Epic Italy – Part I

EpicItalyPart1

Just read my previous entry ahead of writing this and knowing how quickly I got involved in the Epic Camp Points competition it seems rather amusing that I was stating I wouldn’t ! Yes, Jo and I are back from Epic Camp and it was awesome. What an experience – 8 days of hard training with like minded individuals, in awesome scenery and with 3 excellent coaches to gain wisdom from.  Almost tempted to go back to work so I can afford to do these camps regularly !

Must admit to having pretty severe post camp depression and writing this will hopefully be theraputic. Be warned …. This could be very long – I made a lot of notes for this during the camp.

Will start by giving the raw stats on what I did each day and then give a day by day account of the camp.

EpicItalyData

Sunday 8th June

HR: 48, Sleep: 7.75hrs, Motivation: 7, Fatigue:3

Swim: 3k, Bike: 120k, Run: 25m, Hours: 8:03

Jo and I had done a nice 10k (ish) run round Verona yesterday so we were asked to lead the first session of the camp. We were slightly nervous about this not knowing what everyone was like, what sort of pace we should run at, would they like the run etc etc… at least I was confident I could repeat the route without any mistakes. Probably some of the nicest weather of the camp and a nice conversational pace allowing us all to get to know each other a little.

Next was a swim session in a lovely open air 50m pool – we had the whole pool and what a pleasure to swim long course, outdoors with great views. We did a 1k warm up before the 2k time trial. The pool was cold and most had warmed up in wetsuits but when told of the 6 seconds per 100m for not wearing a wetsuit I took mine off. With it being long course my aim was about 1.30 100s. I knew Scott was quick and hoped to keep him within 125m which would probably make my time quicker ! It’s good to hope but when he lapped me at the 1km mark I knew there was no chance. What I hadn’t noticed was how quick John Newsom had gone finishing a further 100m ahead. I managed to get 4th in 29:41 and was first of the none coaches so was happy.

The ride today was along Lake Gardia with a ‘neutral’ zone to the lake. This neutral zone meant cruising at 20mph and on the decent to the lake Jo popped off the back. We  regrouped and headed off along the lake – now not neutral and the fun started. Bursts and people trying to jump off … I say people, probably just Gordo. My aim was to just follow any move and stay in the front pack. The camp is advertised as including everything but mercy … when there was a pee stop I saw this in action. I luckily, didn’t need to pee so just went on easy. When Gordo came by I thought he’d slow up to get everyone to regroup but when another rider went through and I saw they were not slowly I decided to push to get back on. There was no easing up and everyone had to work to come back together. All great fun, we averaged over 21.5mph to the stop for the TT

The final bit was a 11km uphill time trial. In my previous post I’d commented on not chasing the pink points jersey. I felt that my speed in events would not be sufficient for me to have a chance. This was the first chance to test this theory – the ride to this point hadn’t revealed much. We were going at 30 second intervals based on the swim TT. This meant I was going 4th from last with Scott, Gordo then John chasing me down.

Initially I thought I’d just go steady and not trash my legs. Hoping to catch my 30 second man before Scott got me.  I started steady but once I saw someone ahead I started to build and soon was really pushing the throttle. No sign of Scott and I’d passed someone. I started to move through the field with no one catching me. I saw Jo ahead and she was proving more difficult to reel in than the others – she clearly was going well. Finally got her and got to the line without anyone catching me. I managed a little in 24 minutes and was second to Gordo. I was very chuffed when Scott commented on my speed on the flats and how his aero bars were giving him 2-3 kmh but he couldn’t get me. Also it showed I was relatively strong on the bike and having made some points back on John I thought perhaps give a push to get the Pink Jersey today. Jo had come in 5 th fastest, I believe, and proved though she was getting dropped on the flats once we hit the hills she would kick some ass !

We got Trento with loads of time and I decided it was a good chance to get a long run in (ie over 2 hours) and get some bonus points. My thinking was later in the camp such a long run may be more difficult. Decided to go for 2h30 to get 5 points. It was a lovely afternoon, Jo and I ran along the river. Jo was flying and after about the first hour I couldn’t match her pace – I’m sure she must have enjoyed having to turn and run back to me. Unbeknown to me John was out tacking on 30km on the bike and doing another swim session. I got the the Pink Jersey by 0.5 of a point and was very pleased I’d stayed firm about doing 2.5 hours rather than just 2 !

Gordo said our run was a ‘Bold Move” … we didn’t think so – in terms of volume it wasn’t that unusual a day but his comment certainly made us wonder about whether we would crack later in the week due to the pace on the rides.

Monday 9th June

HR: 47, Sleep: 7.5hrs, Motivation: 8, Fatigue:6

Swim: 6k, Bike: 180, Run: 5.5m, Hours: 9:22

Pink fever hit pretty quick. I didn’t sleep well from thinking about ways to gain points. It seemed a pretty clear approach – the bonus points for sets in the pool, 2 hour runs etc… just need to amassed over the course of the camp as they could only be got once. 200km ride seemed pretty unlikely in this terrain but I would grab the chance if possible. The key seemed to be a few things – perform well in races, place high in the King Of The Mountains since these came in to general classification at the end and tack on whenever I was close to an extra point as these were points you only had one chance to get.

Thus plan today was to get in a 6k swim as we had the pool for 2 hours (I didn’t know how often this would be possible) and as part of this get a set done. Decided the easiest one would be 10 x 200 on 3.05 for 2 points. I managed this reasonably comfortably after the first few as I got into a rhythm and just came in on around 2.55 for each of them. I’d run to the pool with Jo to get the run done.

The ride today was going to be tough and I decided I should try and meter out my effort as I could whilst keep towards the front for KOM points on the first climb.

We were climbing almost immediately and Gordo jumped off the front. I decided to stay with the bunch and Scott, John and Jo and I rode away from the pack. Jo hit the front and worked her butt off trying to pull us back to Gordo. She reported later of a HR of 175 for huge periods. John, Scott and I were shameless in following her wheel and following this Jo and I got some ribbing about me being my own ‘domestique’ along – it made me smile. Scott took the front and pushed it on a little, John was second wheel, Jo third and then me. I could see a gap appear and moved round Jo to fill it and try and pull her back up but she wasn’t able to come with me to bridge back. I managed to bridge back briefly but then dropped off again. The rain started and Scott stopped for a jacket allowing John to get to the top 2nd and me 3rd. We offered him the 2nd spot as it was a hollow victory over him but he was having none of it.

