This week was 28 miles of running, 4 "miles" of pool-running and 500 yards of swimming.
This is a placeholder for my last week of taper before the Boston Marathon.
Dailies:
Monday: 6.5 miles easy (9:07) in the morning; foam rolling in the evening.
A "journey" involving running in place in the deep end, and now starring a runner with Parkinsons. Quite possibly I've gone off the deep end.
This week was 28 miles of running, 4 "miles" of pool-running and 500 yards of swimming.
This is a placeholder for my last week of taper before the Boston Marathon.
Dailies:
Monday: 6.5 miles easy (9:07) in the morning; foam rolling in the evening.
This week was 37 miles of running, 18 "miles" of pool-running and 1000 yards of swimming.
I didn't do a great job of planning this week out. By which I mean that I forgot a) that I had a massage scheduled on Thursday night, and b) that I planned to cheer at Cherry Blossom on Sunday (meaning no long run). Had I remembered those, I would have gone with a more significant track workout on Wednesday and a long run on Saturday.
But I didn't remember and thus my plan for the week was some very short fast stuff on Wednesday, a tempo on Friday, and then a long run on Sunday. It wasn't ideal to do a tempo on Friday after a massage Thursday night, but we kept the massage light and focused on the upper body. The tempo was still a bit slower than I would have liked - I'm not sure how much was the massage and how much was the fact that I overdressed, wearing black tights and longsleeve shirt on a morning that started cool and overcast but warmed up quickly.
As for Sunday, I ended up doing my "not so" long run in the pool. I woke too late to run before cheering at Cherry Blossom. While I could have done a mid-day run, I preferred not to - Parkinsons means that I have an increased risk of skin cancer, and so I try to avoid running more than a few miles outside when the sun is at its peak. And yes, I know I have a marathon next week in the sun, but that's the exception to the rule, and also a good reason not to add more midday sun this week.
Given a choice between the pool and the treadmill, the pool made more sense given where I am in the training cycle, so I went with that.
The good news is that everything feels good and all systems are go for the marathon on 4/20. And I'm feeling far better about my fitness than I was at this time last year.
Dailies:
Monday: 8 "miles" pool-running in the morning; foam rolling in the evening.
This week was 43 miles of running, 16 "miles" of pool-running and 1500 yards of swimming.
After last week's long run, I decided I was still a bit worried about my right leg/hamstring. It felt mostly fine, and I was able to run on it fine, but it felt like there was something still lurking there. Not painful or sore, just...lurking.
I reviewed my running log, and the last time I had this feeling was in early 2020. Then, everything blew up (technical term) right before my marathon, and I ended up dropping out of the marathon early. I struggled with it for a few weeks after, and then got prolotherapy to tighten up loose ligaments in the SI joint and back. Once I did that, everything cleared up within a week.
So...I called the doctor who did the 2020 prolotherapy, and he had an opening on Wednesday afternoon. I played things carefully until that appointment, where he confirmed that I was again loose and unstable in my right SI joint.
He offered to schedule me in a few weeks, but then generously fit me in immediately when I explained that I had an important marathon in 2 weeks (all marathons are important, but Boston is really important to me). And once again, everything cleared up within a few days. No more sense of lurking right leg doom. (Some would argue that this was a placebo effect. Perhaps so. I don't care. I got the result I wanted.)
Since I had missed the tempo workout planned for the middle of the week, I substituted it in for Sunday's planned 16 mile long run (I had also previously considered racing on Sunday but decided not to). Of the various options, I felt like the tempo would benefit me the most and was also the least stress on my body.
Sunday morning was more like summer than March - I ran the tempo in 73 degrees with a 21 mph wind blasting at me. This was not quite as bad as it sounds - the wind basically meant that half of each lap of the track was effortless, while the other half was hard work, but into a strong cooling fan.
I once again ran this one completely ignorant of my watch - since the weather was not great I wanted to ensure I stuck to the proper effort and didn't tense up in response to slow splits. And I was once again pleasantly surprised by my splits when I reviewed the watch later. A 37:32 8K tempo indicates ~3:30 marathon fitness on a good weather day, and Sunday was unquestionably not great weather for fast running (though my muscles do seem to work better and be less rigid when it is warm).
Two weeks to go. Time for bubble wrap!
Dailies:
Monday: 7 miles very easy (10:12), upperbody weights/core in afternoon; foam rolling in the evening.
