My first annual twenty-ninth birthday

That’s right. Today is my first annual twenty-ninth birthday! It’s also my father’s birthday so Happy Birthday Dad!

Dad and Cecilia on Whistler Mountain

Race Report: Torchlight Run 8K

Yesterday I ran the Torchlight Run 8K in downtown Seattle. Last year I specifically trained for this race and ran it in a time of 40:53. This year I’m four weeks into half marathon training and so I chose to treat this race as a tune up race and my goal was to run at my half marathon goal pace.

Pre-race

The race started at 6:30 pm which meant that I had all day to second guess my eating strategy and search for something to do with all my nervous energy. I got down to Qwest field at about 5 pm, picked up my bib, checked my gear and found some shade to sit in. It was definitely warmer this year (about 25C) than last year. Late afternoons are the hottest time of the day in Seattle and the sun was beating down yesterday.

I did a couple warm up laps and within moments I had a side stitch! Not good! The same thing happened last year. I think the combination of the heat and an evening race just doesn’t work well for me because the only time I’ve ever gotten a stitch before or during a race is at the Torchlight Run. There wasn’t much I could do so I tried to breath well and lined up between the “8-9 minutes” and “9-10 minutes” pace signs.

The race

The course route heads north on the Alaskan Way Viaduct and then back south through downtown Seattle on 4th Ave. The northbound section is completely exposed so along with beautiful views of Puget Sound the sun was out in full force. The southbound section was shaded by the downtown building and went along the Torchlight Parade route in front of the 300,000 people camped out waiting for the parade to start! My Garmin lost its signal when we ran through the Battery Street Tunnel so while my timing is accurate my splits are off and I’m not going to bother reporting them. Basically I ran fast in miles 1 and 2, slowed down in miles 3 and 4 and then sped back up in mile 5.

My finish time was 42:43 which is a pace of 8:36 min/mile. This is faster than I’d planned to run and I was definitely pushing myself hard. What can I say, I got excited and couldn’t really bring myself to slow my pace down to closer to 9:00 min/mile. I’m not too concerned though. I’ve proved to myself that I can run at (faster than) my half marathon goal pace for 5 miles. I still have ten weeks of training to get that up to 13.1 miles!

Post Race

I didn’t really hang out after the race for very long. I wanted to get out of downtown before the buses got totally tied up by the parade. I did pick up some fruit, water and a Jamba Juice sample (or three). A smoothie has got to be the ultimate summer post race treat!

So all in all this was a pretty good race. I didn’t PB but that was never the goal. I’m taking today off to recover and then it’s back to half marathon training on Monday!
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Half marathon training – Week 4 – Tune up race tomorrow

23/07 - Rest day
24/07 5.0 miles Easy run: avg 10:08 min/mile
25/07 5.0 miles Easy run: avg 9:59 min/mile
26/07 5.0 miles Easy run: avg 9:43 min/mile
27/07 - Rest day
28/07 8.0 km Torchlight Run
29/07 - Rest and recovery day
Total 20.0 miles YTD: 638.5 miles

This week was supposed to be a step back week but by the end of it I will have done the exact same mileage as last week. Oops. I didn’t do any speedwork or tempo runs though so in that way it has been an easy week. I did three easy 5 milers this week at a slightly faster than normal training pace. I like to think of the 5 miler as a cornerstone of my training. It’s a very manegable distance. It takes less than an hour to do and I can run it on an empty stomach first thing in the morning. In other words, not a lot of planning has to go into knocking out a 5-miler. I like that.

I have a very different sort of 5 miler coming up tomorrow though. I’m running the Torchlight Run 8K. I did this race last year as an “A” race in a very speedy time of 40:53. I don’t think I can pull that off this again this year so I’ve chosed to use the race as a tune up race. My goal is to run at my goal half marathon race pace. That means somewhere between and 8:46 and 9:09 min/mile corresponding to half marathon times of 1:55:00 and 1:59:59, respectively. We’ll see how that goes. It will be a good way to guage where I’m at in my training. Stay tuned for a race report to be posted either tomorrow night or Sunday morning!

