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Ran a 10k in June (5 Viewers)

Have managed my best week of running in a while being on vacation this week.

I haven't really been doing any certain plan just cause things have been so hectic lately, but I have a half next weekend. :bag:

Set out for a 4 mile run yesterday and wanted to push it just a bit. The goal was to run a 8:35ish pace or keep my hr in the 160's (just to see where I am). I was able to maintain a 8:10 pace and keep my hr in the high 150's. Felt pretty good the whole time. Definitely uncharted territory for me. Kinda like finding a gear you didn't know you had.

I had not really thought about improving too much on my half time (1:58) but now I think I can improve from that.
Dude. Am I mixing up max HRs or didn't you hit 196? If so, you should be able to demolish that 1:58 if you were running 8:10 and not cracking 160. HM pace would be in the upper 170s for a 196 max.
 
My intervals yesterday. Each one had a one minute break

Warm Up Mile: 9:38 HR 149

1- 1:40 HR 170

2- 1:26 HR 172

3- 1:34 HR 174

4- 1:42 HR 174

5- 1:44 HR 170

6- 1:36 HR 174

7- 1:51 HR 170

Cool Down- 1.07 Miles- 11:29 HR 153

Messed up my count by one. I need to figure out how this Garmin works with Intervals

 
Sho nuff - it's a small half here in a small town callled Flora, only 178 are signed up and I think most are walkers judging by their fb page.

Ned - My garmin said I hit 197 in the st Jude's half last December. I thought I remembered it being a little higher than that.

This will be my third half in 6 months. I wasn't too prepared for the First one and ran it in 2:00. The second was right in the middle of my training for the full so I admittedly didn't go all out, I was too focused on the full but still managed 1:58.

After toying with the pace calculator I think 1:55 is within reach, maybe even better. I got real excuse not to go all out :excited:

I don't know much about the course and it could be 90 here next week, that's the only concern I have.

 
Sho nuff - it's a small half here in a small town callled Flora, only 178 are signed up and I think most are walkers judging by their fb page.Ned - My garmin said I hit 197 in the st Jude's half last December. I thought I remembered it being a little higher than that.This will be my third half in 6 months. I wasn't too prepared for the First one and ran it in 2:00. The second was right in the middle of my training for the full so I admittedly didn't go all out, I was too focused on the full but still managed 1:58.After toying with the pace calculator I think 1:55 is within reach, maybe even better. I got real excuse not to go all out :excited: I don't know much about the course and it could be 90 here next week, that's the only concern I have.
I am doing a smaller 1/2 next weekend too as a training run (very cool course with a bit of everything; grass, dirt trail, bike path and even a stretch of loose rock, tree-rooted trail). To pre-plan my attack, I took their borderline crayon drawing course map and plotted the course on MapMyRun to get a feel for the elevation and to match up approx mile markers with their loose water stop markings, so I know when to take water and gel(s). I also went out to the park and ran 8+ miles yesterday on parts of the course targeting 2 hills that they mention as being the tougher parts (and they are not kidding). If you are interested in getting a feel for the course you are running and can't get out there today or tomorrow for a training run, MapMyRun is an awesome way to get a look. Not only can you see mile markers, but there is an elevation tab as well. If you plan a good approach I think your 1:55 sounds conservative. A virtual look at the course may change your thinking a bit.
 
9 miles @ 11:06 avg pace. I have been shedding some weight as of late. I put my heart rate monitor on and about 20 feet into my run it fell off my chest and rested at my waist :shock:

I ended up going without it today. I will work on tightening it up. I wish this would happen with some pants. I am pretty happy with my weight loss/change of body composition.

Right foot still hurting quite a bit but I can run through it. I have been hitting IBU and massaging it quite a bit.

Congrats to IK today. That is a big PR.

Sean- I have no insurance so I wont get my foot looked at. Google and random dudes on the internet is my health care plan.

 
My PR is 1:47:05.
Not any more.
I'm aiming for 1:45:xx.
Meh. This would have been okay I guess, but a good training cycle, easy course, and literally ideal weather = 1:43:03.I'll follow up with a report later on. For now, I'm going to spend the rest of the day carbo-reloading with my favorite IPA.
That's the way to do it. You've put the time in to earn this reward!!!
 
Me and the youngster ran 5ks last nite. He put down a 22:43 and actually went further than 5k. Check out these splits...