Awesome decent to lunch and the weather improved. Over lunch before the others arrived there was some great banter between the coaches:

•comments on how tough Jo is

•Jo very good on steep climbs and Gordo saying that he’d have to make sure she was dropped before any steep clim s

•Gordo said that the thing with newbies is you don’t know if they’re gonna be freaks and not tire ! I thought – there’s a good chance JO and I won’t !

•More about jo being my domestique

•Mike comments that jo just needed to take a deep breath and she’d float up climbs.

•Ribbing about our rainlegs … they may learn how good they are at some point

•Scott noticed my lack of VMOs and was shocked that I beat him on an uphill TT without VMOs !!

Jo and made an impression with her guts and her climbing ability. I was really pleased after the first day when staying with a group of strong guys on the flats was so difficult.

I was keen to get on as I wanted to tack on to 180km and knew there wasn’t much time. I headed out with John, Scott and Gordo and we worked quite well together to the climb. At the climb I pushed for a couple of reasons – I wanted to show I was still strong (this felt like a bike race which made it so much fun) and I needed to be quick to get the 180km within the 12 hour window (you have 12 hours to train from the start of your first session). I had to TT along a road outside Trento to get it done and got home with 5 minutes to spare ! It’s great that gaining these extra points is not just a matter of pootling along on the bike … I had to work hard to get them done in time.

Great dinner – Jo got a special commendation from Scott for dragging us up the first 20km !! Gordo said I’d kept him honest on the final climb.

Felt strong and still fairly fresh as I went to bed but still mind racing which made getting to sleep difficult.

Tuesday 10th June

HR: 48, Sleep: 7.5hrs, Motivation: 10, Fatigue:6

Swim: 3k, Bike: 180, Run: 6m, Hours: 8:59

We started with a group run to the pool. Was fun, easy paced and a chance to chat. I had hoped to run back as well but John wasn’t keen as we were tight for time to leave with a big day ahead on the bike. As it happened we had a slightly delayed start and with the morning traffic I would have easily got a run in after the swim.  The swim went really well – did 20 x 100 on 1.30 (long course again) – I was swimming strong and coming in on around 1.23 – another 2 points !

Each bike stage I’m thinking like it’s a race. Today decide that with the long gradually uphill approach to the two climbs I should go with any break and aim to get to the climbs ahead of the group so I can do a steady climb up, get good points without trashing myself.

Early on Gordo makes the jump and I manage to go with him but no one else does. We work together for a while and gain quite a lead before he makes another move and I don’t go with it. Content with my position I time trial along heading towards the aid startion. It’s not where it’s meant and I’ve done a big detour off route to get to it. I decide I should check the map and just get on with it unsupported. My map is gone ! It’s hot, I have no water and can only remember the next town on the route. I head there looking to get water and a map and push on. Nowhere is open as it’s round lunchtime. I call Ian and start riding up and down the road in Pedrozza to make sure I at least gain KMs whilst I’m waiting. I ask loads of locals and they consistently point down the road for the marmalada but I really can’t focus on pushing when I believe there’s a chance I’m going the wrong way. I notice the Tourist Info and slow down to move in, I here a call from behind from a cyclist and pull out of the road to see John and everyone else fly down. Apparently John puts the hammer down at that point and I have to work hard to catch them. I’m none to happy that my efforst of the morning were for nothing. Scott kindly offers me some water. Then Ian comes by, I chuck him my bottles and get them later. Then they go ahead to give me a banana and a new map. Once I have fluid and have got my breath back I decide to jump the group. I get away with Gordo who then jumps by me. I work my arse off to get back on his wheel hoping he’d be up for working together for a while. I can’t mask my breathing when I bridge – I’ve redlined for a period to get there, he immediately moves across removing the draft and sprints, looking over to see if I’m coming. I look back see we’re away from the group and leave him go … though I’m flattering myself to suggest I could have done anything else.

The Passo di Fedaia proved a lot easier that expected and a pretty conservative effort got me to the top in Second. Jo came up 3rd !! We stopped for lunch and though I was keen to get going (largely so I could tack on at the end) Gordo said we should wait for the others. Great lunch and awesome decent. The next pass was the Passo di Giau – this was seriously tough.  There was a climb then decent before the main climb started. I got clear into 2nd place on the first ascent but second guessed myself on the route and decide to turn round only to meet up with Jo going the same way. We agreed to work together to try and get a gap on the others by the bottom but just as we turned onto the climb we saw Scott had caught us. I pushed hard early in the climb to try and pull away and then settled but Scott slowly reeled me in and then easily went by gently spinning the pedals. It was only later I discovered he’s packing a triple !! Jo came strong later in the climb and was closing in on me and made me have to work hard. I managed 3rd to the top.

Jo and I descended together and both planned to tack on to 180km but soon Jo realised she didn’t have the extra mileage I’d done in Pedrozza so knocked it on the head. I had to TT hard to get it done with literally seconds to spare. Ian and John were checking their watches as I came in.

Jo really showed her strength today and hopefully it’s making her realise what I really believe – she can be damned good at this Ironman Malarky !!

Mike Peters made some comparison of me to some guy from a previous camp. He said something about it’s the body that;ll have to break cause the mind won’t … I rather liked that.

Wednesday 11th June

HR:51, Sleep: 7 hrs, Motivation: 9, Fatigue: 8

Swim: 6km, Bike: 153km, Run: 5.5m, Hours: 9:06

Felt pretty tired this morning. Still not sleeping well.Went for 50 minute run with Jo first thing before breakfast and the legs soon eased off and I felt strong.

The planned stuff for today was pretty easy so I was hoping to get some extra done and definitely intended heading along on ‘Scotts Surprise”. First thing was to ride the 56km down to the pool. After a climb for about 10km it was all downhill. John Newsom pulled on the front the whole way. At times Jo was struggling to keep with the pack so I would ease back and try and pull her back on. When we got stopped at some lights I discovered she was dropped and the helmet I was glancing over my should was Russ’s … no idea how long I’d been making this mistake. John towed us there in 1h45 – good going !

This was another chance to get 6km done so I was taking it. There was also the 400 IM race ! I got in quick to try and get ahead on the distance. The 400IM was great – luckily I got in the heat with Gordo, Scott and John. It was such fun, taking me back to my youth and swim racing. As usual (I always did this in swim events when I was younger) I went down the first 50m fly fast and suffered a little for it on the 2nd 50. I was pleasantly surprised to find that Scott, Gordon and John weren’t demon fly swimmers and I was in contention after the fly, Gordo and scott got away a little on the backstroke and then on the breaststroke I gained something back and was ahead of John heading into the freestyle. John is fast so I pummelled it to stay ahead of him – luckily I finished within 4 seconds of Gordo so when his wearing of a Blue Seventy pointzero7 suit was taken into account I was second in 6.32. Very pleased.

