Monday, September 27, 2010

Better than the first, but not as good as I wanted to do…


"Goals are the fuel in the furnace of achievement." -- Brian Tracy

So – the second Half-Iron distance triathlon is in the books. I participated in the Redman Half-Iron distance event this past weekend.
Swim –    46:17
T1     -      3:44
Bike   - 3:07:00
T2     -      4:20
Run   -  3:16:00
Total –  7:17:00
I will say the race as a full-distance event was well-supported, even though it isn’t Ironman-branded. They offered full and half triathlons and aquabike events. A number of people apparently use this event as a warm-up for Ironman Florida. I was just happy to finish.
But lots of lessons learned…
  1. First, and maybe the most important, I realized how much heavier my bike is than others. The obvious bike of choice is the Cervelo, and a LOT of the competitors also had race wheels. I am not sure if the weight factor on my bike is because of the metal bars, but it does feel very front-heavy. I hefted a couple of bikes nearby my rack position just in conversation with other folks and you could really feel the difference… of course, the riders were also a LOT smaller than me weight-wise. And I have never used race wheels, but the aerodynamics on them has got to be so much better than standard wheels. These are questions I will have to discuss with the Austin Tri-cyclist guys. They will probably look at this plodding elephant and just laugh. I don’t expect to ever be in contention for a race position (though I would have placed 2nd in my age group for the aquabike half, had I participated in that event), but I would at least like to improve my own performance, and the bike is one component I can improve.
  2. Do a better job of scoping out the swim course. I did not realize until the first wave went off that people could/would actually walk part of the swim. The outbound leg of the swim followed the lake shore and it was actually close enough that people were walking rather than swimming. Maybe that is a good thing if you practice aqua-jogging in the pool beforehand, but swimming into somebody’s backside as they stand up is not a good thing. I improved my swim time by about 3 minutes, but it could have been even better had I thought to navigate around differently.
  3. I need to get into the wetsuit more often. It felt like the shoulders were straining against the wetsuit and I wasn’t getting full strokes. I will have to work on this some more… hopefully it isn’t a matter of the wetsuit being too small.
  4. My transition times were better, though I didn’t feel as organized as I should have been.
  5. I don’t know why I did it, but coming out of T1 on the bike, there is an aid station and a volunteer holding out a Gatorade bottle. I grabbed it, thinking it would be good to have a drink or two to get started and then chunk it at the trash can at the far end of the aid station… wrong! There was NO trash can. In the pre-race meeting the day before they had harped strongly on the fact that there would be a lot of USAT race officials out there and penalties would come for abandonment on the course, so I didn’t just want to chunk it to the side of the road and risk penalty. So I stuck it in my jersey pocket. Well, it fell out in the middle of the no-passing zone, when a race official was on a motorcycle right next to me! And yes, I know there is some discretion about “unintentional” drops, but I didn’t want to risk somebody interpreting that differently than I did, so I stopped and picked it up. Note to self: DON’T grab a bottle unless you have someplace to put it securely. Even more importantly, why take it in the first place?
  6. The ride itself was fairly uneventful… the road was in bad shape. We drove the bike course the day before, so we knew what we were in for. But that didn’t make it any easier. Very rough, lots of road damage. I felt like I was drinking enough and eating a gel every 45 minutes, and didn’t have to make any stops. With the new aero bottle for water, I carried all mixed drinks in the other 3 bottles. Being able to grab water bottles at the aid station and push the water into the aero bottle really makes the ride a lot easier. One thing maybe I should have done would be to take some Advil in transition before the ride.
  7. T2 went okay. With the size of this event, it wasn’t too crowded to get around in transition. The full tri and full aquabike competitors were still out on the bike route. I could have been out a little sooner but some of my stuff had been pushed around by people around me. I don’t know that there is any way I could have controlled that.
  8. The run… well, it’s the run. Actually, the first of the 2 laps went pretty well. I was hoping to do the run in 3 hours, and my first loop was at 1:33:00 – just a few minutes off my goal. But when I started the second lap, my hips started to tighten up on me. So I ended up walking more than I had hoped.
Overall, I managed to cut about 12 minutes from my previous half-Iron distance tri time. I had hoped to cut it by 30 minutes, and get it under 7 hours. Not anything near trophy-winning performances, but I am proud of a number of my TNT alumni friends, who DID take home some hardware… congratulations to all of them. And I did get to meet a number of TNT competitors along the way.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

"The question is not whether we will live, but how we will live." - Joan Borysenko

It has been almost a month since my last post, but it has been a busy month. The swimming and biking have cranked up quite a bit, and the running is coming along, although for a week or so the impact of hitting the ground with each step was bothering some muscles up through the right side of my body. I am basically clueless when it comes to naming the muscles affected - I know where it hurts and when it hurts; I will let the medical types tell me the names of things.
The month's activities were not just the training. I went in for my annual stress test with the cardiologist. The technician doing the work this time was the same one who was there when we ended up going from the stress test to the triple bypass surgery in 2008, and her first statement was "I really hope we don't end up the same way as last time." You and me both, sister!! That was an understatement! Unneeded worries - the test went extremely well. Dr. V looked at the digital images and the charts and said all was good, just keep doing what I am doing. So I hit him with "well, actually, doc, I do have a question..." (yeah, i know -- sounds like that Viagra commercial, doesn't it?) and first ackowledged he had told me before that my heart could not clear the oxidants in the blood fast enough if I was going to attempt a marathon, then with the caveat "I won't run all of it" I told him I wanted to do a full IronMan -- the third segment of which is in fact a full marathon. After further discussion, and acknowledgement from Dr. V that I managed the exertion for the Half-Iron in April and the Triple Bypass ride in July, he approved the full IronMan.  Woohoo!!
Then my next thought was like everybody else when they start this adventure: "What the heck am I getting myself into?" But I already know the answer to that, because a good friend of mine is doing exactly that. I have watched her progress, I have ridden with her, I swim with her on occasion, and I listen to her stories about her training. I will acknowledge right here and now that there is no way I will in 2011 be even close to her finish time in 2010...
So the first thing I did after the stress test was sign up for another Half-Iron distance triathlon. I know a lot of the training plans for IronMan start a year out, and this is more like 14 months, but it will be a good baseline to start from.
I set up a new website for this adventure, and hope to do fundraising to benefit organizations serving those with cardiovascular issues and limitations... check it out at CardiacIronman.com
So - here we go !!