tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-317686882007-08-01T09:28:20.727-05:00WindRunningMarc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comBlogger160125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-90143231045281989252007-07-24T05:09:00.000-05:002007-07-24T13:24:57.014-05:00Rant: Running pet peeves from a 100* weekIt has be hot and humid around here lately, and I am in a bit of surley mood. I just finished Chad Austin's article on "Running Lessons Learned" in the July/August issue of RunMinnesota and it prompted me to write about a few things I see while running: <br /><br />1) Drop the rollerblades and run. I keep seeing people on rollerblades clogging the bike paths. STOP! Rollerblade is an inefficient exercise, if you want physical exercise: run! Running is significantly more efficient and is much more beneficial. And don't tell me about running = injuries! Most girls I see are 40% or less of my weight; the joint impact of you running is minimal. You are in much more risk of injury going down narrow bike trails on rollerblades with no helmet or wristguards. Get fitted for a good pair of shoes, switch to running, and your injury risk will go down significantly! And you will be less of a risk to me as you zoom around me and avoid the bikes. . . <br /><br />2) Get off the sidewalks! Repeat after me: cement and joint/foot health are mutually exclusive! The sidewalk is significantly harder than a tar/asphalt road surface. If you are worried about traffic, find the running trails. I get in my car and drive a mile to a parking lot next to the greenway so I can run on an asphalt trail with no cars. Better yet, run dirt trails or in the grass alongside the asphalt trail. Saves on the shoes and the legs. <br /><br />3) Dress for the weather! It is over 90*, high humidity, and I see people in black pants with a sweatshirt tied around their waist. Most of us don't have a perfect body. Please don't kill yourself trying to get there! Black absorbs light, white reflects it. Light is heat. You burn the same calories running a mile regardless of how much clothing you wear. All you are doing by adding layers is losing water; not helping with permanent weight loss. You are also raising your heart rate, increasing the chance you get a running injury, lowering the effectiveness of your workout for burning fat, and de-hydrating yourself. The last is key. People do die from overheating. I am overweight; I am a blob. Take it from me; when you run in 30 layers of black, people don't think your thin. In fact, they probably imagine that you are larger than you are. It is not worth risking your health to try to cover everything. You are out there to make a better you, not worry about people looking at the old you. The fact is, 95% of us out there are too busy worrying about our own running and how we look to even notice you. . . Wear something sensible and focus on safe and effective work-outs. <br /><br />4) "I (state your name) swear to never wear cotton while working out again!" Now, don't we all feel better? Cotton gets wet, chafes, becomes clammy, and sucks for working out in. "Wicking" fabrics are much better for working out. Now, you don't have to spend huge amounts of $$$$ for wicking fabrics. Get one or two "nice" shirts (Under Armor, Nike, New Balance, Sporthill, etc.) for races and special days. The go to a good sporting goods store or Target and purchase Champion's "value line." It has many names including "C9" at Target, but it always says "Duo-Dry" on the labels and tags. You should be able to find sales, clearance, etc so you get 2 shirts for $20. This is less than you pay for one cotton tee a Abercrombie & Fitch, and will be worlds better. Consider getting the special detergent for performance fabrics, wash them separately, never machine dry, and they will last for a long time and your body will thank you many many many times over. . .<br /><br />5) No water stops! I realize there are hundreds of problems from vandalism to ground freezing, but would it be too much to ask for at least one water source on the bike/running trails in this town? They stretch for as long as 5 miles at a stretch with no water source. Am I asking too much? <br /><br />6) Shorter dog leashes. Don't get me wrong, I love dogs. But shorten their leashes so they don't trip people. Most people really try, but there are still a couple of dogs every run that force me with tired legs to try to hurdle, skip, or avoid their leashes. <br /><br />7) Still don't have a mantra. . . ;) <br /><br />8) I have a pain right below my left knee (tender spot about 1.5" below my kneecap). It popped up after a recent long run. Wish I knew what it was, and what it means. Hope it goes away by tomorrow. . . <br /><br />Well, I am out of rants and feel better! :) When you see some plump guy out running starring into space, he's not a dirty old man leering at you; he's just thinking about how he is going to blog it. . .Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-3804849408398257832007-07-16T04:30:00.000-05:002007-07-16T12:12:51.963-05:00First Running Anniversary<blockquote>"Running has given me the courage to start, the determination to keep trying, and the childlike spirit to have fun along the way. Run often and run long, but never outrun your joy of running."<br /><br />Julie Isphording, winner of the 1990 Los Angeles Marathon </blockquote><br /><br />I have reached the end of my first year of running. Overall, it has been amazing, and I have closet full of technical clothing and worn out shoes to prove it!!! <br /><span style="font-weight:bold;"><br />Highlights:</span> <br /><br /><li>Completed Fargo Marathon (first marathon and PR)</li><br /><li>Completed Earth Day Half-Marathon (first half-marathon and PR)</li><br /><li>Completed one 10K (first and PR)</li><br /><li>Completed one 8K (first and PR)</li><br /><li>Completed five 5K (#1 through #5; lowered my PR in each</li><br /><li>approx. 