pass).  Unluckily, one of them was blasting awful pop music from his cell phone.  But luckily (for everyone save said pop-music aficionado) the cell phone eventually froze up and he pulled off to the side to fix it.  I didn't understand his priorities, but I appreciated the reprieve.

***

There are two ways you can circle the bottom tip of Hains Point - either stay on the road or cut through a parking lot.  This course had us cutting through the lot.  However, Hains Point has changed for the worse since last year, including a poorly thought-out attempt to improve pedestrian safety that resulted in flexible posts in awkward places.  The 15K course was not re-measured to account for these, with the result that making the turn into the lot now meant that we had to weave between posts.  Fortunately, I was far enough up in the field that I had plenty of room to maneuver, but I would really hate to try to navigate this part in a crowd.

Once through the lot, I now had the wind at my back - smooth sailing, right?  That didn't last too long, as what was a drizzle shifted into a comical downpour.  It was ridiculous.  But... a) if I slowed I was just going to be out here longer, and b) this weather happens in goal races too, so I needed to take advantage of this opportunity to practice racing in heavy rain.

The last few miles were a slog, both figuratively and literally.  The water was ponding and my shoes were starting to feel sloshy.  Mile 8 of this race overlaps with Mile 1, which mean I had to run over my favorite stretch of rough pavement a second time - this time obscured by large puddles. I've been doing some trail running each week to get more comfortable with uneven footing, and I told myself that it was time to put that work to good use and pushed onwards.

The end of this race is a slight uphill and then a gentle downhill.  I passed a guy on the uphill and he said "nice job."  Then we hit the downhill and he flew past me in that way that I used to love when I did it to others and now hate when it's done to me.  I did not say "nice job" back - but that was honestly just because I was focusing on running the downhill decently well.  (I did find him after and fist-bump him for a good race).

I finished the race and stopped my watch, noting 1:08 for my time.  So significantly slower than last year.  But despite that, I was satisfied.  I had put in a good hard effort and my gait felt solid for much of this race.  Plus, I was pretty sure I had finished fairly high up in both the overall women's results and in the masters field, based on what I had seen of the field ahead of me at turn-around points.

Splits were:

Mile 1: 7:43
Mile 2: 7:10
Mile 3: 7:21
Mile 4-5: 15:45 (long)
Mile 6-7: 13:24 (short)
Mile 8: 7:16
Mile 9: 7:08
last .31: 2:17

So...as I expected, slower than last year.  But despite that, I actually think this was a much better performance.  My gait felt much better and more stable than it did last year, and I felt much more comfortable and confident in my balance when dealing with stuff like chaotic crowds, rough pavement, and wind/rain.  This was a good confidence boost going into Houston.

I did note that I didn't really have any higher gears for this race - there were points where aerobically I could have run harder, but I just didn't have the gear in my legs.  I'm not worried about this for two reasons:
a) I'm still working out of the sluggishness of the Lexapro, and all of my training paces were dramatically slowed while I was on the Lexapro.  I didn't have that gear in part because I was out of practice (and possible in part because the last bits of the Lexapro are still wearing off).
b) I feel like the Adios Pro 3 really has a sweet spot pacewise for me, and that sweet spot is marathon pace.  Which is really good, because I have a marathon coming up.  If this race had been a goal race in itself, I think I would have been better off with either the Hoka Rocket X (if there hadn't been rain) or the Asics Metaspeed Edge+ - both of which feel a bit more nimble and quick.

Other notes:

  • Left home at 7:10 for the 8:30 start.  This was enough time that I didn't feel rushed, but I wouldn't have wanted to leave any later.
  • The Adios Pro 3 has decent to decent+ grip on wet pavement. It's certainly much better than any Hoka or Saucony shoe I've ever run in, but not as good as other Adidas shoes.  Not sure why.
  • I hid my plastic rain poncho behind a bench before getting into my corral.  A+ decision - it was great to be able to retrieve that and wear it for my cooldown jog back to my car.
  • Wiping my running glasses with that anti-fog stuff was another A+ decision.  Foggy glasses were not an issue at all for this race.
  • About 3 weeks ago I ran the Rothman 8K at 7:18 pace.  Today I ran this 15K at 7:19 pace.  I certainly would not object to running the Houston Marathon at 7:18-19 pace if this trend continues.


Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Training log - Week ending 12/3/2023

This week was 64 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

I made it 3 weeks on the Lexapro, and then we (my doctor and I) decided to pull the plug. The fatigue, drowsiness, and weakness I noted on it just weren't improving enough. Training-wise, easy runs were OK, but trying to run faster was getting harder and harder - my heart rate just wouldn't rise, meaning that I was going anaerobic at paces that should have been not-that-hard.  

Tuesday's workout was particularly rough - a 1600 in 7:32 (so roughly my marathon pace right now) felt like an all out effort with each 100m longer than the previous.  It felt bad enough that I canned the workout, did a few 200s (which also felt awful) and went home.

I took my last dose on Thursday night. As of the weekend I was starting to feel better (certainly not as drowsy).  Saturday's workout, though not great, was better than I expected, and I've felt a bit better each day since.  

I hope I'll improve enough over the next week to be able to race a 15K decently on Sunday.

Monday:  Upperbody weights/core and 8 miles very easy (9:32). Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 7 miles, including a failed track workout of 1600 in 7:32 and then 4x200 in 53, 52, 53, 55.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Sports massage at night.
 
Wednesday: Streaming yoga and 10.5 miles very easy on the treadmill (9:12).  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday:  10 miles, including a track workout of 3200, 2x1600 in 14:42, 7:18, 7:17 with 5:0x recovery between.  Followed with injury prevention work.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles very easy on trails (10:30) and streaming yoga. Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 18.5 miles, including 5 miles, 2x3 miles at marathon effort (paces of 7:42, 7:39, and 7:47).  Followed with injury prevention work and 500 yards recovery swimming. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  90 minutes pool-running and upperbody weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.