1 - 7:09 pace , 172 hr, - 37 ft

2 - 7:33 pace, 189 hr, + 30 ft

2.94 - 7:38 pace, 190 hr, +17 ft

3.1 - 5:39 pace, 195 hr, -23 ft

Jeepers, he's running a 1:25 1/4 mi pace at the end of hard run (albeit down hill aided).

I ran a lackluster 24:33. Splits were 7:44, 8:05, 8:04, 6:30. Really felt like I was moving better than that.

Today we did a 6/7 miler. He did the 7, I did the 6. My legs were trashed and I struggled to hold a 10:00 pace. We sprinted out the end and I was running as fast as I have in a long time. I hung with him for about 150 yards hitting a max hr of 169. He kicked in another gear and instantly gained separation before dropping it into another gear and leaving me in the distance.

Any thoughts of me running the upcoming half with him are gone.

 
Sat - 8 mile run, first in what seems like forever. It was really important to me to limit my walking breaks if my ankles felt OK, and luckily they did: 4 miles at 9:03s, 165 ave HR4 miles at 8:38s, 8:18 last mile, 176 ave HR Overall 8 miles @ 8:51 (1:10:48), 171 ave HR
With 2 weeks until Soldier Field 10, I figured I'd better see if I can actually get my body to move that far... 5 miles @ 8:58s (44:32), 161 ave HR 5 miles @ 8:34 (42:50), 174 ave HR - last mile 8:11, 180 HROverall 10 miles 1:27:22, 8:46 ave, 168 HRGood improvement over last week w/2 more miles. My legs did NOT feel good through most of the run, but considering how much I've ramped up activity the past 2 weeks I suppose it's to be expected.
 
Me and the youngster ran 5ks last nite. He put down a 22:43 and actually went further than 5k. Check out these splits...1 - 7:09 pace , 172 hr, - 37 ft2 - 7:33 pace, 189 hr, + 30 ft2.94 - 7:38 pace, 190 hr, +17 ft3.1 - 5:39 pace, 195 hr, -23 ftJeepers, he's running a 1:25 1/4 mi pace at the end of hard run (albeit down hill aided).I ran a lackluster 24:33. Splits were 7:44, 8:05, 8:04, 6:30. Really felt like I was moving better than that.Today we did a 6/7 miler. He did the 7, I did the 6. My legs were trashed and I struggled to hold a 10:00 pace. We sprinted out the end and I was running as fast as I have in a long time. I hung with him for about 150 yards hitting a max hr of 169. He kicked in another gear and instantly gained separation before dropping it into another gear and leaving me in the distance.Any thoughts of me running the upcoming half with him are gone.
Damn, awesome.How young?
 
Haven't been in this thread in months. It's fun to read through and see what people are up to. I decided to skip the marathon this year and am sticking mostly to Tris (some sprints, some Olys), maybe a HM or two.

Anybody doing a Tough Mudder this year? After doing Warrior Dash last summer I decided to up the ante. I'll be doing the Tough Mudder in Somerset WI next weekend! :football:

 
'FBG26 said:
Haven't been in this thread in months. It's fun to read through and see what people are up to. I decided to skip the marathon this year and am sticking mostly to Tris (some sprints, some Olys), maybe a HM or two. Anybody doing a Tough Mudder this year? After doing Warrior Dash last summer I decided to up the ante. I'll be doing the Tough Mudder in Somerset WI next weekend! :football:
Group of friends from High School that now live in the area here are trying to get me to do it with them next spring.I probably will...just have not committed to it yet. Wife thinks Im crazy for the Warrior Dash...thinks Im out of my mind for going for a marathon in December...and may have me committed if I do tough mudder.They are going to do Warrior Dash too this fall but I don't think that weekend will work for me this year.
 
Race Report

My race yesterday was my local half-marathon in Brookings, SD. I've done this event a bunch of times and know the course pretty much down to the yard. It's nice to be able to do a race on streets that you train on all the time where you know exactly where you are on the course and exactly what's coming up. Like I mentioned before, it's an easy course -- mostly flat, with just a few inclines here and there that you wouldn't even notice during a training run. There is one large hill before the 10-mile marker, but it's only a quarter mile from bottom to top to bottom; it's just that you can't avoid losing a few seconds there and getting your HR up before entering the final 5K.