775 total miles</li><br /><li>Volunteered at two 5K races</li><br /><li>Lowered my blood pressure</li><br /><li>Improved my diet</li><br /><li>Improved my overall health</li><br /><li>Improved my attitude and peace of mind. . . </li><br /><br />The last one is probably the most important. I have taken to heart the saying: it's not adding years to your life, it is adding life to your years. . . <br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;"><br />Still in Progress: </span><br /><br /><li>Weight Loss (lost about 100# from my high point, but behind where I want to be -- diet/food selection is still not perfect :) </li><br /><li>Consistent training (too many nagging injury or health problems have kept me from my weekly training schedule</li><br /><li>Paige running with me</li><br /><li>Cooper running</li><br /><li>Still no mantra</li><br /><li>Need better motivation plan</li><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Goals for next year: </span><br /><br /><li>Complete second marathon (Outerbanks, Nov 2007)</li><br /><li>Complete third marathon (Grandma's 2008)</li><br /><li>Complete 2 to 5 half-marathons (Fishook 8/2007, Beardsley 9/2007, Sheyenne Valley 9/2007), Winter Carnival, 1/2008, Earth Day (4/2008)</li><br /><li>Weight loss below to below 180#</li><br /><li>Tri??????</li>Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-76516694414495758802007-07-16T04:24:00.000-05:002007-07-16T11:56:10.255-05:00Running updateThe definite "high" of my first year running was completing the Fargo Marathon. The definite low has been running since then. My mileage is down due to a couple of reasons: <br /><br /><li>Allergy and hive problems on my feet and ankles have caused raw and broken skin that I was not able to run on.</li><br /><br /><li>Sore quads. I experienced "micro-tears" in my quad muscles during the marathon. That was actually the sorest part of my body after the race. It was also surprising because I had zero quad pain/problems in training. Since then, I have had quad pain in my legs after every run. I broke out the CWX shorts yesterday and had my first pain-free run since before the marathon!</li><br /><br />I also have a bit of post marathon frustration / blues. I had a longer lay-off after the marathon than I wanted due to the hives. Then I was frustrated by my inability to run distances and paces I ran in training leading up to the marathon. It left me feeling frustrated after a run; no satisfaction or runner's high. That lowered my motivation. I was also concerned about the quad pain and worried that pushing it would make it worse and lead to further loss of running. The net result is I have lost both conditioning and mental satisfaction from my training schedule. <br /><br />Today is 17 weeks to my fall marathon. I am adjusting the first couple of weeks of training schedule to fit my lowered base. I am also focusing on motivation and prepping myself for the long haul. I have a long way to go, but I am confident I have the right attitude and plan to deal with it. <br /><br />As I type this, I am looking out the window and wishing I was out running RIGHT NOW! Gotta go. . .Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-55246452063367607672007-07-06T18:20:00.000-05:002007-07-06T15:26:51.473-05:00Is jogging/running right-wing?This is amazing: <br /><br /><blockquote>President Sarkozy has fallen foul of intellectuals and critics who see his passion for jogging as un-French, right-wing and even a ploy to brainwash his citizens.</blockquote><br /><br />Here is more critique: <br /><br /><blockquote>Renaud Longuèvre, a coach of champion athletes, told L’Equipe magazine that Mr Sarkozy bends too far forward, his stride is off, his arms dangle and his feet hit the ground the wrong way. The coach advised the President to get his feet checked, strengthen his abdominal and posterior muscles and “check your diet because it seems you are carrying a slight excess in weight”. <br /><a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2022804.ece"><br />Link</a></blockquote><br /><br />Tough crowd! <br /><br />At least he doesn't seem to have a relay baton or similar device up his posterior like his critics seem to have. . .Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-11258344715467360762007-05-23T23:53:00.001-05:002007-05-24T00:03:11.400-05:00Concern about Saucony changesThe old adage is that everything changes. On the heels of running my first Marathon in <a href="http://www.saucony.com/product_detail.aspx?modelID=20000102&type=M">Saucony Pro Grid Triumph 4</a>'s (the yellow and black ones), I find two pieces of news that concern me: <br /><br />1) Stride Rite, the parent company, was purchased by Payless Shoes. <br /><br /> As I read the reports, the plan is to keep the premium shoe brands separate from the retail operations. It sounds like a diversification move rather than an attempt to leverage savings by using the brand reputation to drive low-end sales in the existing sales channel. Hopefully that means continued production of high end running shoes. <br /><br />2) The "neutral high-cushion" shoe that I run in is getting boring! Fall colors are white and blue; nothing super flashy. . .<br /><br />3) The "neutral high-cushion" shoe is not one of the models getting "winterized." The Pro Grid Triump 4's have GREAT ventilation. Great for summer, that is. They are COLD in the winter. I heard rumors that some models in the fall will have less "breathable" (read more wind-proof) outers. But not the models I run in. Another winter of heavy wool sox and cold toes!<br /><br />I have attempted to run in both Nike and Addidas. I had problems with both shoes and will stick with my Saucony as long as I can. I have 3 active pair and two retired pair in my closet, and I will need to add a pair or two in July for the fall season.