I've been running for a long time, but never considered myself a long distance runner. But my decision to run a marathon forces me to run distances I have never run before. This weekend, I ran my first 20-mile run. I was a bit anxious since I've been having a bit of a problem with my IT band causing pain in my left knee after long distances. I've been stretching the IT band and watching that knee, so I was hoping all would go well.
I chose a route that did not start from my house. I first did that because of the snow and how dangerous the sidewalks were around my house, but as the sidewalks were cleared, I kept the route since it was more exciting (kinda like a race) to drive to the start line. I had mapped a 10-mile loop starting and ending at Baker park, and winding around downtown Frederick.
After having a bit of breakfast, I started running about 7am. It was about 30F and a bit windy, but not too bad. Here was what I was thinking during the run
Mile 1 - Boy its kinda cold, maybe I should have layered more.
Mile 2 - I wish the roads were better labeled, I think I'm lost
Mile 2.1 - Ok, now I know where I am. Damn, I'm hot, I wore too many layers.
Mile 5 - Oh no, no sidewalks, I hate running on the shoulder
Mile 6.3 - Shit, I should have turned right on Patrick not left.... better turn around
Mile 8 - Should I stop for a drink and GU, no, I'm good
Mile 10.5 - One loop done, feeling good, will have water and GU
Mile 12.5 - Whoa, whoa....... damn I did not see that ice, I hope I did not hurt anything in that fall
Mile 14 - I feel slight pain in my left knee - better stop and stretch
Mile 15 - Knee is bothering me, but not getting worse, but whats going on with my right Achilles
Mile 17 - Only three more miles
Mile 18 - Need to stop.... will have water and GU.... need to stretch that knee again
Mile 19.5 - This has been the longest mile ever, and both my knee and Achilles are sore
Mile 20 - I did it, who can carry me back to my car??
On the day after, my left knee is sore and my right Achilles is really sore and tight. I'm not sure I'll be able to do my recovery run today, but I'm glad I got through my first 20-mile run. And the best part, I get to do it again in three weeks!
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
A week of rest
This marathon training program I'm following calls for a week of rest every third week of training. Rest is defined as less running, not no running! At this point, the training weeks consist of about 20 miles during the week and about 20-25miles on the weekend. The runs during the week are staying constant, but the long run on Saturday is building to reach the marathon goal. The week of rest is basically cutting the mileage in about half, allowing the legs to recover for the upcoming increase in mileage. This week calls for about 25 miles total since next weekend is my first 20 mile run.
Running 25 miles in a week seems like a breeze now, after building to about 40 miles per week. Actually, a couple of days this past week I felt a bit antsy because I was not running. Friday was such a day. So, I decided to take an unscheduled run outdoors. Please realize this was the first run outside in about 2 weeks due to the crazy snow we have been getting this year. I also wanted to get out to check the road/sidewalk conditions knowing that I really wanted to do the 20-miler on the road next week. So, I bundled up and hit the road.
There is still a lot of snow out there. The streets are clear, but there are no shoulders and many of the sidewalks are not clear. So, it was a bit of a challenge. I ran around the neighborhood, keeping to the street when the sidewalks were covered. I left the neighborhood on my normal path to the adjacent neighborhood and quickly realized I do not like running on the street with no shoulder. Those cars move very fast! I turned around and headed back to my neighborhood.
I got just over 4 miles in, and while it was nice to be outside, it was very hard to keep pace. In addition, I had to keep looking at my feet to make sure I was not stepping on snow/ice chucks or black ice. I kept thinking that running the neighborhood was not so bad, but if I was tired at the end of a long run, I may not be as careful, and would probably hurt myself.
Looking forward to next weekend, I need to find some place with sidewalks/streets plowed well so I don't have to worry about my footing. Running 20-miles is a challenge enough without having to worry about jumping over snow banks and slipping on black ice. I know the downtown area is more maintained than the location I'm at, so I may start there.
How hard can it be to find 20-miles of road/sidewalk with no snow or ice only two weeks after the 50+ inches on snow dumped during the Blizzard of 2010??? Argh...
Running 25 miles in a week seems like a breeze now, after building to about 40 miles per week. Actually, a couple of days this past week I felt a bit antsy because I was not running. Friday was such a day. So, I decided to take an unscheduled run outdoors. Please realize this was the first run outside in about 2 weeks due to the crazy snow we have been getting this year. I also wanted to get out to check the road/sidewalk conditions knowing that I really wanted to do the 20-miler on the road next week. So, I bundled up and hit the road.
