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The Running Thread - 2019

Whew! Caught up again. I always told my high schoolers, "It's easier to keep up than to catch up!" Yet I have trouble keeping up with all of you magnificent athletes on this thread!

January Totals

Miles: 107.1 (39.3 were Goofy)
Avg. Pace: 11:59 (slower than most months, but, Goofy!)
Duration: 21.4 hours
Runs: 15

I am training for a trail 21k in two weeks and will keep up the slow pace throughout the first half of February. Today I did 10 miles of trail running at 13:20. It was the kind of work out that I run when I can and walk when I have to so I won't fall. And because I have been known to fall sometimes, I take it very easy!
 
January Miles: 81.3
2019 Miles: 81.3

January was not a typical running month by any means. It began with the tail end of my taper, followed by my first full marathon (!!!) and ended with marathon recovery. Even though my weekly totals were low (24, 29.3, 5, 12.5, and 10.5 so far this week...) I still managed to exceed January 2018’s mileage by almost 20 miles.

I’m going into 2019 with a marathon high that will hopefully last!
 


Congrats on the half PR, @canglim52. That's an amazing result!
I've noticed you guys regularly post months well over 200+ miles. I'd love to hear how you guys break up that sort of mileage. Do you do a lot of doubles? How many rest days/week do you typically take? What's your ratio of easy miles vs. workout miles? What sort of mileage do you run in a maintenance week vs. when you've got a target race coming up? I'm thinking of increasing my mileage to get beyond my current plateau, and I'm wondering how others do it.

When I am not seriously injured, running is my activity of choice. There used to be a time when I "had to get my run in". Most of the time, I do it just because I like to run. When healthy, I don't take complete rest days (unless something in my schedule prevents it, like travel). I might do an easy run of 3-5 miles on my "rest" day, usually in addition to the elliptical or spin. Sometimes I do 2 runs in one day, but not as much as I used to. When I was leading a marathon training group, I would end up with 3 runs for the day--my workout in the AM, another 2-4 miles before the group run (because I would be stiff from my run and then from driving in my car), and then the group run.

I have had a few "breakthrough" moments in my running life. When I dropped my marathon time from 3:49 to 3:14 in 6 months, I was running only 4 days/week. All those workouts were hard and served a purpose--speed, endurance, or strength. I would cross train on the other days to save my joints from so much stress, usually doing elliptical. The point with that example is that I don't think you have to hit crazy high mileage or run a certain number of days a week to get faster.

My next big breakthrough was going from 3:14 to 2:58. That took longer-- I had some injury issues. At the time, breaking 3 hours wasn't even on my radar
. I had been training harder and really pushing myself in workouts. My best 5k time was 21:02. I didn't race one for awhile (not my fave distance) and then ran one. I placed 1st in 18:50. I had no idea I could reach that kind of time.

Nowadays, I try to get one longer run each week and then a medium-longish run during the week. When I am feeling good and have no major pains, 8-10 is my average run. I like 8 miles because that takes me about an hour at a comfortable pace (not go all day comfortable, but run on the treadmill and watch a show comfortable). I have been doing more recovery runs lately (because I would rather run slow than do the elliptical). That pace can be anywhere from low 8s to low 9s. When not actively training for anything (which is about 5-6 weeks in the late spring!) I try to get 45-50 miles/week. When in full marathon mode, I hit 65-85/week. I don't like to get over 80 mile--that's when things start to hurt and break. I hit my highest month this past September right before Chicago, 316 miles.

Screen Shot 2019-02-02 at 11.26.25 PM.png

This was last month. I ran very little before WDW Marathon because my feet and back were causing major trouble.

Screen Shot 2019-02-02 at 11.27.52 PM.png

I am also a big time treadmill user. I am not a lover of winter running--between the cold, darkness, and snowy/icy crap that seems to regenerate itself weekly. I love being able to control my pace and incline (and have easy access to water and bathrooms). I credit the treadmill for making me faster--it is where I do any speed work.