I raced through the rest of my 6k and had a very swift lunch to be ready to leave with group along this excellent cycle path back towards Cortina. The weather was great as we went along the cycle path but looked slightly more threatening when we got to the decision point to do “Scotts Surprise”. Jo, myself and Mike decided to grab all our bad weather gear and join Scott to climb the beer mountain – Tre Cime di Lavarado.

This did not disappoint. I was almost happy as the weather got worse. First rain, then thunder, lightening …. Then simultaneous thunder and lightening and torrential rain. It was even cold ! Character building stuff. Stuff u can draw on when the going gets tough. All the time Gordo’s words ringing in my ears “never climb into lightening” but Scott was ahead and not for turning round I certainly wasn’t gonna bottle it. The road was pretty unrelenting and even with 34 x 26 I spent much of the time out of the saddle. I was slightly gutted when I saw Scott go by the turning to the café and head to the higher car park. I did the same and it was worth it. We regrouped in the café – had coffee, beer, soup and huddled round the wood burner with various items of clothing being wrung out onto it and then turned rapidly to avoid them melting. We knew we had to warm up before the return. It was really fun, some good banter. The weather cleared slightly so we took the opportunity to descend and climb over Passo Tre Croci back to Cortina. On the ascent Jo, (I find out later) thinking Scott has his iPod on, says she’s looking forward to a cuddle. Anyway … coming back to the hotel Scott and I have dropped Jo and I tell him I’m gonna wait and see if Jo wants to tack on to 150km. Scott says he thinks the cuddle would be the better option ! Anyway – Jo of course wanted to  get the extra mileage.

Thursday 12th June

HR: 47, Sleep: 6 hrs, Motivation: 8, Fatigue: 6

Swim: 3k, Bike: 169km, Run: 12.5m, hours: 10:16

This is an “easy day” … a ‘regroup day” but you can see from the above that it was the longest days training I did. The camp is 8 days so I felt I didn’t want to waste one with rest… I can rest when I get home.

So… Jo suggested getting up early and doing a long run. I didn’t need asking twice it was precisely want I wanted to do. The mountains here look great and running a little into them would be a shame to miss. So we got on the road at 5am and headed along the path for a little over an hour. It was really nice – saw some wildlife and had a good natter.

The plan was to drive to the pool but that just seemed a waste of training time, the 12 hour window had started at 5am for me. Also – the 56km to the pool was largely downhill and was fun yesterday so I decided to ride. Mike was going to join me but as we collected our bikes he found he had a puncture so I was on my own. I decided to see if I could match the time we managed yesterday – so I pushed along and managed 1h45 again – very pleased.

In the pool I did 1km bands only for a point. Then I waited for Jo who was getting 6km in. We cycled a little together, had a coffee but Jo just wanted to ride back. I didn’t want to miss the chance to ride more in this area so decided that a loop round the ‘beer mountain’ looked good and though there were 3 passes for some reason I decide that the climbing wouldn’t be that much. With hindsight I’ve no idea why I felt this perhaps tiredness was making me delusional. I headed off confident I’d be back by 5pm at latest and have time to hang out before dinner.

First pass was over Krauzbergpass – pretty steady pass. On the descent it started to rain and I got cold. The descent was long which wasn’t a good sign and when I got to Padola it was miserable weather and the place seemed desserted. I felt a long way from home but by now reasonably committed to the route. Next came Passo de Antonio – shame these maps don’t have contours … this was a pretty decent climb and at the top I was totally committed to continue the route. It was also pretty clear I was not going to be back by 5pm. I started the descent and below me opened up a massive valley – it was way way down. Then the first hairpin was numbered…. All bad signs. Bad enough that at turn 5 I turned back to check my route. Surely I didn’t have to descent that much. If I did was had one hell of a tough ride ahead of me. At the top I asked a couple of workmen – yes that was the right way. It was a long descent and I got down to 800m … this meant I had a 1,000m ascent to the top of Passo Tre Croci. This was tough and by the end I was pretty wasted (and this was a rest day), I’d managed 169km the second hard tough going and having to push not to be too late. I also went over the 12 hour window but luckily I hit 150 in the 12 hour window and was given it by Gordo.

I felt trashed and tomorrow is no rest day. I needed good food, good sleep and with luck wouldn’t completely crash tomorrow.

Posted in Epic Camp, Epic Italy | Tagged | Leave a comment

Pre Epic Camp

PreEpicItaly

The graph is my training plan for Germany to Kona.

Tomorrow Jo and I are flying to Verona to take part in Epic Camp. I am so excited about this. Been something I’ve wanted to do ever since getting serious about Ironman. I’m looking forward to an environment where I can really try for my biggest weeks training and be amongst people that just don’t find this unusual. At the moment I’m thinking I won’t get caught up in going for the yellow (or will it be pink) jersey but instead aim to get a big volume block of training done.  The reason I say this is to get points you need to do swim sessions that are multiplies of 3km … so you wouldn’t bother doing more than 3km unless you were gonna do 6km. Similarly for running it’s multiples of 50mins … so you wouldn’t run off the bike unless u will get 50 minutes done. I feel I want to get the best training for me … ie run off the bike every time even if just for 20 minutes. Anyway, all the best laid plans and all that. I’m fully imagining the bike intensity will be a notch or two (or 10) above what I’m used to and it may just rip me apart. Full report when I get back.

I’ve put a little something together that should keep some of you interested ! I’ve been planning out my training between Germany and Kona and have decided to publish it up on my site here. It’s been fun and interesting doing this as I’ve been trying to include more quality bike sessions and ensure enough recovery. Also, having now had a fair amount of time full time I know what sorts of days training I can easily manage and what’s quite tricky to motivate for. Despite focussing on quality rather than quantity I’ve still ended up with my 4 PUSH weeks of getting close to 50 hours but I’ve reviewed and reviewed them and believe this is achievable whilst getting plenty of rest during the weeks. In general I’ve tried to avoid committing to running to swim sessions (other than the minimum required to get there) as this puts a lot of pressure on getting decent sleep. Thursday morning bikes are now very much down to warming up, the main set of an hour (or so sometimes) and cooling down. To get my other sessions done on the bike I’ve decided to head to Regents Park some Wednesday mornings – again this is a less stressful way of getting it done and a great controlled environment. The alternative would be an earlier start and heading out of London which would just result in a much longer ride in order to get the session done. Longer session on Saturdays and then just steady 100 milers on Tuesdays and Sundays – both hopefully social rides. Anyway… take a look if you are interested.