My prior PR was in Sioux Falls last fall (1:47:05). At the time, I thought I would have a hard time improving on that, but since then I've maintained a higher mileage base (35 mpw) and managed to string together 43, 45, and 47 mile weeks with weekly speedwork borrowed from Pfitzinger. Weather conditions were perfect at the start: 42, sunny, no wind. When I lined up, I was pretty much 100% confident that I would get a new PR. Main main issue was whether I would be able to get down to my goal of 1:45 and change.

Miles 1 and 2 (7:51, 7:46) -- During the first two miles, I kept looking at my Garmin and worrying that I was going out too fast, as I had been planning on an 8:00 pace. But these miles felt pretty easy. I've done enough races to be able to recognize when it's just early-race adrenaline, and this didn't feel like that. Given the perfect conditions, it seemed reasonable just to go full steam ahead with the most aggressive possible pace that I thought I had any chance of maintaining, so I decdided to go ahead and roll with sub-8 miles for now.

Miles 3-6 (7:55, 7:41, 7:52, 7:52) -- Not much to report here other than falling in with a guy I know from work and pacing off him and his friend for a bit. Of course, they were running the full so I only had to hold this pace for half as long, but still. I ended up leaving them at the 6-mile water station.

Miles 7-10 (7:51, 7:59, 7:54, 7:57) -- When I hit the halfway mark, I noticed that I was on pace for 1:44. I thought about backing off a touch because I had never even contemplated that time, but I still felt fresh and decided to keep pushing it. At this point, I was running with a group of 3-4 other people who I didn't know, and we all seemed to be pushing each other a little. The splits from this segment make it look like I was starting to fade, but that wasn't the case -- mile 8 was one of two miles on the course that are all uphill, albeit not dramatically so, and mile 10 had the big hill that I mentioned earlier. I was pleased with both of those mile splits at the time.

Miles 11-13.1 (7:41, 7:47, 7:27, change) -- At this point of my race last fall, I was struggling to maintain pace and slowed a little over the last 5K. When I passed the mile 10 water station yesterday, I did a quick self-inventory and realized that I still felt pretty good all things considered. In fact, I was able to say goodbye to the pack I had been running with and turned it up a bit. This last segment was one of those awesome moments in a race when you know -- not think, not hope, but know -- that you're going to demolish your time goal and the only question is by how much. Recognizing this, I just pushed hard and tried to bottle that feeling of accomplishment.

Final garmin numbers: 13.21 (stupid garmin) in 1:43:06 (7:48 pace)

Final chip numbers: 1:43:02 (7:52 pace); 56/324 overall, 44/138 M, 9/25 M 35-39.

The next three weeks are going to be rest/recovery, including a trip to visit family. When we get back, I start 18/55 in preparation for Twin Cities.

 
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Race Report

Miles 11-13.1 (7:41, 7:47, 7:27, change) -- At this point of my race last fall, I was struggling to maintain pace and slowed a little over the last 5K. When I passed the mile 10 water station yesterday, I did a quick self-inventory and realized that I still felt pretty good all things considered. In fact, I was able to say goodbye to the pack I had been running with and turned it up a bit. This last segment was one of those awesome moments in a race when you know -- not think, not hope, but know -- that you're going to demolish your time goal and the only question is by how much. Recognizing this, I just pushed hard and tried to bottle that feeling of accomplishment.
That's freaking awesome! :thumbup:
The next three weeks are going to be rest/recovery, including a trip to visit family. When we get back, I start 18/55 in preparation for Twin Cities.
I'll see you there; this year I'll be cheering instead of running. ;)
 
Race Report

Miles 11-13.1 (7:41, 7:47, 7:27, change) -- At this point of my race last fall, I was struggling to maintain pace and slowed a little over the last 5K. When I passed the mile 10 water station yesterday, I did a quick self-inventory and realized that I still felt pretty good all things considered. In fact, I was able to say goodbye to the pack I had been running with and turned it up a bit. This last segment was one of those awesome moments in a race when you know -- not think, not hope, but know -- that you're going to demolish your time goal and the only question is by how much. Recognizing this, I just pushed hard and tried to bottle that feeling of accomplishment.
That's freaking awesome! :thumbup:
Agreed!!!IK - my recent HM also registered on my Garmin at about 13.21 miles ...I presume it's a matter of not running the tangents and sidestepping around traffic and such. But consider the good news - the time you ran was actually for an extra .1 mile, so an extra 45 seconds or so!

