Wednesday, 30 January 2013

Week 4

Been feeling v tired since my Sunday run and now I know the reason why. Was getting sick. Today I've had the day off work whilst resting, coughing and spluttering all day. It's really knocked me out so no running today and will take it easy in the hope of resuming on the weekend. The plan for the week is below. Clearly the Wednesday and Thursday sessions will now be missed.

Monday: cross train
Tuesday: 3 mile easy
Wednesday: 6 mile run
Thursday: 3 mile easy
Friday: Rest
Saturday: 6 miles pace
Sunday: 11 miles

Target for the week 29 miles (will be 20 due to the illness)

Wish me healthy vibes so I can get right back into it!

Sunday, 27 January 2013

Races for 2013

Sunday morning and I'm sitting watching the Australian Open tennis final with Andy Murray. I've been meaning to post about my race plan for the year and my ambitious goal to get a pb in each race.

So here it is; the ones in brackets I haven't yet submitted my entry:

17/3 Colchester Half Marathon
23/3 Orion 15
14/4 (East London Half Marathon)
12/5 Halstead and Essex Marathon
26/5 Westminster Mile
27/5 Bupa 10000
9/6 Karrimor Great Trail Challenge (22km)
30/6 (Mersea Island Race) (12.2mile)
17/8 (Race the Train) (14miles)
8/9 (Bacchus Half Marathon)
6/10 Bournemouth Marathon

The Bacchus half is a wine race so I'll forego the pb I that one, as you can see many of these races have odd distances so the pbs are guaranteed- and I've never raced at the mile distance :-)

For the first half of the year all the races are quite local so I can really buckle down and train hard for them, with some travel for the second half of the year

6 miles later today, should be easy now all the snow has melted :-)

Saturday, 26 January 2013

5 mile pace run getting faster! :-)

Saturday of week 3 and a 5 mile pace run on the menu.  I'd had some issues with my left foot/calf earlier in the week.  Seems it was suffering from the lack of support in the trail shoes and residual weakness from having pulled the calf muscle last year.  This didn't stop me today!

I went out and actually did a proper warm up- stopped to stretch and every thing, with some dynamic calf stretches :-) and leg swings.  I then started out on the 5 miler, definitely started too fast.  By 0.2 miles my lap pace was an 8 minute mile, so I slowed up.  Other than stopping to walk for a drink at the half way point, and at the apex of the toughest hill, I ran the whole time- it was a traffic light free route, so I could just run 2.5 miles out and 2.5 miles back, and I jumped onto the road where the pavement was too icy.

Managed the following splits:

Mile 1: 8:50
Mile 2: 9:05
Mile 3: 8:48
Mile 4: 8:51
Mile 5: 8:17

This time its miles 2 and 5 that are off the pace, but I think this is ok if it were a race- pushing hard in the last mile, to make up the time lost in mile 2.  Now, this is all well above my next marathon pace.  I think a realistic goal is 4hr 15, whereas this pacing would suggest 3:50.
Perhaps  I can readjust the goal if the training continues to go well, but currently I'm doing the pace runs at half marathon pace as I hope to get a pb in the Colchester half (1:57) - todays pacing would be a 1:50

Feeling great for today's run, and looking forward to the easy 6 miles tomorrow :-)

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Don't stop me now

So I decided to do my 5-miler at lunchtime today, as I was working from home. I had so much energy that at mile 2 I decided I would do miles 2 and 4 at race pace. This was all fine until I hit the icy patches. I ended up doing a new route and stumbled upon high woods country park. I thought snow had melted by now, but as you can see from the pictures, this wasn't the case.

Just after mile 4, my foot niggle came back. I think this is down to weakness from my pulled calf last year, some calf raises when I got home confirmed this. The left one was considerably weaker than the right, so I'll be adding daily calf raising to try to strengthen it.

I also joined tribesports today, a social network for sports nuts, and I've taken a bunch of challenges. One is 100 push ups... Of course there's an app for that, so it's downloaded, and I did day 1 today... Hopefully this extra strength will help!

So, here's to successful week 3, onwards and upwards!





Monday, 21 January 2013

Planning week 3

Hello!

So, after a snowy week 2, I'm sitting proud in the knowledge I did all my runs.  My legs are really feeling the extra effort from the Saturday and Sunday runs though, so I'm here in some compression stockings on my legs to aid the recovery.

