Saturday, September 15, 2007

The Race Report


Well.... It was awesome! Of course. I haven’t posted the race report yet because I needed to process the event mentally & when you’re gone most of a weekend, it takes some catching up with “regular” life outside the race. Then at my first opportunity to write, I was interrupted with a reminder for my son’s high school Open House which I had forgotten. But being that he is a freshman this year & we’re in a new state: gotta go. So sit back and enjoy, it’s a long post here.

So Saturday I made the drive down to Austin, where I have not yet been. The drive was beautiful & in the car I listened to Lance Armstrong’s “Its Not About The Bike” audio book I had picked up at the library earlier in the day. Good book if you haven’t read/listened to it. Anyways, there were lots of mentions of Austin and hills & I started to get a little concerned because I am not a hill trained girl. But I was already on the way, money was paid & plans made, so hills or not: here I come! I got a little turned around in downtown but eventually found Jack & Adam’s Bike shop & picked up my race packet. On to Pace Bend Park where I would camp.

My campsite was right on the water in Mudd Cove area of the park as I wanted to camp near the race start/finish so I didn’t have to exert extra energy going to & from. It was beautiful & peaceful. I setup camp. Grabbing my camera, I drove the loop I would be riding on my bike and realized it was much hillier than I was really trained for, but oh well, I was here & I was going to have to just do my best. I found some great cliffs, coves & sunset shots & then went back to camp to get my bike & explore some more. I had dinner after the sun went down & then moved my chair and table into my tent to escape the bugs and read running & biking books from the library before trying to get some sleep. I had forgotten my pillow so I used my transition towel for a pillow. Nobody gets good sleep the night before a triathlon, so I wasn’t too upset about the pillow.

In the morning I woke early. I took advantage of the fact that I had camped and was already there so I went right over to transition at it’s opening at 6am and racked my bike in a nice spot near the front and setup my transition area. Then I went back to camp and had breakfast and got the rest of my stuff ready. I stretched out, swam a bit in the water and eventually the pre-race meeting happened and then the first heat was off.

I was in heat 3 (women 25-34, yellow caps again). I decided to start off in the front this time, feeling confident and relaxed. Hey, I’ve done this once, this should be easy I was thinking. Well, I learned that each race is unique and there’s always a challenge.

The swim was difficult. I was bummed about this because swimming is my favorite discipline and it’s where I feel the strongest. Because of all the rain this year in Texas, the water was murky green with almost no visibility past my arm’s length. This stressed me out but I tried to get in a groove anyways. As we rounded the first bouy, I was hoping to find my groove, but we were heading straight into the glaring sunrise and sighting was nearly impossible so I kept having to pause for a bit. Sighting is very important in open water swimming because there is no black line on the bottom to follow as in a pool, so you have to swim with your head up for a bit to check your bearings and adjust as necessary. Well, by the time I rounded the second bouy I realized I wouldn’t be getting my groove so I just muscled through. T1 (the swim to bike transition) went well and quickly I was running with my bike up to the road for that leg.

The bike was difficult. I have what I call a “Costco-special”. It’s heavy, not aerodynamic and has fat tires. But, it’s what I have and I’m not going to let the lack of perfect equipment stop me from competing in something I am really starting to love. Additionally, the course was quite hilly, more than I expected and more than I was ready for. Again, wasn’t going to let that stop me. There was one hill that on both loops I had to walk up it. My heart was just racing and I wanted to save my legs for the run. At first I felt ashamed walking on the bike course but I remembered the stories of triathletes who somehow still have the will to continue even when their body is giving out and they have crawled to the finish line. So again, I wasn’t going to let this little (big) hill stop me. I finished the bike course in longer than I anticipated but feeling pretty good. T2 (bike to run transition) was quick and I was ready for it.

The run is what I’ve been working on since my last triathlon. The last triathlon I literally gave it everything I had and was probably pretty close to crawling across the finish line. My max heart rate is 188 and while in the bike, I had already reached the 180s. I spent most of the run worrying about my heart rate and trying to get it to come down, which it never did much because I had been exerting so hard for so long. Since then, I’ve been doing a run/walk progressive routine to build endurance in running. I could tell it paid off. I had my strategy this time and I would run 1 1/2 min and walk 2, the whole distance through. My heart rate did not even get to 180 but twice and that was in the last 1/4 mile of the entire race. I finished strong, running and I felt good. My time was 2:01:09. This was 1:09 over my time goal, but I felt with the great progress with my heart rate, who cares about a minute? I’ll get it next time.

So, it was an awesome time! Hard no doubt, but really fun. I love working my body really hard and testing it’s limits. I’m seeing the results that as I train it more, it can do more and it really is amazing. Oh, and I burned 200 less calories on this triathlon, even though I felt I had to work harder. Progress, progress. My next triathlon will be in 3 weeks.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Triathlon #2

I haven't been posting over here as much because I've been more involved in posting in the forums at Motivation To Move. I've joined the 100 Day Challenge (of exercise) and I've been posting all my activity over there.

Well, I'll be packing it up to leave shortly and make my way to triathlon #2: The Austin Dilloman Sprint. It's an 800 swim, 12.4mi bike and 3.1mi run tomorrow morning at 8:00am. Due to convenience and budget, I'll be camping onsite in Pace Bend Park at Lake Travis. I'm pretty excited and more laid back at the same time. Now that I've done a triathlon already, the pressure is off somewhat and I'm just happy to be running it. I've been exercising so hard on the weekends lately that last weekend I thought, "I should just do another triathlon!" and so I registered on Labor Day and now I'll be driving down in under an hour. Pretty cool!

My goals for this race are:
1.) to have fun, pay attention to details and smile!
2.) run a more even paced race that "feels" better. I think with my changed workout (see below) that I have more cardio endurance and strength so I should be fine.
3.) finish at or under 2 hours. With more training (again, see below) and a shorter bike, this should be doable.

Since my first triathlon, things kindof languished for a few weeks before I got back into a dedicated routine. Once restarted, I put more of my training outside to get my body used to the humidity and conditions here in Texas being that the conditions are much more of a factor here than in northern California.

I've started a running program I found in a book by Runner's World that is a 6 month walking to running program starting out slowly and gradually increasing the amount of running each week. I reintroduced weight training back into my cardio-centric workouts and that was a breath of fresh air. I took to swimming outside in the HOA pool since it's open in the summer (till September 30 and then I'll have to switch back to the Natatorium) and I get biking in where I can, usually down to the pool and back or out for leisure rides with the fam.

The bike situation has become somewhat of an issue for me. I have an old, heavy "Costco-Special" as I like to call it and it is anything but race equipment. I really would love to have a more appropriate bike for the sport, but I just do not have the money. As much as I lamented over this, I realized, in conversation with someone about this upcoming triathlon, that it is better to take the opportunity and race, even on the clunker bike, than to not race at all because of it. Maybe the bike situation will improve for next season, but for now, I'm just going to do my thing and not let it bother me too much.

My weight loss had plateaued for a LONG time, but I think these new changes and challenges for my body have FINALLY spurred more weight loss and I'm happy to report I've said goodbye to the 200s for the rest of my life! I was down to 198 last week and I'm down to 197 today. My goal is to get down to 170 by my birthday next year; just take it slow, let my skin shrink back as much as it can and get as fit as I can. That's the plan...