Training since the last entry has been quite focussed on ensuring full recovery for Epic Camp. We’ve been told that we should try and start the camp without any ‘residual fatigue’ … this has kind of been ringing in my ears and erring me on the side of caution this week. So Tuesday I rode 100+ miles but then knocked the brick and swim on the head. Yesterday I knocked everything on the head other than the squad swim – which went well. Did 2 x (8 x 200m) … managed the first lot all in low 2.40s and second lot on about 2.50. Very pleased. This morning I just got up in time for a short warm up before doing just over an hour of chainganging – felt strong.

As usual though with this reduced volume I found myself falling off the wagon food wise and ended up eating a load of carbs and piling on quite a few pounds in a few days. Pretty gutted with myself and still trying to work out how to control this part of my preparations. Certainly in the period between Germany and Kona I know I need to focus on good nutrition especially during the recovery and taper weeks.

Posted in Epic Camp, Epic Italy | Tagged | Leave a comment

Birthday

Todays my Birthday and interestingly enough I only got one cycling related present! David came up trumps again by finding a book on cycling I hadn’t read! Don’t know how he manages it. Enjoyed a light day of training – 50 minute run to the pool and a 90 minute swim. Was going well. Rest of day just chilled out.

At the weekend I did what has become a bit of a birthday tradition – a Birthday attempt at a long ride. I headed out North and got as far as Oundle. Virtually off the road map I use ! Flukily (is that a word?) I bumped into Kevin, Ray and Andrea at their start point and they kindly reversed their ride so we could do the first 35 miles together. I then head North north north to meet Roger, a guy I met in New Zealand who qualified for Kona. He lives near Rutland so he headed a bit south to meet me. It was great to chat about all things Ironman and, knowing I wanted a big ride, he helped me by taking me further north to Oundle for coffee and a sandwich. Pretty committing considering I had 100 miles on the clock and I’d been cycling away from home the whole time.

Luckily I was on my race bike and had been motoring this didn’t let up on the return as I really didn’t have much time to mess about. In 10 hours I covered 178 miles which is good going for me. By the time I got home I’d done a mere 204 miles ! Longest ride of the year.

Sunday felt like an easy ride as I was heading out with Jo to accompany her on her 3.5 hour IM pace effort. We cycled an hour out and started. I was on my P3C again and I had great fun, letting Jo get ahead then pummeling it till I got ahead and then pushing on for 10 minutes until I was getting close to a turn on the route we planned. I then eased up to let Jo catch up again and then I’d repeat. I ended up with a 3.5 hours hard interval session and my legs certainly felt it. The final section from Great Dunmow to Leaden Roding I blasted at 27 mph !! I felt awesome.

Really enjoyed this and looking forward to the summers training I’ve been mapping out which will include a lot more of this sort of quality bike work.

Posted in Big Rides, Training | Tagged | Leave a comment

Some Intensity

Here’s another YouTube video of the Mid Wales Ultra. bit more footge of Jo and I. Certainly enjoy getting a chance to think back over that race.

Been planning out my summers training and looking to try and build on all the base work I’ve done till now and get some increased bike and running speed. My swimming is improving as I knew it would by increasing my volume and doing weights in the gym. It’s the one aspect where I’m confident about what I need to do. I think largely because it’s the one area that I’m not aiming to go faster than I’ve ever done before. It’d be awesome to get back to my student days of knocking out 4.40 for 400s in training but it’s probably not going to happen. However, I do know that if I consistently get the swimming done and do weights I will move closer to that. On Wednesday evening I cruised a 5.25 400 in the middle of the main set and this morning I managed 5.19 in a TT. Please with it considering I didn’t really pace it for the fastest time but did a race simulation. Thus I went flat out for 50m – even beat Luis down the first length and was with him at two… he went on to do 4.45 ! My target now is to manage at least 20k of swimming per week and other than during recovery and race weeks continue this to Kona. With luck, I will get out of the swim well up the field and enjoy a great bike.

I did some quality sessions yesterday. In the morning went to Regents Park. Kevin was on his new TT bike and we did about 75 minutes of constant effort averaging well over 20mph. When the others arrived we did a session of 5 x (1 lap all out, half lap recovery) – we were all going well and gave great motivation. I was on my fixed and managed every lap between 7.28 (my last lap) and 7.42 (4th lap – got held up a little by lights and traffic) – these are some of the fastest laps I’ve done.

In the morning I got in the pool and did a long continuous swim. Did 1km to start then got the pull Buoy and band and swam a straight 5km. Then did a final 2km. 8km in 2h20.

Lunchtime saw me running with Stephen. Headed to Primrose Hill and did 20 minutes of hill repeats.

The day knocked me for six. Rested the rest of the afternoon, couldn’t face the club handicap in the evening. In bed and asleep by 7.30pm but still tired at 4.30am so knocked my hours run on the head and got an extra hours sleep.

Pretty sure I’m going to knock the 60 runs of 60 minutes in 60 days attempt on the head as I’m starting to feel now that it’s detrimental motivation. I feel down when I miss a run and then am often out running almost zombie like. Important thing now is recovery to make the most of Epic Camp.

Seeing how much the intense work yesterday took out of me – particularly the bike sessions means I’m going to spend some time reviewing my summer schedule and ensuring there is enough recovery time for the more intense cycling I’m planning.

Posted in Training | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Fred Whitton Weekend

FredWhitton

Myself plus a dozen other Tri Londoners headed north for the Bank Holiday weekend, escaping the storms down south, and enjoying 3 days of sunshine in the Lake District. Many arrived together in the ‘Sunshine bus’ and started the weekend as they meant to continue … no not by unpacking the bikes and giving the legs a spin but by heading out for Lunch !  For me the weekend started on the Saturday with five reps of Kirkstone Pass and then riding the Helvellyn Bike Route followed by an hours run off the bike.

The Fred Whitton Challenge kicked off with a massive feed in the hostel on the Saturday night. Jo and I cooked a great main course which was washed down with a little wine and beer and then followed by an awesome selection of desserts prepared by Kathleen, John and Morag.