Week 3 looks to be a step back week.  The total mileage is 22 miles.  In reality, the only thing that's stepped back is the Sunday long run, but I'll trust Hal's guidance.  I might make an extra effort to go slow on the midweek runs.  Hopefully I can be back in my road shoes.

Week 3 Plan:
Monday:  Cross train (I'll do P&D Strength and Core sessions - too snowy for a walk or cycle)
Tuesday: 3 miles easy
Wednesday: 5 miles
Thursday: 3 miles easy
Friday: Rest
Saturday: 5 miles pace
Sunday: 6 miles long run

Feeling fairly strong from last week, yet looking forward to consolidating that effort this week.

Lately, I've also been working on my race schedule for the year.  I'll post about that later.  Ciao for now!

Sunday, 20 January 2013

Ok, this snow has become a regular feature

It's Sunday evening, the end of week 2 of the Hal higdon plan. It started snowing on Tuesday, and today it's been snowing non- stop since this morning. This has meant a great opportunity to sample my trail shoes, and now they're well and truly worn in, as I've done most of this week's mileage in them.

Saturday was 5 miles in the evening, it was still a bit icy underfoot and I did go over on my ankle, but otherwise a fairly uneventful run.

Sunday and I went for my 9 miles. It had already started snowing before I set off, and I thought it would be fun to run in the snow. I now know I should have worn sunglasses as the small snow drops in my eyes was quite irritating. I decided to go the trusted route of the Wivenhoe trail, hopefully this would mean running on snow rather than ice and for the most part this was true. As I went through the lower part of castle park, the usual lake where the ducks swim had frozen over, so the ducks were stuck in the small part that remained unfrozen, though there were many other birds on the "lake"

Around mile four, I heard a squeaking sound and wondered what it was, I looked to see a small bird flying. It reminded me of the baby skimmer birds I'd seen on Africa earlier this week (pic 3)

On the way back home, I saw a snow man :-)

I'd read a lot online about how a snow run is much like running in the sand. I have to say when I was out there running, I didn't understand what the fuss was all about, however, when I got home and thawed out a bit, I realised I had quite sore knees, and my legs definitely feel like they've done a lot more work than usual.

So I'm sitting here feeling rather proud of myself that I did the 25 miles set for this week, despite the weather.

Next week is a step back week, down to 22 miles, so hopefully a good opportunity to rebuild and gain the fitness from the last 2 weeks training.









Friday, 18 January 2013

Past Races and what I've learned

This week I've been looking over my past race performances, and trying to understand what factors contributed to good or bad times.

My best 10k was in 2008 and was my first serious race where I'd trained to run, rather than just showing up for a fun run.  All other distances have improved on 2nd attempts, however, I've never managed to improve on the first 10k time, which was 52:50.  This was run in cold rainy conditions, and I ran the whole race with my sister, after she'd been on Gladiators, so she was in peak fitness.  The competition here clearly helped my pace.  In 2010, I did the 10k distance again and achieved  53:26 and one other in that area which I can't quite remember.  In 2011 I did it in 54:14 but I did the first half slow with friends.  It was a month after my first marathon, and I did the 2nd half in 24:45, so potentially if I had raced the whole way, this could have been sub 50.

My best 5k was in 2011, again benefiting from marathon fitness, at 24:01.  I also raced a trail race at that distance that year in 26:26 - this was the second fastest women's time, and I did this after getting home around midnight the night before having been to a cocktail bar- I was hungover for the race!

For the Half, I set a sub 2 hour target in 2010 before building up for my marathons and I achieved 1:59:03, yet last year, I did 2 half marathons both in 2:06 and 2:05

Marathons were London and Berlin in 2011 in 4:38 and 4:33 respectively.  Here, the major issue wiht London was pacing- my mins per mile ranged from 9:07 to 12:40.  It was a hot day, and I definitely hit the wall, but I'm  sure I could have managed 10:00 the whole way and saved myself 15-20 minutes.

What caused slower times?  Lack of consistent training, which lead to injury.  Too regularly consuming alcohol, leading to less training.  Slightly overweight, leading to slower race times.  And in the longer races, the big problem is pacing!

On a Runner's World Forum, Steve Smythe, who's one of the marathon coaches has suggested I need to do the following in order to qualify for Boston:
The speed has to be improved and then you have to do much harder marathon training with the improved speed being utilised

To run around 3:35 you probably need to get that 5k time down to around 22, the 10k down to close to 45 and the HM to 1:38 and that not going to happen straight away..
You probably need to work on the speed through the summer and then aim to get the marathon down to 4:00 in the autumn and then take it from there.
So, I need to get faster.  I'm going to build the endurance for this marathon, not worrying too much about speed.  And I have signed up for the first Bournemouth Marathon in October, to go for the sub 4 hours.  