There is still a lot of snow out there. The streets are clear, but there are no shoulders and many of the sidewalks are not clear. So, it was a bit of a challenge. I ran around the neighborhood, keeping to the street when the sidewalks were covered. I left the neighborhood on my normal path to the adjacent neighborhood and quickly realized I do not like running on the street with no shoulder. Those cars move very fast! I turned around and headed back to my neighborhood.
I got just over 4 miles in, and while it was nice to be outside, it was very hard to keep pace. In addition, I had to keep looking at my feet to make sure I was not stepping on snow/ice chucks or black ice. I kept thinking that running the neighborhood was not so bad, but if I was tired at the end of a long run, I may not be as careful, and would probably hurt myself.
Looking forward to next weekend, I need to find some place with sidewalks/streets plowed well so I don't have to worry about my footing. Running 20-miles is a challenge enough without having to worry about jumping over snow banks and slipping on black ice. I know the downtown area is more maintained than the location I'm at, so I may start there.
How hard can it be to find 20-miles of road/sidewalk with no snow or ice only two weeks after the 50+ inches on snow dumped during the Blizzard of 2010??? Argh...
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Running with Captain Kirk
As you know from my previous posts, we got a ton of snow in Maryland. To be precise, we got about 50 inches of snow in about a week of time. Government offices (where I work) were closed for 4.5 days. We did not see a snow plow for a week. Needless to say I've been spending time on the treadmill. Typically this would be ok with me, but I'm also training for a spring marathon, so this means I have to spend a lot of time on the treadmill.
Saturday was my long run for the week. I was scheduled to do 18miles. On Friday, I took a walk to assess the neighborhood and local streets and knew I'd have to do this run on the treadmill. The sidewalks were not plowed, and the roads, though slightly cleared, had no shoulders and in many cases only one lane was plowed. So I knew I'd have to start mentally planning for this indoor run. The only way I've been able to get through the long treadmill runs was to watch an action movie. Chick flicks just don't do it for me (not sure they ever do), and dramas are too boring. Comedies work sometimes, but can also be too boring. Action/adventure movies seem to keep me interested enough to get through the long treadmill miles.
For today's run I chose Star Trek. I saw this movie in the theatre and loved it. I love origin movies, and this was one of the best. In fact, with the time travel and all, it actually re-wrote the Star Trek history and opened the door for many more movies. Anyway, this is not suppose to be a review of Star Trek, just an example of the type of movie that gets me through 18 miles on the treadmill. Great characters, great interactions, great story, and great action..... just what I needed. I started the run kinda slow (8.5 m/m) and kept it that way for about 5 miles. I then pushed the pace to about 8.2 m/m and the incline to 0.5%. I ran this was until about 8 miles. At this point, I stopped to get some water and a GU ( less than 1min). I then increased the incline to 2% for the next mile. After mile 9 I deceased the incline to 0.5% and upped the speed to 8m/m (I was feeling pretty good at this point). After mile 12, I stopped for some water (less then 20 sec) and a short stretch. Between mile 12 and 15 I played with the pace, upping and lowering it as it felt natural. Never less than 7:30 m/m and never greater than 8:30 m/m. At Mile 15, Spock and Kirk beamed aboard the Romulan ship and the real action began!!. At 16.2 miles the movie ended and I quickly stepped off the treadmill to put in a CD from the Big Bang Theory (great sitcom) to finish the run. Finished 18 miles in 148 min and 25 sec. an 8:15m/m. I'm pretty happy with that.
My left knee only bothered me slightly, and the quick stretch really helped it. I was tired and my shirt was soaked and salt stained, but I did it. Not only was this my longest treadmill run, but my longest run ever. I'm pretty proud of myself. My training calls for a recovery week next week, and my first 20-mile run in two weeks. Hopefully the roads will be better by then, but if not, I'll have to find another good action movie, and hit that treadmill again!
Saturday was my long run for the week. I was scheduled to do 18miles. On Friday, I took a walk to assess the neighborhood and local streets and knew I'd have to do this run on the treadmill. The sidewalks were not plowed, and the roads, though slightly cleared, had no shoulders and in many cases only one lane was plowed. So I knew I'd have to start mentally planning for this indoor run. The only way I've been able to get through the long treadmill runs was to watch an action movie. Chick flicks just don't do it for me (not sure they ever do), and dramas are too boring. Comedies work sometimes, but can also be too boring. Action/adventure movies seem to keep me interested enough to get through the long treadmill miles.