The morning of the attempt Jo and I got up and headed out for a run – Jo got her 50 minutes done and whilst she got her bike ready I tagged on 10 minutes to get my hours done. I had a cracking breakfast of sausage, egg, bacon and  cheese – set me up for the day. We were on the road by 7.30am and soon heading up Kirkstone Pass. The highest pass on the route but only really a taster for what lies ahead. This route involves riding 112 miles over some 12 passes (Kirkstone, Matterdale, Honister, Newlands, Whinlatter, Fangs Brow, Kelton Fell, Cold Fell, Irton Pike, Hard Knott, Wrynose and finally Hawkshead Hill). The group rode well together regrouping at the top of each climb. Varying levels of enthusiasm early on saw some full of beans pushing on, whilst others, notably the Tri London King of The Mountains points winner, holding back early on knowing full well what was in store. First stop was at nearly 40 miles just ahead of the first major climb – Honister.  A cracking 25%er though I imagine most would agree that the hardest section felt harder than that. The King Of The Mountains form continued from last week with Alex and Luis getting to the front. Luis staying in the saddle for, almost a disrespectful time before finally having to get out for make progress. The wind was on our backs here but it meant in our faces for the hardest climbs later on. Two climbs follow in quick succession before we had a sit down and regroup at the top of Whinlatter (the point of no return!).

Fantastic that no one chose to turn back at this point and we all enjoyed the awesome descent into Lorton – spinning top gears at 40mph through sweeping bends helps remove the pain from the previous climbs and the thought of whats to come. The next section is in one of the qietest bits of the lakes and is disceptively lumpy robbing precious energy from the legs. Another awesome descent from Cold Fell brought us to the second feed stop in Gosforth. Still Chris and Kevin seemed to not believe me when I said the hardest climb was still to come.

The ride up Eskdale always seems to take longer than expected, the whole time you can see any chance of an easy exit getting removed until finally you see a road insanely snaking up a fell side. This is Hard Knott pass – the toughest part of the whole ride and we’ve only done 90 miles and 9 passes as warm up! The group falls into silence and finally come to the red phone box which marks the start. It kicks up immediately and a cattle grid early on doesn’t help. The climb is insanely steep for a long time early on (30%) and you have to red line for minutes to make progress. The winds were gale force and in our faces. It was clear to me this would be the toughest it’s been. The first section was so much harder than I remember I think due to the gale force winds. I had severe doubts about completing the climb despite having never failed an attempt There’s an easing off halfway and I took the opportunity to take it easy and catch my breath. Ahead you can see the steepest pitch (some 35%) and I could see Luis and Alex ahead. As I hit the hard bit I see Luis come to a stop on the steepest section. There are cars coming down so you can’t use the full road and on this section the tarmac is very worn so you hit bumps that virtually stop you. On a few occassions I could only just get the pedals round quick enough to be able to start the next pedal stroke. I power past Luis with Jo not far behind. The gradient eases off to about 25% and I think it’s all done now just keep it together and you’ll get the top. Then the wind really hits and this feels even harder. Alex keels over sideways ahead of me leaving his bike in the middle of the road. I shout “Move your bike Alex!” which prompts him into action just in time to prevent me coming off as well. Approaching the brow the wind is so strong I can hardly move forward and on the top I can hardly stand up. I get shelter just as Jo finishes – an astonishing effort to be the only other person to ride the whole thing. In this wind I was surprised she’d not be blown away.

It was almost a party atmosphere as every arrived at the top by various means and hunkered down out of the wind, in the sun, to watch the others arrive. Everyone made it to the top and were buzzing. The descent was serioulsy hairy and then along the valley to Wrynose – the wind was so strong we were largely in our bottom gear on the flat. Luckily as the road steepened it got out of the wind making Wrynose manageable. I felt very light headed on the ascent of Wrynose, which bizarrely seemed to help as I was not fully aware of my legs. The descent was interesting due to a broken down car and a BMW driver (the sort that gives BMW drivers a bad name!) – I think we all gave him some choice words as we snuck past. About half the group had a highly amusing sit by the road waiting for the others and watching various drivers in cars two wide for their driving skills try and edge by !

With one climb left we had 4 of the group decide to call it a day. Morag had a hot date and headed off  whilst the others, having spent 10 hours riding over the toughest climbs in the country, much into gale force headwinds found the lure of a sign saying “Ambleside 3m” too much and took the left turn rather than the right required to complete the route. After splitting the main group headed down some of the best riding of the day – the sweeping bends into Coniston. I tried to do the jump on Alex and Luis approaching the brow of the hill but Luis managed to hop on my wheel to do a little “Sandbagging”. Glad he did as I had someone to share the 40+mph pedalled descent through the twisting roads … we were beaming as we waited for the others in Coniston. Hawkshead Hill – the final one. Time to give it all you had left. I absolutely pummelled it and was interested to see who would give chase… only Luis did and he maintained his distance never able to pull in the gap I’d managed to jump on him early on. We were all wasted at the top. More or less downhill from there. 5 stopped for a pint at the Drunken Duck whilst the others headed back to run off the bike !

I managed to get myself out for a run and felt I’d only do 20 minutes but I felt great right from the off and ended up running for 70 minutes before getting back for some food and then most of us chilled out in the living room of the hostel  and chatted away getting merrier and merrier.

To round off the weekend Jo and I got up next morning and were joined by Kevin and Alex for a lovely run round Rydal and Grasmere – just over 90 minutes before breakie. Jo, Sparky and I then did a 60 mile ride out into the wind to Greystoke and enjoyed an awesome ride back with a tail wind.

Absolutely awesome weekend and I’m completely wasted as a result. Yesterday and today I’ve only managed swim sessions. Tomorrow I should be back into full training.

Posted in Big Rides, Training | Leave a comment

No Working Malarky

I am really enjoying this no working malarky ! Having time to just do things that you want to do. I’ve had the time to completely re-do the TriLondon Website. Really enjoyed it and if website design wasn’t such a competitive field I would consider this as a way of making a living. Also ran the clubs King Of The Mountain competition last Sunday. It was a real success – great fun. I reckon I enjoyed it more as the organiser than I would if I competed. It was lovely to be able to chill out at Box Hill cafe for an hour at the end. Followed in the evening by a social at my flat. Finally, sorted out a bike mechanic course – worked out perfectly as I can do the two weeks consecutively just after I return from Kona. Be good to be able to make a few quid working as a bike mechanic (with a bit of luck).

Training been going really well in amongst all of this. The volume is getting back up there and I’m running consistently. On Saturday I had a monster Brick session – rode 128 miles and then ran 18 miles off the bike. The awesome thing was how strong I was running and I ran strong throughout, didn’t fade at all. I could have kept going. I was buzzing Saturday night and it allowed me to relax on Sunday and just enjoy the day.