Has anyone else had experience of taking their marathon time down by an hour?  Can you tell me how you did it?

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Running in the snow... Are you mad?!?

So week 2 was off to a snowy start. Still incredibly cold, so on Monday I stayed in and did my P&D weights session, looking at it on paper, it looked easy, however, it turned out it was actually quite challenging- especially step ups followed by weighted lunges.

On Tuesday morning I woke up earlier than I needed, looked outside and saw the snow and thought, this 3 mile run ain't gonna happen... I went back to bed, and had a mental fight with myself, trying to come up with excuses that would have justified not going out... 'You might slip and injure yourself', 'you'll probably have a train delay so should leave for work early' etc etc. eventually I decided if it was really slippy, I would turn back, but I would go out there. My procrastination meant I only had time to do 2.5 miles. The cold meant it took me a long time to warm up, so the whole run was on the slow side. But that's ok, it's a recovery run.

Now I know my trail shoes work just fine in snow, there's no excuse not to run because of weather, however, I still don't have good kit for when its properly pouring with rain. Can anyone recommend anything?

Monday, 14 January 2013

Planning week 2


Good Morning.

Week 1 of the Higdon plan complete.  I’m incredibly glad I did a 3 week build up before beginning this training plan.  My 2012 was so full of injuries, there is no way I would have had the residual fitness to have done a 24 mile week, however, I managed it and it was fairly easy.  The Dryathlon (no alcohol) for January is certainly helping too.  So, week 2 is not that much different.  We go up to 25 miles by increasing the long run distance.  The Pace run on Saturday becomes an ordinary run, however, I’m quite tempted to go and do a Parkrun on Saturday, and perhaps follow it with a couple of easy miles to loosen up and make the distance.  I’m now on the volunteer committee trying to get a Parkrun started in Colchester, so I want to see how an event runs.

Week 2 looks like this:
Monday:  Cross Train
Tuesday: 3 miles easy
Wednesday: 5 mile run
Thursday: 3 miles easy
Friday: Rest
Saturday: 5 mile run (might switch for a 5k Parkrun plus 2 miles easy – (warm up and cool down)
Sunday: 9 mile run

Given the build up I had before, this seems to me more like a consolidation week, so I will focus on staying healthy- eating well, getting enough sleep, staying warm enough on the run with the snow so that I can step it up in the coming weeks.  Looking over the plan, the future weekly mileage scares me in places – up to 44 miles sometimes.  I may modify those weeks- I don’t see the benefit of extra miles on those easy days (Tues/Thurs), but we’ll see how I feel.

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Back in Colchester

Today after a golf lesson in the icy cold, I set out for my 8 mile long run. I decided to try to cover the first part of the course for the Colchester Half Marathon, to try to get an idea for the incline, that run up north hill early on in the race will be a tough one, but might help save me from going out too fast. Hopefully there's still pb potential despite the hills. I shall have to explore the country part of the route next weekend to make sure of this. The run went pretty well, though i wasn't very disciplined on pacing here, tending to go faster than the 10:40 I set on my garmin. Looking at my heart rate afterwards however, I think this was ok. I sped up for the last 2 miles. Splits were as follows:
Mile 1: 10:27
Mile 2: 10:20
Mile 3: 10:26
Mile 4: 10:06
Mile 5: 10:16
Mile 6: 10:09
Mile 7: 9:20
Mile 8: 9:39

I've been reading what seasoned runners know as P&D, so this evening I did a stretching session plus core work. I'm going to try and out these in 3 times a week from now. Core session was ok, though my balance on the Swiss ball was a bit off-rolling around all over the place!

In summary, goal for the week 24 miles.... And I did it, all sessions complete. Feel great and looking forward to continue like this. Happy Running!

Saturday, 12 January 2013

A night in Oxford and a 5 mile pace run

Friday was my rest day, well, rest from running- lots of walking though. I had to get to Oxford for a boat club committee meeting, and so, I returned to my alma mata.

I had planned to get up extra early to do my run before free breakfast, but it turned out I needed my usual lie in until about 9am and got out running at about 9:30. It was a crisp winters morning and it took me almost a mile to warm up. I set my garmin when it had signal and only speeded up once I was warm. The cold air constricted my airways, so at the end of the first mile, I stopped to take a puff of my inhaler.