Half marathon training – Week 3 – Allison’s ankle surgery

16/07 - Rest day, IM softball game
17/07 3.9 miles Easy run: avg 10:18 min/mile
18/07 4.9 miles Tempo run: 3 miles @ 8:40/8:44/8:30 min/mile
19/07 - Rest day (Allison’s surgery)
20/07 - Rest day
21/07 8.2 miles Long run: avg 10:24 min/mile
22/07 3.0 miles Recovery run: avg 10:33 min/mile
Total 20.0 miles YTD: 618.5 miles

The big event of this week, other than the release of Harry Potter #7, was my sister’s ankle surgery on Thursday. The women in my family all have loose ankles. Seriously, several times I’ve had a doctor check my ankles and then call in the residents so they can feel how loose they are! Allison has sprained her ankle so many times that she had bone chips that needed to be removed and some ligaments that needed tightening. I drove up to Vancouver on Wednesday and spent the rest of the week up there with her. She was a superstar and really toughed it out and dealt with the pain and discomfort. I’m sure it will all be worth it if she can ski this winter!

I ran twice while I was up in Vancouver. The weather was really funny this weekend. It rained pretty steadily like it does in the winter but it was still sort of warm and even a little humid. If it hadn’t been for the humidity it would have been perfect running weather but it was still much much better than the hot, sunny weather we’ve been having. My 8 miler on Saturday was the first run I’ve done since the marathon that actually felt easy. I was just rolling along at a comfortable pace and it felt great. I need more long runs like that!

I finally hit 20 miles in a week. This isn’t big mileage but it’s still nice to be back at this level!

Half marathon training – Week 2 – Heat wave

09/07 - Rest day, IM softball game
10/07 3.0 miles Easy run: avg 10:03 min/mile
11/07 6.1 miles Speedwork: 2×1600m (w 800m jogs) in 7:59/8:05
12/07 XT 45 min on the elliptical, light weights
13/07 - Rest day
14/07 7.3 miles Long run: avg 10:18 min/mile
15/07 3.1 miles Recovery run: avg 10:26 min/mile
Total 19.5 miles YTD: 598.5 miles

It’s been a hot hot week in Seattle. It reached over 30C on both Tuesday and Wednesday. I was out running by 6:15am on both days but even at that time it was about 20C. So far I’ve been able to handle the higher temperatures but I can definitely tell that running in the heat takes a little more out of me than usual. Needless to say I’ve been drinking about 4L of water a day and going through sunscreen at an alarming rate!

Now that I’m through week 2 I’m starting to get back into the training groove. That means consistently going to bed early (which is hard when it’s still quite warm in my room at 10pm and I want to keep reading one of the Harry Potters in preparation for the release of Book 7) and waking up early, even on the weekends. It also means brining enough healthy food with me to work/school that I don’t make a bad decision at the vending machine at around 3pm!

I spoke to my cousin Nic on Friday before he left Sunday for the RCMP Training Academy (aka Depot). That’s right, my cousin is going to be a mountie! Anyway, Nic and I got to talking about the fitness benchmarks he’s going to have to achieve during the 6 months at Depot including a 22 minute 5K! That’s pretty speedy but I have no doubt that with proper training he’ll be able to do it. I was pleased to see that my 5K PB is 4 seconds under the female standard of 24:00. I’m pretty sure the pull-ups and bench press would do me in though!

Sunset over Elliott Bay

Sunset over Elliott Bay

Fourth of July Fireworks

Fireworks

This is the first year since moving to Seattle that I actually managed to see fireworks on the Fourth of July. We watched the Lake Union fireworks from the roof of one of my friend’s apartment building. I was able to rest my camera on the railing and just shoot photos while watching the show. Most of my photos were very blury but the above is my favourite and I’ve added a few more to my Around Seattle photoset.

Half marathon training – Week 1 – 14 weeks to a new PB

Before I get into discussing my next round of training I want to give you a quick update on how my running has been going since the marathon. I took two full weeks off after the marathon and then I tried to slowly ease back into running. I donated blood three weeks ago and that didn’t do much to help my recovery. I honestly felt as thought I was running through syrup for the two weeks after donating. It was sort of like reverse blood doping! I only managed to get a total of 35.9 miles in during the month of June which brought my mileage for the first half of 2007 up to 560.4 miles. It’s nice to know I’m on pace to hit my goal of running 1000 miles this year.

This week I started fall half marathon training. I’m hoping to run both the Royal Victoria and Vancouver Fall Classic half marathons this year. My goal for Victoria is to set a new personal best (<1:59:56). I don't feel nearly as fit right now as I'd like to but I'm hoping that with 14 weeks of training I'll be able to whip myself into shape and achieve that goal. It feels good to be working towards something again. Here's how the first week of training shaped up.