This week was 55 miles of running, 15 "miles" of pool-running and 1000 yards of swimming.
This was another uneven week. On Wednesday, I warmed up in a jacket over my longsleeve shirt and tights, and felt good. I took off the jacket for the workout and felt awful for the first two 3200s.My body was very stiff and I just couldn't move. I decided to experiment and put the jacket back on for the third rep and felt much better.
It was only 39 degrees, so not that cold. But apparently 39 degrees is no longer longsleeve weather for me during a workout. Noted.
I did my last 20 on Sunday, and was satisfied with it. Like my previous 20, this one included climbing and descent on the last 7 miles, with the difference that rather than a rolling course, I just ran up and then down. The down involved dodging a number of walkers, but that was fine - good practice for a big race. I did have a few twinges of nerve/hamstring during the final miles, but nothing super concerning.
So that's my Boston training cycle done. Now I just need to taper.
Dailies:
Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running in the morning; upperbody weights/core midday; foam rolling in the evening.
This week was 56 miles of running, 15 "miles" of pool-running and ~1000 yards of swimming.
Since the low point of last weekend was me bailing on a Saturday marathon effort workout after my right hamstring cramped, this was a cautious week. I pulled back on mileage and pace for the first half, while also getting the knots worked out of the hammy and doing some strengthening work on my hip rotators. (This was because I suspect that irritated and tense hip rotators pressing on the sciatic nerve were a significant factor in the hammy cramping.) I also emphasized mobilization work on my ankles, since they seemed to play a role as well.
I was supposed to race Shamrock Half-Marathon this weekend but decided early in the week to skip it due to my hamstring/hip blip. By the second half of the week, things were better, but I stayed home anyway. Being healthy at Boston is my top priority, and I didn't need to do a half-marathon as a tune-up, given that I did one three weeks ago.
I tested the hamstring with a very cautious track workout - about 2 miles of work - most at tempo pace but with some strides at the end. My objective was simply to check how things felt without ever working too hard, since I hoped to get some sort of long run in on Sunday.
As for how I felt on Friday? The hamstring was fine, but my gait was definitely off - when I don't do fast strides regularly, I lose the muscle memory for fast running. Fortunately, by the time I got to the strides, I had "remembered."
My plan for Sunday was 12-14 miles with 2x4 miles at marathon effort. The first mile at marathon effort was influenced by my paranoia - sometimes a tweak or injury can be gone, but one is so hyperfocused and worried about it that the muscle in question tightens up in response. After that mile, I got my groove back, and felt better with every mile. About a mile into the second rep, I decided to swap from 2x4 to 4, 3, 2, 1 at marathon effort. That went well (admittedly a bit too fast at the end), and no pain, tightness, or cramping during or after, so yay.
Perhaps I could have done Shamrock after all, and I'm sad to have missed it. OTOH, if I had reaggravated the hamstring/hip racing Shamrock, I'd be very upset right now. And doing a marathon effort workout is nowhere near the physical stress of a half-marathon raced all out.
Related - in case anyone else ever has the issue of weak hip rotators triggering sciatic pain and cramping, here is how I strengthen those muscles (keep in mind that I have no medical training or expertise, and what works for me may very well not work for you. Caveat lectoris.):
Dailies:
Monday: 6.5 miles very easy (10:08) with 2 untimed strides in the morning; foam rolling in the evening.
This week was 44 miles of running, 21 "miles" of pool-running and 1000 yards of swimming.
Two workouts this week - one good and one not quite as good.
Wednesday's workout was a 4 mile tempo - in years past I've done 3x3200 as a slightly less-stressful alternative to my coach's preferred 25x400m at 10K pace. Being a bit older now (and having two half-marathons on the schedule), I decided to go even more conservative, with a simple 4 mile tempo. Better to undertrain than overtrain at this age and point in the training cycle.
The tempo went extremely well - I was expecting to run around 30 minutes, which would have been a big jump from 6 weeks ago, when I ran 30:44. Instead, I ran just over 29 minutes, which was a real shock. (I ignored my watch during the tempo, and so I didn't know what my splits were until I finished). Training is working. Cool!
On Saturday, I hit Anacostia Park for my second 2x5 miles in fairly windy conditions. The effort during the workout felt remarkably easy, Unfortunately, my right hamstring began to spasm during the second 5 mile set, so I shut things down before a spasm turned into a hamstring pull.