Read a great article by Justin Daerr about how he want from 12.55 Ironman to 9.20 and then from 9.20 to 8.40. The latter was great to read since it’s the step I’m trying to make. My best is 9.15 achieved a couple of years ago but I’ve not managed to move on from that. This article gave details of the bike sessions he did. I am now working from my schedule from Germany to Kona. I have scheduled it as less volume and more serious work on the bike. I’m quite excited about it. Entering New Zealand next year has made me change my focus this year – Wisconsin is no longer the priority race since I feel if I don’t qualify there then New Zealand gives a great second chance, Lanzarote will make a great 3rd. Anyway, the outcome is my focus is now on getting a good time at Kona.

Posted in Training | Leave a comment

Another Day In The Life Of A Full Time Amateur

Before I get into todays entry I thought some of you might like to see the YouTube footage of the mid wales Ultra. I’m the guy coming out of the swim first !

It’s another Thursday but this time I’m in a big week of training so I thought, as promised, it would be interesting to detail another day of training but this time where the focus is getting the volume in. Not saying this is a typical day but Thursdays can be quite interesting day as it often proves to be the day of the week that I cram lots of different small sessions in rather than a big ride / brick session.

So…

This morning the alarm went off at 3.30am and as it’s a big week I didn’t dither. I immediately took my pulse rate and got up. I’d bought some Pork Pies last night thinking they’d prove a nice quick breakfast … I munched one whilst I looked at a couple of emails and was out on the bike by 3.50am. Pretty pleased with myself.

Usual Thursday morning Fixed wheel session round Regents Park but today we were going to do a 20k time trial. I’d predicted a time based on 8 minute laps (2.75 miles) which I felt was optimistic. At the Park I enjoyed about half a dozen laps pushing it along before Kevin arrived. I eased the pace and we had a good old natter and slowly collected the rest of the crew – Gabriel (key guy as he was doing the timing. He is doing IM Lanza in just over a week so had come up with the TT idea and offered to time) and Luis ( on his HED TT bike … he’d be quick!). Jo turned up just after we’d all set off so was unaware of her presence until after the finish.

Kevin was my minute man and I was Luis’s. As expected this effort felt worst at the start. I had no plans of giving it my all – such efforts really need to be limited when you’re trying to get the volume done. My idea was steady ironman sort of effort. Kevin was out of sight by the time I started. Forgot to check my speedo at 1 lap and at 1.5 laps Luis went by. Didn’t feel I was able to push it but was stunned when I got to 2 laps in just under 16 minutes. Caught Kevin on 4th lap and finished in 36.04. Very pleased with it. One lap was 7.41 which is about the sort of pace I managed to achieve earlier in the year but then I felt I was hammering it.

We finished with some easy laps. The last couple just Gabriel and I having a good old natter before heading for breakie and yet more chatter. I was focussed on getting to the pool quick so I could get my swim done before the schools came in. As I headed home I bumped into Jo – we decided to have a pot of coffee at home. Very nice to have a half hour chat. Still managed to be diving into the pool bang on 9am.

Got a steady 4km done by the time the schools arrived. Headed to the gym and did weights and core work for an hour. This left me about 40 minutes to grab something to eat – had a nice fresh fruit salad and yogurt before Stephen turned up for a run. Now started the big run part of the day. We headed out on an exploratory run up over Hampstead heath. Ended up longer than I’d planned – some 98 minutes and I felt really strong throughout. This left me about 45 minutes for some food. This time – pear and blackberry smoothie, some tomatoes, pork pie and cheese. Checked emails and then back running this time to Battersea Park to meet my sister.

Ran for 63 minutes. Jane was already there so didn’t have long before we were running again with me pushing Isaiah in the 3 wheeler. We did 23 minutes and headed back to Janes … I had about an hour to relax and get some food in – this time a rather delicious combo: 2 slices toast, butter, peanut butter, cheese, sardines all topped with 3 scrambled eggs. Then I was off again running to the clubs 5k Handicap race. I rather over did it and ended up running for 78 minutes getting there just in time. I felt pretty comfortable running still but wondered as to the merit of running the race. Didn’t really have much time to think about it as I was off about 5 minutes after arriving. Ran comfortably and at a reasonable pace – went as well as I’d hoped and probably equated to half ironman race effort. Only had to run home ! Another 15 minutes. Reckon I ran 36 miles in total !!

At home there was time for some more fruit salad and yogurt a bit of a relax before heading to bed having completed about 11 hours of training.

Thursdays can be like that. Normally my days don’t have so many different sessions but I find Thursdays like that quite amusing – if that’s the right word. It’s none stop, you get loads done and I appreciate the fact I’m able to do it. You’ll be pleased to know I certainly felt the effects this morning. I optimistically had my alarm go off at 4.15am aiming for 75 minutes or so run before swimming. I did not hesitate to immediately change it to 5.30 as my legs ached so much and even then I wondered whether I could face the 1.5 mile run to swimming. The run didn’t feel so bad once I got going !

Posted in Training | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Email To A Mate

A friend asked some advice on his training for Ironman / Endurance events. Really enjoyed preparing a brain dump for him and thought perhaps it would make an interesting blog entry. So below is an extract from the mail. I enjoy discussing training and trying to help people out on the training front and have been considering doing some online coaching – the first step though is to get some sort of formal coaching qualification … so with abit of luck the BTA will put out the new calendar of course soon and I can get on the level 1 course.

Anyway… here it is:

“… I reckon you need to keep in mind the long term. You are starting nice and early which means you have the potential to really reap the rewards over the years. Key now is consistency and the key to that is not getting loads of niggly injuries. I reckon you should periodically test what you can get done but not try to make massive leaps. I am a real believer in a Basic week. This is a bog standard set of training u KNOW you can do week in week out. Your aim should be to do this week in week out. 

You deviate from this for several reasons:
1.Tapering for races
2.Recovering from races
3.Adhoc recovery
4.BIG weeks

I plan out my year ahead to give me a base line but I tend to be pretty pretty easy going about changing it. If I start to feel drained I’ll have a rest day (I don’t tend to schedule them) and if thats not enough a rest / easy week. Periodically I have BIG weeks and a few times a year I try to put together several back to back.