Not sure if this completely answers your questions, but maybe shed some light on how I reach my mileage. I am part of a FB group for Boston training--some of those people hit 400 miles in a month and run CRAZY fast paces!
 


Wow @Wendy98, that calendar is super impressive! I have trouble finding 25-30 miles a week in my schedule, but I also don’t have a treadmill or like going to the gym to run on one too. That’ll be a goal when my schedule gets more flexible.

Jan was pretty rainy here in the Bay Area but I was able to get some decent miles in. I need to start ramping up for my upcoming HM and a possible try at the LA Marathon in late March.

Jan 2019 Totals
Miles- 79.1 miles
Avg Pace- 8:59/mile
Avg HR- 152bpm
 
January: 72.25 miles.

Better than I was expecting given that since the marathon the focus has been on healing. With the last blister finally healed enough I started back on the treadmill today; it is nice to finally get back into my routine.
 
Congrats on the half PR, @canglim52. That's an amazing result!
I've noticed you guys regularly post months well over 200+ miles. I'd love to hear how you guys break up that sort of mileage. Do you do a lot of doubles? How many rest days/week do you typically take? What's your ratio of easy miles vs. workout miles? What sort of mileage do you run in a maintenance week vs. when you've got a target race coming up? I'm thinking of increasing my mileage to get beyond my current plateau, and I'm wondering how others do it.
He @BikeFan thanks!! I’d say I’m like Wendy in that running is my activity of choice as well. I started running three years ago, and simply got hooked! Running is never a chore, and I’m always down to run. Since I’m pretty new to the sport, I’ve been ramping my miles up slowly over time. As I’ve increased miles doubles have become more common and I now run 7 days a week. Part of that is because I need the blood flow to recover, my RHR is like 37-40 lol. I’d say most my miles are easy(usually 80%), and I’m not afraid to run extra easy on those runs... going to hard on easy days hurts the quality of your hard days and serves you no added benifit. Usually I run a step back week every 4th week, but they vary depending on my training load. I’m still learning a lot about training, but I recommend working with someone to get your best results... ppl just can’t coach themselves as successfully imo. I personally recommend talking to @DopeyBadger he really knows his stuff!

One thing I feel is very important to running more mileage is a holistic approach to your overall health. I don’t just run and expect to be healthy. I make sure I sleep 8+ hours a day, I work hard on maximizing my nutrition, I rarely drink alcohol, I strength train daily(some with weights and some just bands and body weight), and I also visit a PT(physical therapist) regularly. I don’t want to just run well for one race, I hope to run the rest of my life!!

I hope that helps :-)
 
Race Report - Light 2 Light 50 Miler

I’d like to start out this race report with sincere thanks to all who have offered advice and encouragement as I considered trying this race and then trained for it! I don’t have a lot of runners in my every day life, much less runners with ultra experience. Your input was greatly appreciated and helped me formulate my approach to this race.

Saturday was my first attempt at 50 miles at the Light 2 Light 50 Miler on the Outer Banks of NC. The race started at the Currituck Beach Light House in Corolla, NC and ran down the island through Duck, Kitty Hawk and Nags Head to the Bodie Island Light House before returning to Nags Head to finish at Jeannette’s Pier. The course was entirely paved and near pancake flat.

It was hard finding specific information on the race, which was in its 2nd running. With only four aid stations, I really wanted a course map. Unfortunately, this photo of the race director’s note pad was as close as I could get to that:

A1590423-83EE-44B4-BE25-55C4A49AC101.jpeg

Race day weather was near perfect, if a little chilly to start, ranging from ~30 up to the upper 40s. Fortunately, the coastal winds pretty much took a break for the day, too. My race got off to a near disastrous start. Somehow I got confused on the start time and we arrived at 5:55 for what I thought was going to be a 6:30 start. Nope, the race started at 6:00 and kicked off before I was in my hydration pack and before my Garmin had a chance to sync up. I was last across the line.