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-6043432430231779122007-05-23T22:50:00.000-05:002007-05-24T10:55:15.744-05:00A Few posts from other blogsHere are a few posts from other blogs I am reading:<br /><a href="http://cnaustin.blogspot.com/2007/05/couldnt-be-better.html"><br />Chad Austin called me</a>:<br /><br />"Marc may be one of the year’s most inspirational stories."<br /><br />I am humbled, but also wondering if Chad's wife could check his temperature. . . There are lots of people that have overcome more than me. I just show what is possible to give lazy guys less excuses. . . ;) <br /><br />I am also reading Eric. I found his blog when he commented on my Marathon post. We shared a serious complaint with the cold wind on 25th Ave S at Fargo. We both ran our first marathon last Saturday. But from here, the stories differ. Eric started at the front between Dick Beardsley and Andrew Carlson. He also finished second overall. Good job Eric; I hope to actually meet you face to face and shake you hand sometime. <br /><br />Here is his reports: <br /><br /><a href="http://sundogtraininglog.blogspot.com/2007/05/23345-2nd-place-woot.html">Part 1</a><br /><a href="http://sundogtraininglog.blogspot.com/2007/05/more-to-come.html">Part 2</a><br /><a href="http://sundogtraininglog.blogspot.com/2007/05/race-report-fargo-marathon.html">Part 3 </a><br /><a href="http://sundogtraininglog.blogspot.com/2007/05/race-report-fargo-marathon-continued.html">Part 4 </a><br /><br />I have Scheels Run Club tomorrow night and I am going to take a lesson from Chad and interview some of our runners for postings. Look forward to them in the next week. <br /><br />Gotta run. . .Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-55225641857090616272007-05-22T06:34:00.000-05:002007-05-22T13:45:45.697-05:00Goals UpdateI posted my <a href="http://windrunning.blogspot.com/2006/10/2007-goals.html">2007 goals here</a>! Now let's check status: <br /><br /><li>1) Target Weight 164#<br /><br /> Not going great. I have "plateau'ed a bit and I was 20 pounds over goal when I started the Fargo Marathon. Still need work here. Attacking this with a new plan from Nancy Clark to eat two lunches and cut back on evening calories. </li><br /><br /><li>2) Finish Fargo Marathon<br /><br /> Done 5:46:36</li><br /><li>3) Finish Outerbanks Marathon<br /><br /> Registered for 11/11/2007 race.</li><br /><li>4) Finish Beardsley Half-Marathon<br /><br /> "Intent of goal" was to run a half-marathon. Ran Earth Day Half-Marathon on 4/21/2007. Running Beardsley on 9/8/2007. Also running 2-4 other half-marathons this year. </li><br /><br /><li>5) Run 29:59 5K<br /><br /> Lowered PR twice in two races this year (from 34:57 to 34:40 and 33:11) I think success here is possible, but it will depend on #1 and #8!</li><br /><br /><li>6) Scout Twin Cities Marathon<br /><br /> Schedule conflicts means it probably will not happen.</li><br /><br /><li>7) Scout Grandma's Marathon<br /><br /> Schedule conflicts means it probably will not happen.</li><br /><br /><li>8) Add track/speed work in 3rd Quarter.<br /><br /> Depends on #1, but looking at starting in July. </li> <br /><br /><li>9) Stock up on some really cool "Pre" t-shirts<br /><br /> Have one, need two more. </li><br /><br /><li>10) Help Cooper run 5 kids races.<br /><br /> Ran one on 4/14/07. He was not able to run at Fargo Marathon because I was too tired after Marathon to stick around or help him with running. </li> <br /><br /><li>11) Help Paige run a 5K<br /><br /> Paige has talked about an "in-line skate" marathon, and also about running, but has not started a training program yet. . . </li>Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-83537759122650328022007-05-21T11:16:00.000-05:002007-05-21T15:06:12.739-05:00Scheels Fargo Marathon -- Full reportSaturday, May 19th, 2007 was the Scheels Fargo Marathon. I was registered to run; it was my FIRST marathon. My main goal was to FINISH; my stretch goal was to finish in under 6 hours. <br /><br />Weather: Blessing here! Five days before race, the forecast was for Sunny and 81*. Race start was in the low 50's* with a cold north wind and overcast. It stayed that way until after the race. It rained hard the night before and I had my first allergy free run in over a month! Could have done with a bit less wind, but at least I had plenty of chance to “train” for that. :) <br /><br />Start: I was in the rear of the pack. That meant two problems: the north wind was hitting me in the back of my legs and I heard nothing from the starting line. Missed the anthem, prayer, instructions, and actual starting gun. . . I just moved when the pack did. <br /><br />By the time the pack started moving, I had stopped stressing about how I was going to get through 26.2 miles. I also stopped stressing about lack of a mantra. My main thought was: “It's COLD!” <br /><br />½ mile: Finally warming up. Turned out of the wind, feeling great, and short sleeves and shorts were the right uniform for today. <br /><br />2 miles: Need to unfog these sunglasses! Too humid for me after the rain. <br /><br />3 miles: Ran by a bike shop. They had signs out that I will have to paraphrase. Basically, the message was: You're looking strong, but a long way to go. When your knees hurt, consider riding a bike next time. It took all my self control to not give them the “bird.” Instead, I made a mental note to put my bike up on E-Bay and sell it. <br /><br />4 miles: Some guy was holding up a “Go Pre” sign. Gave him a big thumbs-up! Still no mantra. . . .