If I'm honest, I was dreading this run. I wasn't sure if I was properly fuelled, or if I could maintain the pace for the requisite 5 miles. During mile one I was cheered on by an old guy in Christ Church meadow- I assumed he's a hobo, even made me laugh as he said "I see you're still on the bottle" referring to my sports drink I assume. I left Christ church meadow via Rose lane, and headed east, hoping to stumble upon Donnington bridge so I could do a loop. I passed the iffley road sports ground, famous for sir roger bannister's 4 minute mile. And the Liddell building, where I lived during my final year at Oxford.

Somewhere just before 2.5 miles I came across Donnington Bridge road. Hurrah! I crossed the bridge, looked over the river for rowers and came down the south side to return along the tow path. I was happy to reliably overtake other runners along the way, toward the end of the tow path I hit mile 4- I knewi'd have to dig deep as this was psychologically the most difficult mile. Unfortunately, my pace was affected by having to follow pedestrians and go through a kissing gate to get back to Christ Church meadow. Then, I had to puddle jump. I decided to cross the river to boat house island and to the best boathouse- Christ Church boat house: got a pic of the river and some geese :-)

The last stretch was back around the meadows, with another cheer from the hobo "looking good miss". I felt like an Olympian... Well, only for a second!

And my mile splits were:

Mile 1:9:39
Mile 2: 8:50
Mile 3: 8:45
Mile 4: 9:19
Mile 5: 8:45

So mile 1 and 4 were slower than the rest, due to warm ups and kissing gates, but I think this run suggests I can happily aim for a 1:55 in the Colchester Half Marathon in March.

8 miles tomorrow...



Thursday, 10 January 2013

Easy run in new shoes

Day 4 of the plan, and easy recovery run- as usual local out and back. It was f f f freezing- so I wrapped up warm and put my headlamp on. With the cold weather I decided to try my new trail shoes in case of ice. This was unnecessary and a bit of a mistake-strange stretching of lower legs due to the flat profile, but it felt good nonetheless. Looking forward to the 5 mile pace run at the weekend.

In other news, I entered the Bupa 10k- this will be just a couple of weeks after my next marathon. I'm hoping that the residual fitness from the marathon training will lead to a pb if I feel ok to go for it!

In the Beginning....

There was  a runner; a girl who loved to run, and whose dream was to see the world running.
Well, I still have that dream.

After a disastrous 2012 where I was newly diagnosed with Asthma, one race was cancelled due to flooding, and another (NYC Marathon) due to hurricane Sandy, added to this, 2 injuries - patella tendonitis in leg 1, and a calf tear in leg 2, its a wonder I can walk.  But now, I've set my sights even higher!  I want to race a lot more, get a lot faster, and one day, before I'm into the next age category, qualify for the Boston Marathon.

This means I have to run a marathon in under 3 hours and 35 minutes.  My best time was in Berlin 2011 at 4 hours 33 minutes.  So, I only have to cut off an hour.

This blog is to help me do that, and in consultation with some experienced runners, I should aim for 2015 or 2016 as possibility.  As I'll be turning 30 in 2016, I would like to set that year as the goal, and hopefully to run the BQ in the London Marathon if I can get a place (hopefully I'll already have qualified for a London good for age place at 3h50 by then).

So, step 1:  Follow a marathon training plan to a T, no excuses, no treadmill, and run at the correct pace.
I've chosen Hal Higdon's Intermediate 1, and the Halstead and Essex Marathon on May 12th.
I'm day 4 into the plan and have completed all the sessions so far.

Week 1 looks like this:
Monday: Cross train (i did a brisk walk in my barefoot shoes and some weights and strenthening exercises)
Tuesday: 3 mile recovery run - easy not much to report
Wednesday: 5 miles 'sorta long run' - running through the sites of London, stopping to take pictures along the way, which messed with my pace, but it was fun - must take on some energy drink next time as was quite tired around the 4 mile mark
Thursday: 3 mile recovery run (tonight)
Friday: Rest
Saturday: 5 mile pace (as in race pace - I'll be in Oxford so I'm going to try out my new trail running shoes in the meadow for this)
Sunday: 8 mile Long slow run

So far 8 miles out of 24 completed and I feel good.  Trying to increase carb in take from fruit and veg as opposed to starches - I've just been reading that this is especially important after the run for glycogen replenishment.

Wish me luck, follow my journey, and hopefully see you on the start line in Boston in 3 years!