For today's run I chose Star Trek. I saw this movie in the theatre and loved it. I love origin movies, and this was one of the best. In fact, with the time travel and all, it actually re-wrote the Star Trek history and opened the door for many more movies. Anyway, this is not suppose to be a review of Star Trek, just an example of the type of movie that gets me through 18 miles on the treadmill. Great characters, great interactions, great story, and great action..... just what I needed. I started the run kinda slow (8.5 m/m) and kept it that way for about 5 miles. I then pushed the pace to about 8.2 m/m and the incline to 0.5%. I ran this was until about 8 miles. At this point, I stopped to get some water and a GU ( less than 1min). I then increased the incline to 2% for the next mile. After mile 9 I deceased the incline to 0.5% and upped the speed to 8m/m (I was feeling pretty good at this point). After mile 12, I stopped for some water (less then 20 sec) and a short stretch. Between mile 12 and 15 I played with the pace, upping and lowering it as it felt natural. Never less than 7:30 m/m and never greater than 8:30 m/m. At Mile 15, Spock and Kirk beamed aboard the Romulan ship and the real action began!!. At 16.2 miles the movie ended and I quickly stepped off the treadmill to put in a CD from the Big Bang Theory (great sitcom) to finish the run. Finished 18 miles in 148 min and 25 sec. an 8:15m/m. I'm pretty happy with that.
My left knee only bothered me slightly, and the quick stretch really helped it. I was tired and my shirt was soaked and salt stained, but I did it. Not only was this my longest treadmill run, but my longest run ever. I'm pretty proud of myself. My training calls for a recovery week next week, and my first 20-mile run in two weeks. Hopefully the roads will be better by then, but if not, I'll have to find another good action movie, and hit that treadmill again!
Sunday, February 7, 2010
I see a treadmill in my future
In Maryland, we got about 25 inches of snow as of Saturday afternoon. Now thats a lot of snow. Growing up in Illinois, I remember many large snow storms, but not many top this amount of snowfall. When I was in the 8th grade, my family went on vacation to Florida (where my grandparents lived) in January (1979), and came back to a huge amount of snow. I don't really remember how much we got, but we had to crawl over the snow to get to the house. We parked the car down the road at the neighbors and our fresh Florida oranges froze while we tried to dig out our driveway. I think I went to school only a few days that January. Well here we are in 2010 and the snow fall amazed me. This picture was taken Saturday morning, and shows my patio table with about 24 inches of snow on it. The black pole next to it is a broom handle I stuck in the ground to get a feel for the level of snow. Only about 30 inches of the 65 inch handle is showing. My wife went out to measure the handle and almost did not come back because the snow was up to her waist in the backyard.
So, needless to say, my outdoor running will be a bit limited in the near future. The first issue is how to shovel 24 inches of snow?? I tried, I really did, but its a ton of snow. Thankfully, my neighbor has a snowblower and after she blew some of my driveway, she let me have a turn and I finished the driveways. In this picture, I'm actually snow blowing the street. I look way happier than I really was. I did get it finished, but it shows just how much snow is on the street. One of the guys I worked with asked if I was going running, and whether I plowed an eight mile path before hand. I told him I plowed a 0.1mile loop on my driveway and planned to run 80 loops!
In reality, treadmill running is all I'm going to be able to do in the near future. I don't mind the treadmill, but I'd much rather run on the road. The treadmill forces you to go at a constant speed and is not forgiving. When I run on the street, my pace picks up and drops off as I feel necessary. Pushing a button does not work as well. But I do it and I typically watch TV to make the time go quicker. So for the next week, I'll be watching a lot of sitcoms and movies on DVD. I hope the snow get cleared somewhat by next Saturday, since I have that 18 mile run planned. I'm not sure I'd survive 18miles on the treadmill, but if i gotta do, I'd do it.
In reality, treadmill running is all I'm going to be able to do in the near future. I don't mind the treadmill, but I'd much rather run on the road. The treadmill forces you to go at a constant speed and is not forgiving. When I run on the street, my pace picks up and drops off as I feel necessary. Pushing a button does not work as well. But I do it and I typically watch TV to make the time go quicker. So for the next week, I'll be watching a lot of sitcoms and movies on DVD. I hope the snow get cleared somewhat by next Saturday, since I have that 18 mile run planned. I'm not sure I'd survive 18miles on the treadmill, but if i gotta do, I'd do it.
Why did I choose winter marathon training?
Friday, February 5, 2010
A 16 miler
Ok, I did it. I ran my 16mile run and it was not too bad. The weather was very nice and felt pretty good for the most part. Here is how it went.