<br /><br />5-6 miles: Ran by a house playing Springsteen. “Born to Run” just makes me run faster! Then there was a house with a block party. There must have been 300 people on the block and some guy had a bullhorn: “We still have 125 Breakfast Burritos; who's hungry?” I also saw my cousin, Eric, for the first time and it was great to see him. <br /><br />10 miles: WIND. Turned north into the wind on a 4 lane street with no trees. It was only about a ¼ mile, but I was chilled and not happy. <br /><br />11 miles: Met by the “Windahl Support Team” for the first time. My wife (Paige), son (Cooper), and parents (Ron & Gloria) were all dressed in matching tee-shirts cheering me on. <br /><br />12 miles: I was “Gumping!” Someone was blasting “Running on Empty” and again it picked me up. It made me feel like I could run across the country. Still no mantra. .. (Mom & Dad: This is a reference to "Forest Gump"; it is the song that plays while Forest runs across the country a couple of times. . . )<br /><br />13 miles: Right hip starts hurting and I am worried this will prevent me from finishing. I was approaching the Scheels Aid station and they had a bunch of signs with facts and quotes to read and take your mind off running. I had a brief moment of panic when I worried that it would be like so much at Scheels with a test at the end, and I could not remember what animal could lick it's own eyeballs. (its the giraffe for those of you that don't know how to google it. . .) <br /><br /> Made it to the actual aid station, high fived my coworkers and friends, picked up my resupply of Sharkey's, and continued on with new energy from all the support. <br /><br />15-20 miles: Chip and GPS say I ran it, wish I could remember it. I do remember giving a long-time family friend (Bev) a hug and I called her by a last name that has not been accurate in 30 years. I also vaguely remember running through the Concordia College campus. I was a bit disappointed that it was not full of girls like Welsly is during the Boston Marathon, but then again, I did not have any energy to react anyway. There was also an orchestra somewhere in there; nice kids. And I met a couple from Thief River falls; she was running her first marathon. I looked for them at the finish, but never found them again. Saw the guy with the "Go Pre!" sign again. Still no mantra. . .<br /><br />Mile 20: Saw my family and cousin Eric again! More energy! <br /><br />Mile 21: Working on inventing a time machine so I can go back and kill Phillipides at the 21 mile point and not have to run the last 5.2. If he is going to die anyway, why not help him, and myself, along a bit. I am almost through the equation that will prove Einstein wrong and make the time machine possible when I catch the smell of a brat on a grill. Now I can't remember it. . . <br /><br />Mile 22: Made a mental note to cancel the E-bay listing of the bike, and instead use its wheels for a temporary wheelchair. Notice a “fat Elvis” in a jump suit singing on a Karaoke machine. It occurs to me that the songs he is signing are ONLY known by my son as from “Lilo & Stitch”. Huge generation gap here. . .<br /><br />Mile 23: Lonely. Runners are fairly thin and I have few near me. I ask a cop if they know who stole the Fargodome, because I was sure it was supposed to be on that corner. He laughed. I was able, at times, to find a comfortable stride where I could run with zero pain and feel good. Unfortunately, I could stay in that place for longer than a block. Then I had two to three blocks of painful shuffling. I was worried that I over-tapered due to my allergy problems. I did not notice it in endurance, but I did notice it in my feet. The course had to be changed due to flooding, and 4 miles of asphalt bike trail were replaced by concrete streets. I trained on softer surfaces, and by this point my feet were VERY sore. I have not had blister problems since I started running, but the balls of my feet and at least 3-4 of the toes felt like they had blisters now. <br /><br />Mile 24: Saw family again. Cooper yelled: “Go daddy go! Only two more miles!” Wish I could bottle that feeling for tough days and away races. <br /><br />Mile 25: Parrot station. I was a bit disappointed. I had built this up so big in my head, but it did not live up to expectations. They were not playing my favorite Buffet song, they were out of beads, and despite the signs, I got neither a Margarita nor a cheeseburger. It was not the paradise I was looking forward to, but it gave me enough to know I could finish. About a block later, I bent over to set my cup down on the curb and almost didn't finish. Huge protests from the back and leg muscles. Dropped it and continued on. Consider and reject "fins to the left; fins to the right" as a mantra. . . <br /><br />Mile 26.2: Home! Entered into the Fargodome stadium. Family and friends cheering. Great comments from the announcer. Crossed the line and emotions were huge. The last two times I remember feeling like that was when Cooper was born and Paige and I were married. <br /><br />I don't know that I can ever completely explain to friends and family how much their support, encouragement, hugs, and congratulations meant to me, but it was beyond my wildest expectations. It felt awesome. <br /><br />I met both goals, finishing in 5:46:36. I lost more than 90 pounds to get to the starting line, I now know that if I lose an additional 80, I can run faster times. I am excited to continue my progress! <br /><br />Went home and soaked my legs in ice water and then took a long shower. Dressed and went out to eat with my family and my parents. Cooper fell asleep at supper; it was a long day for him also! <br /><br />Day after, I walked about 2 miles. Quads and feet are sore; calves never complained. The race was well run, the crowds were great, the support was fantastic. I am looking forward to my next marathon.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-25679833962312068002007-05-20T12:18:00.000-05:002007-05-20T12:20:30.801-05:00Finished!!! 5:46:36I finished my first marathon yesterday, the Scheels Fargo Marathon in 5:46:36. <br /><br />Here is <a href="http://www.onlineraceresults.com/race/view_individual.php?make_printable=1&bib_num=1248&race_id=5331&type=result">my results page</a>.<br /><br />Full report to come. . . Going to shower and do some walking to stretch out my legs first!