 
This last segment was one of those awesome moments in a race when you know -- not think, not hope, but know -- that you're going to demolish your time goal and the only question is by how much. Recognizing this, I just pushed hard and tried to bottle that feeling of accomplishment.Final garmin numbers: 13.21 (stupid garmin) in 1:43:06 (7:48 pace)Final chip numbers: 1:43:02 (7:52 pace); 56/324 overall, 44/138 M, 9/25 M 35-39.The next three weeks are going to be rest/recovery, including a trip to visit family. When we get back, I start 18/55 in preparation for Twin Cities.
Did you start smiling here?What's you mary pr and will you be shattering that too?I suspect you really did run at least 13.21. If anything, the Garmin measures short.
 
'comfortably numb said:
'BassNBrew said:
Me and the youngster ran 5ks last nite. He put down a 22:43 and actually went further than 5k. Check out these splits...1 - 7:09 pace , 172 hr, - 37 ft2 - 7:33 pace, 189 hr, + 30 ft2.94 - 7:38 pace, 190 hr, +17 ft3.1 - 5:39 pace, 195 hr, -23 ftJeepers, he's running a 1:25 1/4 mi pace at the end of hard run (albeit down hill aided).I ran a lackluster 24:33. Splits were 7:44, 8:05, 8:04, 6:30. Really felt like I was moving better than that.Today we did a 6/7 miler. He did the 7, I did the 6. My legs were trashed and I struggled to hold a 10:00 pace. We sprinted out the end and I was running as fast as I have in a long time. I hung with him for about 150 yards hitting a max hr of 169. He kicked in another gear and instantly gained separation before dropping it into another gear and leaving me in the distance.Any thoughts of me running the upcoming half with him are gone.
Damn, awesome.How young?
14
 
What's you mary pr and will you be shattering that too?
3:58 (Twin Cities two years ago). Originally I was just planning to go sub-4:00 again, but I've improved as a runner quite a bit over the past 8-9 months, and now I'm starting to think that just "sub-4" is too conservative. For now I'm going to plan on something like an 8:50-9:00 pace and reevaluate when I get toward the end of training.
 
What's you mary pr and will you be shattering that too?
3:58 (Twin Cities two years ago). Originally I was just planning to go sub-4:00 again, but I've improved as a runner quite a bit over the past 8-9 months, and now I'm starting to think that just "sub-4" is too conservative. For now I'm going to plan on something like an 8:50-9:00 pace and reevaluate when I get toward the end of training.
Major :hifive: GB!! That "knowing" feeling is why we do what we do. All the chips falling perfectly in to place :chills: I think you are going to be pleasantly surprised when you finish the 18/55. :thumbup:
 
The marathon weekend is in the books. Very proud of the family. This is the first race where all of us got to participate. I really cant wait for the kids to get older and race with us in the big races. It all started with the kids fun run yesterday. Both boys (Zack 5yrs old and Ian 3) were pretty fired up about the run. That changed quickly for Ian when he saw the crowds. There was hundreds of kids along with their parents. It was quite the sight seeing all these kids from 3-12 piled in at the start/finish archway. I'd wager a guess that there was a good 500 kids+parents.

My wife took Ian and I took Zack. We separated at the start thanks to Ian refusing to run. He was petrified of the crowd. Once the crowds dispersed some Zack and I took off with him squeezing the hell out of my hand. About a quarter mile later he finally let go and was on his own. He ran thru the first half mile and then said "Daddy why does my chest hurt?". We took a quick walking break as I explained what was going on with his breathing. We ran the rest of the way with two other quick breaks. Of course I took my watch and timed him. 14:10 average over the 1.33 miles. :thumbup: Poor Ian didn't have much fun, but finished the run. They both are very proud of their medals. What a cool experience.