I'm pretty I know what caused this. My hip rotators like to get tight sometimes and press on my sciatic nerve, which causes spasms and tightness down the leg. On Saturday my ankles were really tight (it happens sometimes), there was a strong crosswind which forced me to stabilize with my hip rotators, and my legs were cold (and thus rigid) due to a poor choice of shorts over tights. All of these combined to irritate the hip rotators on the right side, and...spasming hamstring.
Since I stopped rather than run myself into actual injury, this shouldn't take too long to fix. Heck, if I was 20 or 30, it might have already vanished. But I'm 51, so it'll take slightly longer. As for the fix, I need to:
Dailies:
Monday: 8 "miles" pool-running; foam rolling, yoga, and PT exercises in afternoon.
This week was 63 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running and 1000 yards of swimming.
The first half of the week was recovery from the One City Half. We had yet another bout of icy conditions on Tuesday (fortunately shortlived) so Tuesday was a treadmill run.
One of my goals this training cycle is to be very smart about my recovery between hard efforts. With a half-marathon last weekend and a progressive 20 miler this weekend, my mid week workout was intentionally half-assed - a 1600 at tempo effort and then some 200s and 100s to preserve some speed.
On Saturday I once again structured my easy run to include the Fletchers Boathouse parkrun. Even at an easy effort, this parkrun is challenging for me (in a good way). It has crowds and an uneven surface (the towpath), and a section that transitions from the towpath to concrete and back that is really hard (pun somewhat intended). Transitions between harder and softer surfaces are tough in a way that I can't really explain but a neurologist might.
It was in many non-physiological ways a hard easy run, but that was the whole point, and I once again felt better for doing it. Additionally, I set a "Fletchers Boathouse Parkrun PR" of 28:28, so I seem to be getting better at these. Or it's getting warmer. Or I'm not being good enough about keeping the effort restrained on these.
Sunday's long run was a huge confidence boost. I ran it in Rock Creek Park as three out-and-backs of various lengths. Admittedly repetitive, but structuring the run this way meant that I did the whole run on rolling hills and was able to include two decent longer climbs - 1000m at a 1.5% incline and later 600m at a 2.3% incline - during the final third of the run at marathon effort.
I made a point of focusing on marathon effort (not pace) during the final third, and so was pleasantly surprised to see at the end of the workout that I had averaged sub-8 minute pace for the seven miles at marathon effort. A few months ago running 800s at sub-8 pace was hard, so this is definitely progress, even if I am always at my best at the end of a long run.
Traditionally my running does three long runs of 20-22 miles split into 3rds, with 1/3rd easy, 1/3rd moderate, 1/3 marathon. My coach told me to do two 20s, and I had no objection to that. Additionally, I kept the run at 20, rather than the 21 or 22 I would have done previously. Some of this is age - as an over 50 runner I think it's essential that I not stress my body any more than is necessary to achieve my goals.
But there's also the fact that I'm slower now, and so running 20 or 21 or 22 miles keeps me out there longer. And there's a point where I'm simply running for too long, even if it's less miles than it was before. Doing a 20 miler structured as 7/6/7, rather than the 7/7/7 or 8/7/7 split that I used to do, means I still get the most important part of the run done (7 marathon effort miles on tired legs) but reduces the risk of overdoing stuff.
As I get older, and presumably slower, I suspect I'll probably modify these long runs even more, perhaps even down to something like 6 miles at easy effort, 5 at moderate effort, and then 7 at marathon effort. It seems the smartest way to balance the demands of marathon training with the reality of aging/slowing.
Dailies:
Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running; foam rolling and PT exercises in afternoon.
I ran the One City Half Marathon last Sunday, finishing in a time of 1:41:46, which was good enough to win my age group.
This is my fourth time racing this half, and I've got the day before routine nailed for this race. Leave home as early as possible on Saturday (I left at 8:15 am) this year, drive down (stopping for Chipotle along the way), grab bib from a small but very organized and efficient bib pick-up/expo, check into hotel.
The one tweak I made this year was to stay at the Holiday Inn at City Center. The last few years, I've stayed in Hampton, VA - about a 10 minute drive from the finish line (and the buses from the finish line to the start). However, I did the math and the mapping and realized that the Holiday Inn's special rate was about half of what I would pay in Hampton, while only being about 5-10 minutes further from the finish line. I should note that there were also buses from the Holiday directly to the start line, but they weren't scheduled to arrive as early as the first finish line buses, and I need a long warm-up.