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-52858098515280266292007-04-30T07:36:00.000-05:002007-04-30T07:41:27.995-05:00Earth Day Half-Marathon SplitsI was very happy with these:<br /><br />Mile Split<br /><br />1 11:07<br />2 11:02<br />3 11:23<br />4 11:05<br />5 11:35 (Shot blocks)<br />6 11:16<br />7 12:46 (bathroom break and BIG hill) <br />8 11:06<br />9 11:24<br />10 12:44 (Stomach cramps) <br />11 12:11<br />12 11:09 (Pouring rain)<br />13 11:28 (Pouring rain)<br />.1 10:18 pace <br /><br />For a first half-marathon (and race #7 or 8 total), I was very happy with my pacing.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-70997382422618576962007-04-30T07:35:00.000-05:002007-04-30T07:35:27.016-05:00Marathon Questions: How Long for longest runI am doing a short series of posts on questions I frequently hear at run club and seminars about training. Let me preface this by saying that I am training for my first marathon; I don't have a vast font of experience to draw from. I am not an expert, but I am someone with a good memory, research skills, and I read a lot. (see <a href="http://windrunning.blogspot.com/2006/10/should-anyone-listen-to-me.html">here</a> for a discussion of whether anyone should listen to me. . .)<br /><br />The most common question is: how long should my longest training run be for a marathon. <br /><br />It is the great fear of first-timers: <br /><br /><li>"I was dying at the end of 20 miles; how will I make it to 26.2?"</li> <li>"Shouldn't I run longer?"</li> <br /><br />The answer is 20 miles. Now, I spent most of last fall thinking this could not be right. But it is!<br /><br />I started by reading looking at EVERY book in my library and the local bookstore on running (Barnes & Noble, Fargo ND). I was AMAZED to find that no training plan for beginners had a run longer than 20 miles. Higdon, Galloway, Runner's World, even Beardsley had 20 miles! Why??? <br /><br />Well, the reason is pretty easy to understand, once you think it through. The human body has enough glycogen for 20 miles. When you run out of glycogen, you "hit the wall." The fact is, I can run the day after a half-marathon; but every expert says plan on 4 to 12 days of no running after a marathon. Imagine having that in the middle of your training! Your chance of injury goes up significantly when you are out of glycogen. Even runners that finish a marathon "injury free", have micro tears of their muscles. <br /><br />How about advanced runners? There is MANY different opinions here, but there are common notes. Most advanced plans I reviewed stop at 20 miles (Dick Beardsley's from the Grandma's Marathon site has one 24 mile run). The rest increase the number of 20 milers (Higdon has one for beginners, two for intermediate, and three for advanced). Also, most programs build by running parts of the long runs at tempo pace, increasing weekly mileage, etc. <br /><br />That is the second part of the answer. More weekly mileage. If I was to summarize the books I have read, it would be: <br /><br />1) Longest run 20 miles. Anything more and the risk of injury outweighs the benefits. <br /><br />2) The final 6.2 miles are trained for by your weekly miles and base endurance.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-8639476535484102032007-04-30T07:02:00.000-05:002007-04-30T07:36:36.811-05:00Marathon Questions: Galloway run/walkI was at a recent seminar where a question came from the audience about Jeff Galloway's RUN-WALK method. The session was on marathon training, but the facilitator had not read the books and was not familiar with Jeff's methods. <br /><br />I also heard a veteran runner during a half-marathon tell a young new runner: "never walk during a race, if you have to run slowly, but never walk. It throws off your rhythm and makes your legs hurt worse." Well, I saw the veteran runner again near the finish, but did not see the younger runner and I wonder if that runner finished. <br /><br />Jeff's <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Galloways-Book-Running-2-Ed/dp/0936070277/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/102-3884602-0063362?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1177359648&sr=8-1">main book</a> is ranked 26,639 on Amazon and in its second edition. He also has other books. Jeff is an Olympic qualifier and has run over 116 marathons. He has trained over 150,000 runners. He is a frequent contributor to "Runner's World." His website bio is <a href="http://www.jeffgalloway.com/about_jeff/index.html">here</a>.<br /><br /><br />OK, so what's up with RUN-WALK? While, the best way to began to understand it is go <a href="http://www.jeffgalloway.com/training/walk_breaks.html">here</a> and read what Jeff says. Then, buy the book!<br /><br />Let me explain it for you: <br /><br />1) Walk breaks help break the race down into shorter segments. At the end of two miles, I don't have 24.2 to go, I have one mile until next walk break. . .<br /><br />2) Walk breaks HELP your leg muscles. As you run and become fatigued, your stride shortens. Walk breaks use the muscles differently! By walking with a long, purposeful stride, I actually stretch the muscles back out and can run farther. <br /><br />3) Walk breaks help with cardiovascular recovery. <br /><br />How do I use walk breaks: <br /><br />1) I follow Hal Higdon's advice and walk through aid stations. Lets me stretch my legs, get my heart rate down, and drink without spilling most on my shirt/shoes. <br /><br />2) I use walk breaks when increasing mileage. I have inserted walk breaks into my long runs EVERY time I have jumped mileage above 12 miles. Once my body can handle the distance, I reduce or cut the walk breaks. <br /><br />3) I used it to get from the couch to running when I first started out. <br /><br />There are a lot of proponent's of the WALK-RUN method. As I hinted, Hal Higdon uses for aid stations during long races. John Bingham uses for everything. But what really matters is how it works for you. Does it make you run farther and faster? Then do it and stop worrying what other people