To give an idea this is my basic week as per my 2008 plan (remember I’m full time at the moment!):

Monday – 4.5 km Squad swim. 15 mile running consisting of longish run in morning and short run late afternoon
Tuesday – 60m / 6m BRICK
Wednesday – 4.5km squad swim. 15 long run
Thurs – 60m fixed (hard bike), 12m run split into two runs – morning, late afternoon
Friday – 4.5km squad swim
Saturday – 100m / 6m BRICK
Sunday – 100m / 6m BRICK
Totals: 34 hours / 13.5km swim / 320m bike / 60m Run

I know I can hit that easily in a week of proper training and invariable do a lot more. Thing about this is it’s achievable and as such it keeps me motivated. But be prepared for it to change as habits shift. So… for instance my basic week currently pans out more like:

Monday – 4.5km Squad Swim, 1 hour gym, 15 mile running split across two runs
Tuesday – 100m bike
Wednesday – 15m run across two runs, 4.5km squad swim
Thursday – 60m fixed, 3km swim, 1 hr gym. 16m run across two runs
Friday – 4.5km Squad swim, 16m run across two runs
Saturday – 125+m bike / 8.5m BRICK
Sunday – 100+m Bike / 8.5m BRICK

Reckon you want to focus on building up your aerobic fitness. This involves long hours of aerobic work – only way this can realistically be done each week is on the bike. Take a look at Mark Allens article (http://www.markallenonline.com/heartrate.asp ) which is excellent and unbeknownst to me I’d been following this for years ahead of reading the article. Every year I do lots of very long bike rides. We are talking 10 hours or so regularly once there is enough light. Each year I try a breakthrough ride of 200+ miles. I also do long runs (5 hours) when I get the opportunity (ie in the hills). For years ahead of finding Triathlon I did stuff that at the time I didn’t think of as training but in hindsight it was. Initially this was fell walking which got progressively longer … talking a week holiday where most days we’d walk for at least 10 hours with several days doing challenging walks of 16 hours. Then I got into fell running and not only did I do lots of Mountain Marathons – 6,7,8 even 9 hours of running on consecutive days (with packs) but also did loads of training runs – had occasions where I was running for upwards of 12 hours in the mountains and holidays where I was doing this for most days for two weeks.

Thats a long winded way of saying you need to get that sort of thing in the bank. Doing the Mid Wales is the right thing. Do these sort of fun events, set yourself challenges each year and your aerobic base will get monster. As the years pass you will reap the rewards.

Just look at the Mid Wales. After 20 miles on the run I was running strongly. I almost ran the whole thing the only reason I didn’t is I walked with Jo at times. I truly believe that the reason I am able to do this is the background in doing ultra long physical challenges.

As for your Ironman success. Keep working on the swimming. The improvements you’ve made since you first joined the club are impressive but keep working. Swim as often as you can when there is a coach watching you. Swimming comes with years of practice to nail that feel for the water. Though not a big part of Ironman it is a great benefit to be up there out of the swim as you are amongst the faster guys and on the bike get paced by the fast guys. BIG riding is my view as 112 miles must not feel like a long way and if you want to race that distance and still be fresh enough to race the marathon then 112 miles really must not feel that far. By the time I’m racing in the summer if I go out for a 100 miler I feel like I’m “Just” doing 100 miles, I view it as a soft day.

BRICKS – now I’ll be honest I did hardly any prior to this season. But a mate of mine who won M20-24 at Kona and has gone 9 hours at IM Switzerland told me his run training was: 1 hour most mornings and 10km off the bike after every long ride. He runs close to 3 hours off the bike ! I took this to heart and in the run up to New Zealand I was doing 3 bricks a week. I have never felt so good on the run (despite having a niggly injury for a few weeks leading up to the race!) – strong throughout and able to really push hard in the final few KMs. I try and get some long runs in but mostly in the winter and am pretty wary of them because they can really hamper your ability to get your weekly volume training done. Over the years I have built up a tolerance to running. To give an idea – prior to having problems with my knee I couldn’t really do more than 50 miles a week without injuring myself. In my early 30s when my knee was ok and I started fell running I made a point of doing absolutely no speed work whatsoever for running for a couple of years. ALL my running was at conversational pace. I am convinced this really built up all the tendons etc. because now I regularly tolerate 100+ mile weeks. In fact, in the run up to New Zealand I managed 3 consecutive weeks of 100+ miles running including one of 129 miles. I rarely run longer than 2.5 hours (perhaps a few times a year) but regularly do two even three runs a day. On big weeks I may do two 2 hour runs. Now, not saying you should pile in and do this sort of mileage, more you need to start laying the ground work. Slowly build up mileage, be careful of too much speedwork and when you do speedwork accept you will need to recover from it and that will impact that weeks volume.

Another factor I think helped me is I decided one winter to focus on running and see how fast I could go. That winter I managed a 33.58 10k, a 75 minute half and a 2:44 full marathon. I did speedwork every week to achieve that and sacrificed bike volume to be able to recover. I reckon this speed stayed with me in subsequent years, not at the same level but certainly over a marathon I can still maintain a reasonable pace. I’ve only once gone slower than 3.30 in an Ironman. So in terms of long term planning I think worth one year focussing on getting a fast marathon.

Another thing I do quite alot with running is I tend to run most places I go. This can mean alot of 1.5 mile runs to and from swimming, 2.5 mile runs to and from my sisters (though she’s now moved so it’s 5 miles!). Anyway, my thinking is to get my body to feel that running is a normal activity. I think the same about swimming and cycling. You want the muscle memory but since these activities aren’t natural you don’t get it in everyday life. If you think when walking you are using your muscles in a similar way to running ( very layman I know!) but in swimming and cycling there’s not such everyday activity. In my first couple of years doing Ironman I was a firm believer in regular swimming / cycling. So, felt it was better to do 2 x 3km on consecutive days than one day of 6km. As the latter gave a day where the muscle memory wasn’t being  re-affirmed. When I was working this really fit nicely into the pattern of my life and so my basic week in those days would have involved swimming every weekday. In fact, when I went part time I used to swim 3 times on mondays !! And every other weekday. Also I had long periods of riding everyday ! And I mean minimum of 30 miles. Again trying to make it feel natural. Just look at tour de france riders. On rest days they ride, on TT days they’ll ride the course. If it’s good enough for them it’s good enough for me. Now I don’t work I’ve fallen out of that routine but, this week, I’ve started back on the swimming every weekday and when I’m in big weeks I aim to ride every day other than Mondays.

As for specific sessions you mentioned they sound very sensible. Like you I’ve been working on pushing a bigger gear, I’ve upped the gearing on my fixed. I also work on staying seated when climbing. Ultimately you get faster on the bike by pushing a bigger gear at the same cadence. I still don’t feel I really know how to improve the bike, still experimenting and certainly see this as my biggest gains. As for running I’d be wary of regular 20 milers, for the reasons given above. However, whether this works really depends on your circumstances and when you can train. For instance if there is a day in the week where you tend not to be able to train anyway then doing a long run the day before would allow that day for recovery. Really needs to be suck it and see. Trying doing “Kenyan’ days (term nicked from Tim Don) ie 2 runs in a day, and see how you go with that and periodically put in a long run (2.5 / 3 hours) but not every week.”