I started out at about 10am. My plan was to run an 8-mile loop from my house, stop and get a drink and GU, and then do another 8-mile loop. The first few miles were kinda tough, nothing hurt, just felt a bit sluggish. The wind was a bit stonger than I expected. weather.com said it was about 10mph. The sidewalks in the area are only partially cleared of snow, so in some cases I ran on the street, or parking lots, and other time I just ran over the snow. As the run progressed I kept a 7:50m/m pace, which felt comfortable. I stopped after 6 miles to stretch my legs and at 7 miles to tie my shoe.
Got back home, got a drink and a GU (and some nipple protection I forgot), and was back out. I felt fine for miles 9 and 10. I stopped and stretched the IT band at mile 11.5. At mile 12 I was running over snow, when I slipped and twisted my knee, twice. I swore so loud I think the passing cars slowed to make sure I was ok. I slowed the pace down, but my knee was ok. I stopped again to stretch at mile 14, but still no pain in my knee. My IT bands felt tight, but no pain. I finished the run at 16.08 miles with an average pace of 7:56m/m. The garmin said 2:07:33, but I was out for about 2:15 including all stops.
Overall, I'm very happy with this long run. I'm also happy my knee was pain free. I think the stretching and foam rolling really helped. I also think going out slower made a difference. I still need to go to the PT, but it'll have to wait until after the big snow storm this weekend.
Next weekend I'm suppose to do 18miles on Saturday. Yikes
I started out at about 10am. My plan was to run an 8-mile loop from my house, stop and get a drink and GU, and then do another 8-mile loop. The first few miles were kinda tough, nothing hurt, just felt a bit sluggish. The wind was a bit stonger than I expected. weather.com said it was about 10mph. The sidewalks in the area are only partially cleared of snow, so in some cases I ran on the street, or parking lots, and other time I just ran over the snow. As the run progressed I kept a 7:50m/m pace, which felt comfortable. I stopped after 6 miles to stretch my legs and at 7 miles to tie my shoe.
Got back home, got a drink and a GU (and some nipple protection I forgot), and was back out. I felt fine for miles 9 and 10. I stopped and stretched the IT band at mile 11.5. At mile 12 I was running over snow, when I slipped and twisted my knee, twice. I swore so loud I think the passing cars slowed to make sure I was ok. I slowed the pace down, but my knee was ok. I stopped again to stretch at mile 14, but still no pain in my knee. My IT bands felt tight, but no pain. I finished the run at 16.08 miles with an average pace of 7:56m/m. The garmin said 2:07:33, but I was out for about 2:15 including all stops.
Overall, I'm very happy with this long run. I'm also happy my knee was pain free. I think the stretching and foam rolling really helped. I also think going out slower made a difference. I still need to go to the PT, but it'll have to wait until after the big snow storm this weekend.
Next weekend I'm suppose to do 18miles on Saturday. Yikes
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Long run on the wrong day
I'm going to run my long run today. I know today is only Thursday, but i have to do it. This weekend (Friday and Sat) we are suppose to get 2 feet of snow, and I really want to do this run on the road. So I'm going to do my long run on Thursday. This goes against everything I've done in the past. I always rest before my long run. Not this time, ran 8 miles yesterday. So we will see how it goes.
My goal is 16 miles. Again I have to run this slow and easy. I used this calculator before (Runbayou) and it says with my race pace, my slow runs should be around 9m/m. I will try and run this slow.
I worry about my knee. During many of my long runs (>13 miles), the outside of my left knee hurts. I have not been to the doctors, but the folks at RunningAhead say its probably IT band problems. It only hurts during long runs, and stops when I stop running. So, I've been stretching, strengthening, and rolling on a foam roller to try and loosen the band up. If I continue to have this problem, I'm afraid I will not be able to do the long distances. A trip to the Doctors and Physical therapist is on order, and I will do that soon.
I have to beat that snow and get this run in. Wish me and my knee luck and I'll let you know how it goes.
My goal is 16 miles. Again I have to run this slow and easy. I used this calculator before (Runbayou) and it says with my race pace, my slow runs should be around 9m/m. I will try and run this slow.
I worry about my knee. During many of my long runs (>13 miles), the outside of my left knee hurts. I have not been to the doctors, but the folks at RunningAhead say its probably IT band problems. It only hurts during long runs, and stops when I stop running. So, I've been stretching, strengthening, and rolling on a foam roller to try and loosen the band up. If I continue to have this problem, I'm afraid I will not be able to do the long distances. A trip to the Doctors and Physical therapist is on order, and I will do that soon.
I have to beat that snow and get this run in. Wish me and my knee luck and I'll let you know how it goes.
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