say. . . ;)Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-58214905807201614702007-04-30T07:01:00.000-05:002007-04-30T07:36:02.210-05:00Marathon Questions: What Pace?What pace should I run at? <br /><br />This is a question I hear all the time. I have also heard variations based on heart-rate monitors ("What heart-rate should I run at?") <br /><br />It is my contention that most inexperienced marathoners I have met are running their training runs too fast! The person who asked about heart rate monitors was older than I am and running a a pace that was at least 25 beats/minute faster than I run. <br /><br />What is the right speed? On a heart rate monitor, it is 65 to 75% of your max heart rate. In the real world, it is "conversation pace." Run slow enough so you can have a normal conversation with your running partner; run fast enough so you cannot sing along with your iPod. <br /><br />We are in a world that teaches: "it's not any good if it doesn't hurt/burn. . ." Well, the fact is, that is wrong. When you are running to "finish", you should be in the conversation zone 100% of the time. When you are running for "time", you still should be in the conversation zone 60 to 85% of the time (coaches vary here). The great thing about North Dakota/Minnesota winters is you have to wear so many clothes, it is hard to run above conversation pace. That lays on a good endurance foundation of LSD (long-slow distance). <br /><br />Why not go faster?<br /><br />1) Doesn't burn fat! See <a href="http://windrunning.blogspot.com/2006/10/losing-fat.html">here</a> for a full citation of sources and evidence. <br /><br />2) Increases chances of injury. This is the main point. Running too fast for EVERY run doesn't improve your endurance, only increases the chances you won't make it through your training plan. <br /><br />The key is "slow" is not slow; it is slow for you. Figure it out and adjust as your endurance improves. <br /><br />1) Wear a heart rate monitor and run at 60 to 75% of your max heart rate. <br /><br />2) Use <a href="http://www.mcmillanrunning.com/rununiv/mcmillanrunningcalculator.htm">Greg McMillan's running pace calculator</a> and find your optimum pace. See my previous blog <a href="http://windrunning.blogspot.com/2007/04/mcmillan-running-calculators.html">here </a>for a discussion. <br /><br />Now, I freely admit that there is a lot of controversy over LSD ("long slow distance makes long slow runners" -- Arthur Lydiard) But that is for world class athletes and competitive runners. I can tell you my results confirm the consensus, as I understand it. I have built my base (nothing to approaching first marathon) with no major injury. I continue to improve my 5K and 10K times. I am pleased with my results. <br /><br /><br />Other reads:<br /><a href="http://www.joehenderson.com/lsdbook/"><br />Joe Henderson</a><br /><a href="http://www.pponline.co.uk/encyc/slow-training.htm"><br />Peak Performance online</a><br /><a href="http://www.active.com/story.cfm?story_id=12866">Mike Ricci</a><br /><a href="http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0NHF/is_6_21/ai_111890088">Run&Fit News</a><br /><br />or simply google it! I got about 1,230,000 hits for "long" "slow" "distance" "running"Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-15114975720281171922007-04-23T18:34:00.000-05:002007-04-23T13:46:06.815-05:00McMillan Running CalculatorsWhen I first took up running, I found the <a href="http://www.mcmillanrunning.com/rununiv/mcmillanrunningcalculator.htm">McMillan Running Calculators</a>. I think they are a great tool for plugging in running times and getting recommendations for pacing for workouts(endurance and stamina). It also maps out "equivalent performance" by projecting your times over other distances. The author has the following explanation and warnings: <br /><br /><blockquote>When I say "Equivalent Performance", I mean what would be an equivalent race time at one race distance based on your recent race time at another distance. For example, if you run 31:24 for 10K, you might wonder what you could run for a 5K or for the marathon or for a 30K or 15K. Using my Running Calculator, you'll now know. Of course, I must say that these are "estimates" of what you can run. Actual results will vary depending on the course, the weather, if it's your day or not and a myriad of other factors. However, I think you'll find that within a small variation, these estimates are accurate. (Do keep in mind that a 5K runner is unlikely to run the equivalent time in the marathon off of 5K training. The runner would obviously need to train for the marathon to accomplish this equivalent time.)</blockquote><br /><br />Anyway, besides HIGHLY recommending this site to anyone that has questions about pacing, training paces, etc., I had something interesting happen this morning. I found a PDF on my laptop that I had created (via printing) on 3/17 after I set my PR in a 5k (from the hotel in Minneapolis). I never actually opened it, read it, or printed it when I got home. I decided to look at what it "projected" for last weekend's half-marathon. The darn thing was wrong: it predicted 2:33:23 and I ran 2:33:05. It was closer than I was, by about 7 minutes!!!! Amazing. <br /><br />Now, it is predicting a 5:22:51 for my full marathon. I will say clearly up front that given the impact of my health problems on training, my weight, and the open questions of in-race nutrition to avoid hitting the wall early, I don't think I will be as close on that number. But it does give me hope for sub-5 hour marathons in the future. Stay tuned!