Posted in Training | Leave a comment

A Day In The Life Of A Full Time Amateur

Thought it might be interesting to detail a typical (well perhaps not so typical ) day for an age group Triathlete that has all they time they want to train. Today was my first day back training after illness and a race. I’d planned to train through the Mid Wales Ultra but I got ill in the week before the race and thus did no training what so ever in the 5 days ahead of the race. Believe it or not whatever was wrong with me seemed to improve following the race however I followed the race with 4 days of complete rest.

This week is a recovery week. For me that means I have very few formal plans for training and like an easy week I will always err on the side of less rather than more. Ie if I am undecided what to do I will do less. This is in contrast to my big weeks where I always err on the side of more !

So today … the first day of training in a recovery week. It started last night when Jo and I both treating ourselves to skipping swimming and going for a pint instead. A rare occurrence but all the more pleasurable for it. The plan in my mind was to get up and do some Regents Park laps just to spin the legs for just a couple of hours or so. Then in the morning go to the pool and get in the gym. Then run with Stephen before running over to Jane to run with her. Great plan.

What a pleasure the alarm only going off at 5.15am and even more pleasurable being able to decide to reset it for 5.25am and get an extra 10 minutes. Up and out by 5.45 and bump into Sparky on the way to Regents Park. Natter on the way. First lap of the park see Gabriel race by, down on the tri bars doing some Ironman pace efforts with Tim and Damien hanging on his wheel. I spin out my fixed to catch him and try and casually strike up a conversation, all like it’s so easy. Last a couple of minutes before deciding that’s enough of the joking and leave them to it. Meet up with Mel and do just over an hour or so of more steady laps and have a good chat about race plans and the like. Find out she can kayak and mention the Hebridean Challenge – perhaps I won’t have to learn to sea kayak to compete in it !

Gabriel finishes just as I’m ready to go. We head off for breakie (abit of a Thursday tradition). Without Jo, we can head to Central Café guilt free (Gabriel and I  like it but Jo’s not so keen). I tell Gabriel all about my weekend and we discuss Lanzarote – he’s doing the Ironman in a few weeks and has been there on a training trip. Hopefuly persuading him to go next year again, worked on Mel earlier … we’re trying to get a good club turnout next year.  Also find out he’s thinking of doing the OMM. This is great news. Jo and I are planning to do it and we were saying how it’ll be ashame if this is the first time I do one and not know other people competing.

Back home I get a text from Jane – she can only run in the morning. This is a recovery week so I can rejig stuff. Unfortunately, it means canceling my lunchtime run with Stephen and trying to get my swim and gym in this afternoon, which I always find more difficult.

Meeting Jane at 10.30am, means I must leave by 9.30, ideally 9.29 to ensure my 60+ minute run. Leaves about 60 minutes to spare. Check emails, some club website work and enter Ironman New Zealand (hurrah!!). Then bang on 9.29 I head off running to meet Jane.

Gorgeous day. All this rest means I feel good running. I hold myself back and just enjoy keeping the pace down. Arrive at Battersea Park bang on 10.30am. Jane turns up but with both Jude and Isaiah. Jude is ill and can’t go to ‘pre school’. We try and run together with Jude on his scooter but it doesn’t last long so I let Jane continue and look after the boys. End up having to run whilst carrying Jude which is a rather interesting training session.

Back at Janes we chill out in the garden. Fill the paddling pool, blow up the pirate ship ! and prepare a delicious salad for lunch. It’s really nice hanging out with my family and decide this is more important than the training planned so I stay 90 minutes longer than I intended. Swim and gym canned (no surprise really). Manage a good 80 minute run on the way home and drop in to the supermarket to get salad for dinner.

Nice to be back home by 4pm and can get back online and respond to emails, work on website and the like. All that’s left is to prepare dinner and watch Heroes.

May repeat this again during a big week.

Posted in Training | Leave a comment

Ultra Triathlons

MidWalesStart

On Saturday I competed in my first ever Ultra Triathlon: the Mid Wales Ultra (click for a race report). Like an ultra marathon is longer than a marathon an ultra triathlon is longer than Ironman. In this case the swim was cut short because the water was ridiculously cold (about 10c). It ended up 1.8km swim, 166 mile bike and 32 mile run.

I feel on cloud nine right now. Like I’ve found something I really really enjoy doing. There was something about that run, the feeling I got… I want to have that feeling again. It really hit me in the second half of the run. I managed to get to a place in my mind where time just flew by, but not only that I seemed able to run fast despite the severe aching in my quads. Not sure whether this made it tougher on Jo but I was enjoying the running and about every 5 minutes I’d be getting to the point Jo couldn’t see me and either I’d notice or Jo would shout and I’d walk till she caught up. She was so understanding – she totally realised that we couldn’t really do it any other way, to run at an unnatural pace would have been crippling for me.

At the moment I just want to feel that again.  Be setting out on a long long run into the night in the middle of nowhere. Seriously running through my mind entering the West highland Ultra run by the same people. This is 3.5 mile swim, 175 mile bike and then a 35 mile run round Applecross. It takes in some of the most stunning scenery in Scotland. It’s 2 weeks before Ironman Germany so I know I can convince myself that there are merits in it – last big day of work before rest and taper. Anyway,… Germany isn’t that important now, I’d like a fast time but in the grand scheme of things my result is of little concern. Only other issue is getting support crew. It’s quite a commitment as it’s gotta be the nearly 600 miles of driving to the start and further to drive back.

Jo’s was an amazing achievement on Saturday, the first woman to finish that event. I had been looking forward to doing the event together and the fact that most likely I would be the strongest one and would be able to help motivate Jo. I guess I’ve always enjoyed that role – when fell walking and fell running I’ve liked it. Jo, however, got quite concerned, even during the race that I wasn’t able to race it. I feel she felt I could be competing for the win. I said I didn’t mind but she’s put the seed of that thought in my mind and I think if I did it again I would want to race. When we look at it … we spent 35 minutes in T1, 10 minutes in T2, had over an hour of stops on the bike and probably 45 minutes of stops on the run. Conservatively, with a more efficient approach (ie racing) I’d save 1h15m easily just from less dithering ignoring the fact I could have ridden and run quicker. That’s for next time, this time I wouldn’t have swapped the experience – it was great to race together and I think it’s confirmed that we will race the KIMM together (hopefully this year) and perhaps at some point try some sort of cycling challenge on a tandem – a fast Lands End To john O’groats is top of the list.

Posted in Race Review | Tagged , | Leave a comment