02/07 - Rest day (Potlatch recovery)
03/07 4.5 miles Easy run: avg 10:20 min/mile
04/07 4.9 miles Tempo run: 3 miles @ 8:45/8:46/8:54 min/mile
05/07 - Rest day
06/07 - Rest day
07/07 6.2 miles Long run: avg 10:27 min/mile
08/07 3.0 miles Recovery run: avg 9:46 min/mile
Total 18.6 miles YTD: 579.0 miles

I’m a little embarassed to even call my 6.2 mile run a “long run” but there it is. When I look at this week it seems as thought I didn’t do much but I know it fits into the larger training plan and I have to trust that the plan will get me where I need to be. As I did for the marathon, my new training program (pdf) is based on a Runner’s World SmartCoach program. I altered it to mesh with my weekly schedule, the tune-up races I plan to do, my travel schedule and my desire for patterns in mileage increases across the various types of runs. What can I say? I’m a mathematician and I like patterns!

Idaho Travel Diary

A guest entry by Matt …

If it wasn’t for Jeff and Leah’s wedding, Cecilia and I might never have gone to Idaho, which would have been a shame. Our in-car navigation system could not have been more wrong when it said the state had no points of interest (the navigation system was otherwise very helpful), when in fact there are many.

The wedding was in Idaho because it was a central location for friends and family, who traveled from all over the states and beyond, and because the ultimate destination, Redfish Lake, is a favorite spot of Jeff’s, which he came across when doing research during his undergrad.

We arrived in Boise Thursday morning, rented a Subaru Tribeca (which was fun and comfortable, but soft and fuel inefficient) and took a leisurely drive up and into the Sawtooth Mountains to Stanley and then on to Redfish Lake. The lake is large, home to kokanee and sockeye, and sits in the evening shadow of a large mountain called Grand Mogul. We stayed at Redfish Lake Lodge with the rest of the 50 or so wedding guests. The lodge has a bunch of different cabins and a main building right on the lake with cheap draft and good food. Elk was in season and I managed to eat it as a burger, sausage and stew.

Outside Stanley Redfish Lake and Grand Mogul

Just before arriving at the lodge, we had stopped at a ranger station to pick up a hiking map. The ranger was helpful, but unimpressed with our total ignorance of our destination. In our defence, we came for a wedding and the rest was gravy. Turns out, Redfish Lake is 6400 feet above sea level and as the ranger put it “all the hiking is up from there”. He seemed concerned that we had no idea what we were in for. This was true, but the hiking turned out anyway.

On Friday, we hiked up, up to 8500 feet and the clear cool waters of Sawtooth Lake. It was a moderate 11 mile round trip and, as the pictures show, beautiful. Besides the panoramic views, my favorite thing was a small spiky orange flower, for which, so far, I haven’t been able to find the name.

Matt and Cecilia along the trail to Sawtooth Lake Sawtooth Lake

Sawtooth Mountains Spiky flower

Jeff and Leah had their marriage ceremony Saturday. The weather held. It was 80, clear and sunny. In the morning, Cecilia and I made an easy hike to the base of Bridal Vale Falls. We couldn’t find a spot to take a good shot of the falls, but we did pass through a pretty meadow on the way. We also cut it a little close, and had to negative split the hike to get back in time for the wedding!

In the afternoon, a friend of Leah’s from Michigan who is a minister, performed the ceremony on the beach of Redfish Lake. The Utah crew ran security, clearing the beach, and the Seattle-ites took pictures and made sure there was music. After the ceremony there was a dinner in a large tent near the lodge.

In true Idaho style, trout was the dish of the day. When in Idaho, order the trout (when not eating elk). The cake, three tiers in three different flavors, was delicious, and Jeff and Leah added local touches to the dinner. The wine and beer were from Idaho and Washington State and Leah also made trail mix wedding favours. The dinner was a lot of fun, kegs were floated, and the party went into the night.

Sunday opened with a continental breakfast and then the guests began to head home. Cecilia and I flew out from Boise late in the day. Before the flight, we got to see a bit more of Idaho. In the morning we went for a short paddle on Redfish Lake. In the afternoon, the navigation system in the rental car proved its stuff. It smoothly navigated us into the heart of Boise, where we saw the capital building and had supper at a good local brewpub, BarDeNay.

Canoeing Redfish Lake Idaho State Capitol

From the historical markers, we were happy to learn the Boise was in fact founded by Canadians (The first Europeans to explore the area were French-Canadian trappers working for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Granted, this was before Confederation). We were surprised to learn there is a large Basque population in Boise (BarDeNay is in the heart of the Basque “district” (i.e. street) of Boise).

For a place we never would have thought to go, Idaho is a place we’d definitely go to again.