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-18239081190523998242007-04-23T10:23:00.000-05:002007-04-23T10:31:08.909-05:00Marathon Training: Week 14Week of 4/16<br /><br />Mon 4.12mi<br />Wed >1mi*<br />Thur ~2mi*<br />Sat 14mi -- PR in Earth Day Half-Marathon at 2:33:05 <br /><br />WTD 20.22mi<br /><br /><br />*I purchased a new pair of shoes on the advice of our Adidas rep. I am sure they are fine shoes, but they are definitely not for me! On Wednesday, I had SORE legs and did not even finish a mile. I chalked it up to sore legs from the long run, all the extra walking I did during my business trip (~10 miles/day from Sunday through Tuesday), and spending 4 hours in planes on Tuesday night with little sleep. Thursday, I had the same problems. At the one mile mark, both shins, my right ankle, and left knee throbbed! I turned around and mostly walked/jogged back in. . . I paid close attention to my stride and realized I was supinating in these shoes. My "Shoe Guy" gave me the "I told you so look" and got me a second pair of the Saucony that I run in. Ran the half on Saturday with no shin, ankle, or knee pain (although I did have a lot of anxiety about it. . .) Rule 1: Always listen to your "Shoe Guy". Find a good one and then shut up; the good one's know best!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-18149270872397977402007-04-23T10:21:00.000-05:002007-04-23T10:23:37.921-05:00Marathon Training: Week 13Week of 4/9:<br /><br />Wed 6mi<br />Thur 5.3mi<br />Fri 20.96mi<br />Sun 6.19mi<br /><br />WTD 38.51 <br /><br />Felt good, Weather is finally warming up!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-54922338445082248132007-04-23T10:19:00.001-05:002007-04-23T10:21:40.308-05:00Marathon Training: Week 11Week of 3/26:<br /><br />21.19 Miles <br /><br />Cold and rain and wet. <br /><br />16 Miles for long run; couple of days with no one to watch Cooper or 30's and rain.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-54261533103230905852007-04-23T10:18:00.000-05:002007-04-23T10:19:44.110-05:00Marathon Training: Week 10Week of 3/19<br /><br />23.95 milesMarc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-13042637941445524562007-04-21T20:08:00.000-05:002007-04-21T20:24:02.224-05:00Earth Day Half-Marathon<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_FvMJ89fes1k/Riq5JGMhTxI/AAAAAAAAAA8/ialgH8fYfto/s1600-h/Race+-+Earth+Day+Half+Marathon+4-21-2007.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_FvMJ89fes1k/Riq5JGMhTxI/AAAAAAAAAA8/ialgH8fYfto/s400/Race+-+Earth+Day+Half+Marathon+4-21-2007.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5056057097609891602" /></a><br />I ran the Earth Day Half-Marathon (13.1miles) in St. Cloud, MN today. My goal was sub 2:40 and to use it as a training run for the Fargo Marathon. <br /><br />Woke up at 5am for a 9am race start. Started with some whole-wheat bagels and bananas. Watched the weather channel and saw the temps were already 60*, so I pinned my race number on a short-sleeve top and laid out my shorts. Then read/dozed until it was time to get to the race. <br /><br />Got to race and I was very nervous. Warmed up some and also paced and tried to visualize. Then moved out to the course for the start. About 5 minutes before the start, the rain started and the temp started falling. It was a cold first half-mile, but then the rain stopped and we ran on. <br /><br />The course had some great views and had lots of places where it doubled back on itself. This let the slower pack see the front runners. Of course, most of the view (along the river) that looked great in 75* sun on Friday when I drove the course, was now lost in overcast, wind, and clouds. <br /><br />Course management, volunteers, and crowd support were all great. Made the first 9 to 10 miles fly by. <br /><br />I worked on walking through rest stops and getting a good drink of gatoraide swallowed rather than on my shoes. Worked well for the first few stops. At mile 9.5, the "mix" was pretty thick. Within a quarter-mile, I had stomach cramps that forced me to slow to a walk. I walked about 0.10 of a mile, had four large burps, and I was back running. I switched to water from that point forward, but had trouble at the last two stops swallowing the water; I really could not get any down. <br /><br />I also had trouble with my "Shot Blocks". They are easy to chew at my easy pace, but running at race pace made them hard to chew, swallow, and breathe at the same time. So, I am going to rethink that a bit. . . <br /><br />Around mile 12, it started pouring rain again, with thunder. I kicked it up a gear and started reeling in other runners in an effort to get to the finish before I froze. <br /><br />I finished strong at 2:33:05 and felt good. I did get a massage, but the legs felt surprisingly good. I had to drive 175 miles home, and then my son wanted to go to a bookstore and out for supper. Legs had some soreness, but I was walking fine and made it home fine. I am tired now, and confident I will sleep well. <br /><br />Shoes were great and I had none of the leg pain that I had earlier in the week (more on that to come; suffice it to say, new shoes were not stopping supination and I had very sore ankles, knees, and shins after only a mile. . .) <br /><br />Now, I am looking forward to a twenty mile run next weekend and then the Fargo Marathon.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-26199726819764669552007-04-14T05:53:00.000-05:002007-04-14T06:12:10.006-05:00Long RunI had my first 20mile run for marathon training scheduled for this weekend (also first 20 ever!) Due to business travel, I moved it to Friday afternoon. <br /><br />What went wrong:<br /><br /><li>Didn't carry enough liquid or have enough drink stops planned. </li><br /><br /><li>Wore my ipod on my hip and its case rubbed a raw spot on my side. </li><br /><br /><li>Screwed up my calculations and ended 20 miles about a mile from home. </li><br /><br /><li>Pace was about 6:11 marathon. I had hoped to be about 20 minutes faster, but finish is my primary goal. <br /><br />What went right: <br /><br /><li>Food! I carried 4 packs of "Shot Blocks." I was able to intake them without problems and they really helped. I am a big guy, and I was starting to hit the wall at mile 16 on my long runs before this. I pushed that back 4+ miles. I was still pretty much