Fortunately, I was able to settle into my rhythm pretty quickly and started ticking off consistent miles. In an attempt to forestall fatigue, I started with a strategy of walking 1:00 of every mile run. That not only allowed me to rest my legs, it also allowed me an opportunity to take nutrition while walking instead of trying to gobble on the run. The “nothing new on race day” rule was broken here, too, as I tried Uncrustables as a fuel for the first time. Wow! Thanks again for the recommendations, everyone! It was perfect for me. Easy to eat and sat easy on the stomach.

The first aid station was at 15 miles. I met @apdebord there briefly for the first time, handed off my gloves, headlamp and headband to DW who was crewing for me, restocked on Uncrustables and headed back out. The mental challenge of the distance started to intrude around this point, passing mile 26 knowing I had just run a full marathon and was only about halfway there! The next aid station was supposed to be around mile 27 and, having miscalculated my water intake, I ran out about a mile early. That wouldn’t have been so bad, but the station turned out to be around mile 28, instead. I changed into a lighter, dry shirt, refilled my hydration pack and moved on.

At this point, it was apparent my intervals weren’t going to be sustainable, so I started to play around with them, looking for a sweet spot. I settled on walking 30-45 seconds of each half mile. My pacing started to flag a little around this time, too. It was getting warmer and lonelier, as 57 starters get spread out by quite a bit over the course of 50 miles. Around mile 32 or so, my mouth was getting so dry I couldn’t get and more food down on the run, too. My legs were also really starting to feel the effect of all the pounding by the time I pulled into aid station 3.

I got to have a nice, if brief, conversation with @apdebord who was volunteering there while her husband was busy crushing the course (I think he was 4th overall at that point). I had my Gatorade and banana, changed shoes and socks and declined a hydration pack refill (oops) before heading out on the penultimate leg of the race. At this point I was struggling a bit both physically and mentally and my intervals were up to walking 2:00 of every half mile, although that didn’t affect my pace as dramatically as I would have thought. My water intake was increasing, though, and declining the refill hurt when I ran out of water 4 miles short of the last aid station. I was able to text DW and get her to bring me more about 2 miles down the road.

By the time I hit the last aid station around mile 43, I knew I was going to finish. I could walk it in under time from there. The only time goal I had set for the race was a super secret double probation sub-12:00 that I hadn’t shared with anyone. But with how well and consistently the first half to 2/3 of the race went, I had become emotionally invested in a sub-11:00 finish and I didn’t think I was going to make it if the pacing trend of the last 10-12 miles held and I was feeling down about that as I headed into the last stretch of the race.

When I hit mile 44, I looked at my watch and did some calculations and thought I might have an outside chance at that sub-11:00 if I could pick up the pace a little. So I pulled out the headphones I hadn’t used yet, started up my favorite 80s playlist, and said “screw it, let’s see what we can do”. I kept my intervals the same, but really bore down on my run pacing and was quickly turning out miles almost as fast as at the start of the race. I was able to keep the pace up through a strong finish at 10:43:48!

It was a great race and I enjoy it more as each hour post-race passes. I learned a lot about what goes into running those distances and where I need to improve (hydration management and aid station dwell time, especially). I don’t see myself going much past this distance, either. But I said that after my 50k, too.

Once again, thanks for reading a long-winded race report. There’ll be a quiz later.

TL;DR:
Finished my first 50 miler this weekend. Met all official and unofficial goals:

1. Don’t die - Check
2. Finish - Check
3. (Secret goal). Finish sub-12:00 - CRUSHED! 10:43:48!

30393CD4-192D-43A2-872E-78A18D6416FC.jpeg
 
@camaker CONGRATS!!!! You did awesome out there! Nice work crushing all your goals. It was nice to meet you finally and talking with your wife and petting your sweet dog too!

DH did end up finishing 4th overall. He was in 3rd at the last aid station but someone came out of nowhere cruising at ~8 min miles and there was no way he had that in him that late in the race.

I’m so glad you had a great day! 100k up next???
 

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