Getting up 10 minutes later on race morning wasn't worth $150 to me, so the Holiday it was. Which was doubly fine because the Holiday was probably a bit nicer than anything I'd book in Hampton.
***
One of the many nice things about the One City Half is that the start is at a local high school, and for the past few years the high school gym has been open on race morning - providing a nice warm place to hang out, stretch, etc.
I always debate exactly when to get to the start of a point to point race, but for the One City Half, it's an easy decision. There's no reason not to be on the first bus there, since I can stretch and mobilize in the gym just as well as in the hotel. As early as possible this year meant the 5:05 am bus from the finish line. An early morning, but that's part of racing.
My hotel had an 11 am checkout, and late checkout was prohibitively expensive (I would be charged 1/2 night if I checked out between 11 and noon, and for a full night if I checked out after noon). Since I was racing the half and would be done well before 9 am, checking out post-race was possible, but would come at the expense of cheering for friends running the full marathon. So, I decided to check out before the race - packing a clean change of clothes and some wipes in a separate bag for post-race.
This made for an even earlier morning. Since I also had to time my Parkinsons medication with the race (I get roughly 4 hours per dose of Rytary), and with breakfast (Rytary works best for me if I take it at least 30 minutes before a meal or 60 minutes after) my morning ended up looking like this:
This week was 47 miles of running,and 500 yards of swimming.
This was the week that I raced the One City Half-Marathon. Race report to come.
Dailies:
Monday: 6 miles very easy on the treadmill (9:46) and upperbody weights/core; foam rolling in evening.
This week was 50 miles of running, 18 "miles" pool-running, and 500 yards of swimming.
Foer much of this week, running outside continued to be an icy challenge. The running trails were mostly clear but not all the way clear - and there is a difference between the two. As for the track, it wasn't clear and open to the public until Wednesday afternoon, so Wednesday morning's workout was on the treadmill. Which is fine - I don't mind running on the treadmill, and my fitness has been improving steadily over the last few weeks of treadmill-heavy training.
By Thursday, everything (roads, trails, the track) was clear of snow and ice. We were also gifted with one nearly perfect morning - high 40s, overcast. There was a decent wind at times (hence the "nearly") but still...so much better than the past few weeks.
That nearly perfect morning was also Saturday. Which happened to be the day I had a big marathon effort workout scheduled.
I debated between 4-3-2-1 miles at marathon effort and 2x5 miles at marathon effort, then decided to play it by ear. If I'm out of shape, the 4-3-2-1 is easier because there's more recovery. However, if I'm reasonably fit, then the 2x5 is actually easier and lower stress, simply because it's hard neurologically (and thus tiring) for me to accelerate from easy effort to marathon effort. If I'm out of shape and early in a cycle, the stress from the neurological stuff is balanced out by the need for recovery during the workout; when I don't need that recovery as much, the balance changes.
Anyways...I got about 3 miles into the first rep and hit a rhythm, so I decided to keep going and do 2x5. That was good news. The really good news was that I had been hoping to be close to 8 minute pace for this workout, which I was doing by feel. Instead, by the third marathon effort mile, I was well below 8 minute pace, and it felt controlled and comfortable - like I could go for a really long time at that pace. Which is how a marathon effort workout should feel - if you are hanging on and gritting it out, that's probably not your marathon effort or pace.
I just cruised the rest of the workout, finishing the 2x5 miles averaging 7:53 pace over the 10 miles (8:01 pace for 11 miles if you include the mile between the 2x5). And I felt like I could have kept going for several more miles without straining. Excellent.
This means that, fitness-wise, I'm already where I hoped to be at the end of this cycle, and I'm still 7 weeks out from Boston. The temptation is just to try to build on that even more and see how much fast I can get before the end of the cycle. Basically, to get a bit greedy. But I've seen how that one plays out - you just end up peaking too early and underperforming. So better to try to cruise the rest of the training cycle - do the work conservatively with no heroics. That approach gives me the best shot of running well in mid-April.
And, of course, I may still get a bit faster with that approach. Fitness is one of those things that likes to come to you when you don't chase it.
Dailies:
Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running and upperbody weights/core; foam rolling in evening.