drained of glycogen at the end of 21 miles, but 4 packs of shot blocks really helped. I will carry 4 at the start of the marathon and pick up 4 more from a co-worker that is volunteering at the mile 13 rest stop. </li><br /><br /><li>Support. My wife and son met me around mile 18. I handed off my hydration belt, topped up with gatoraide, picked up my reflective gear for the last two miles, and got some much needed encouragement. </li><br /><br /><li>Powder. I only needed one pit stop today due to a better eating and hydration plan before the run. I purchased a small travel size of Gold Bond powder and used that at the rest stop. No "monkey butt" or chafing; no discomfort at all! Also, no bladder discomfort. It comes down to being smart and planning. It is clear that if the training schedule says "4 miles", I can basically tie the shoes on and go! But high mileage requires a plan and extra steps. </li><br /><br /><li>Shoe tying! I was given a hard time by a friend because I had to stop in the first 1K of a recent 5k to retie my shoes. I have a high instep (my foot is "thick" from top to bottom and not side to side. I am constantly fighting a battle to find a point where the shoe is snug on my foot but isn't cutting off circulation. I can't wear Nike running shoes for this reason. This was the first long run where I tied them right before the start and they never came loose the entire run! </li><br /><br />26.2 in 35 days!!!! (5 weeks and 2 hours from when I type this!) 7 days from now, I toe the line for my first half-marathon race, and 14 days from now, I have my second 20miler. My plans are to run that at 8am on Saturday to simulate race prep.Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-31043456960415901662007-04-01T14:43:00.000-05:002007-04-01T14:46:09.806-05:00Doubts and new confidenceAt mile 16 yesterday, I honestly was convinced there is no way I will ever get to 26.2 miles. My legs were killing me. This morning was a huge surprise; my legs felt great! I will log 4 or 5 miles tonight and I am felling no after-effects of the long run. Maybe I can do this marathon thing after all. . . :)Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-57165785866801593882007-03-31T14:39:00.000-05:002007-03-31T14:49:41.278-05:00Half-marathons are easy; full is impossible.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_FvMJ89fes1k/Rg67RqmvkvI/AAAAAAAAAA0/LjLir4iyZ5c/s1600-h/Endurance+Building+-+Moorhead+3-31-2007.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://bp1.blogger.com/_FvMJ89fes1k/Rg67RqmvkvI/AAAAAAAAAA0/LjLir4iyZ5c/s400/Endurance+Building+-+Moorhead+3-31-2007.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5048178144497865458" /></a><br />Ok, maybe that is too much, but it is how I felt today. I am starting to get into long mileage for my upcoming marathon; today I ran 16 miles. At 13.1 miles, I felt great; at 15 miles, I felt like the legs were falling off. <br /><br />Few notes: <br /><br />1) I need a better nutrition strategy for runs. I did not eat enough DURING the run, what I ate did not sit well, and I what I ended up eating post-run made me sick. . . <br /><br />2) I need a portable powder solution. Spent about a mile of the run figuring out how to word this and have no idea. . . So let me just say this: There are things about long runs that runners who never run over 5-6 miles have to deal with. I need pit-stops, the pit stop removes much of the powder I put in for chafing, and I got "monkey butt." I need an "in-run" replacement system for use with pit stops. . . <br /><br />3) I need to continue the work on motivation. There is a great article in the recent "Runner's World" that I started with yesterday. I need to work on building up a resource of memorized quotes and images that I can pull from in the late miles of a run and race to keep my mind focused on something OTHER than how my legs are feeling. <br /><br />Hopefully, more thoughts will come to me after a nap. . . <br /><br />Carpe Viam!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-74290294790852854592007-03-26T06:04:00.000-05:002007-03-26T09:12:39.919-05:00HydrationI apologize for lack of time to post a full report on Noake's book, but everything comes down to one word: hydration. Poor hydration management and an empty bladder are the cause of my problems (Exercise hematura and kidney stones). I purchased a belt with four small water bottles and asked a friend to help keep me on task for hydration. I did an 8mile and a 12mile this weekend and felt much better! (lots of worrying, but no actual pain or problems). <br /><br />More to come when I have time. <br /><br />Carpe Viam!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-30992947774747415322007-03-25T13:22:00.000-05:002007-03-26T13:24:50.949-05:00Spring is hereRunning in shorts and shirts again instead of pants and shells. Nice to be able to "feel the breeze" instead of "fear the windchill." Nice to be able to feel my toes without them encased in heavy sox. Of course, there is rain, fog, mud, and water puddles to deal with, but I just remind myself it is not 100*, sun, humidity, snow drifts, ice, etc. ;) <br /><br />Carpe Viam!Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31768688.post-6403062089944895262007-03-22T13:49:00.000-05:002007-03-22T13:53:13.381-05:00Exercise Hematuria updateTaking two quick minutes at lunch to post this! I just got my copy of Tim Noakes, Lore of Running off UPS from Amazon. Starting on page 879, there is three pages on Exercise Hematuria. I just skimmed them, but will be digging later tonight after my run. I will post more then. <br /><br />Also, there is a section on Kidney stones and how runners are at a significant increased risk (one study of NY Marathon runners said as much as 5x normal population). Interesting, given that this is the other health problem I have been dealing with. . .Marc Windahlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01684530109995696349noreply@blogger.com