Today was the relay. The order was my wife, sister, brother, then me. Gorgeous sunny day, but it warmed up pretty fast. Based on the girls' training I figured they would both run their 6.55 legs around 1:10. We had to coordinate spectating and then being back in time for the transition to the next leg so it was a bit stressful trying to time it all right. My wife came in right on time at 1:09 and change. My sister came in at a shade over 1:10 and my lazy ### brother came in at 1:11 (he did very little training for this). Both girls had a blast. My sister is already chomping at the bit to run the Philly HM this fall. :thumbup: The girls are never going to let my brother live this down. :lol:

When I started my leg it was already 81 degrees. My pacing was all over the place. I admit I ran scared due to the heat. There were a few hills that I knew weren't huge but just big enough to zap you. Coupled with the heat I ran timid and held back too much. Still pretty happy with my time, but I know I have a little more. Splits:

1- 6:58/179

2 - 7:16/184

3 - 7:23/184

4 - 7:42/186 (hills)

5 - 7:32/185

6 - 7:35/188 (hills)

6.55 - 3:27/190 (6:14 avg) :bag: downhill but had way too much kick in me.

Average - 7:18/185 (194 max)

 
Fun report, Ned! The chest hurting - :lmao:

--

Forgive me, brothers, for it has been four days since my last run-session.

Finally shook the cold. It had gotten into my chest, but lots of rest did the trick, and I finally felt healthy today. I did 4 miles this morning, and did one of those at a hard 6:12 pace just to remind myself that I haven't lost all my conditioning with the rough week. I have a day off tomorrow, so I'll hit the track for some intervals.

 
My wife took Ian and I took Zack. We separated at the start thanks to Ian refusing to run. He was petrified of the crowd. Once the crowds dispersed some Zack and I took off with him squeezing the hell out of my hand. About a quarter mile later he finally let go and was on his own. He ran thru the first half mile and then said "Daddy why does my chest hurt?". We took a quick walking break as I explained what was going on with his breathing. We ran the rest of the way with two other quick breaks. Of course I took my watch and timed him. 14:10 average over the 1.33 miles. :thumbup:
Ahem. You left out his HR data. :coffee:Seriously, this sounds a blast of a weekend. Fun times.
 
I'm not worthy to post in here considering Ned's kid would push me but in my defense I'm old, fat, slow, unmotivated and have only seriously been running since January. I don't push myself much and do it more for recreation than racing or time. I've never run a race and probably won't anytime soon but I'm not against it should the opportunity come up with the group of people.

I had every intention of trying to best my personal distance by going 8 miles yesterday but it just wasn't in the cards. I haven't really done much distance the last few weeks and was thinking I was better prepped than I actually was. My pace was decent for me up to mile 4 and then the monkey jumped on my back and I struggled to make it home. I feel most comfortable in the 4 mile range and it seems like when I go over that I lose direction on how I should be running meaning I start worrying about how ad I feel, my feet hurt, etc. Everything but concentrating on the run. What do you distance boys do?

1 - 9:04

2 - 9:39

3 - 10:00

4 - 10:36

5 - 10:32

6 - 11:18

7 - 11:07

 
I'm not worthy to post in here considering Ned's kid would push me but in my defense I'm old, fat, slow, unmotivated and have only seriously been running since January. I don't push myself much and do it more for recreation than racing or time. I've never run a race and probably won't anytime soon but I'm not against it should the opportunity come up with the group of people.I had every intention of trying to best my personal distance by going 8 miles yesterday but it just wasn't in the cards. I haven't really done much distance the last few weeks and was thinking I was better prepped than I actually was. My pace was decent for me up to mile 4 and then the monkey jumped on my back and I struggled to make it home. I feel most comfortable in the 4 mile range and it seems like when I go over that I lose direction on how I should be running meaning I start worrying about how ad I feel, my feet hurt, etc. Everything but concentrating on the run. What do you distance boys do?1 - 9:04 2 - 9:39 3 - 10:004 - 10:365 - 10:326 - 11:187 - 11:07
Honestly, building up your long run to 10 miles or so is hard the first time you do it. Your body's not used to be in motion that long, your connective isn't used to being pounded on for that many miles, and your muscles aren't that strong or efficient. I'm not sure what your weekly schedule looks like, but runs like this will definitely get easier as long as you're maintaining a good solid base (like being able to run 4 miles or easily) and a decent long run every other week (maybe 6 for now, with the goal of building that up to 8-10). It just takes time.
 
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Congrats on smashing your PR Ivan!

Ned - sounds like a blast. cool there were so many kids involved. make sure to give your brother #### for getting whooped by the girls.

 
Ivan - Amazing race!! :thumbup: :thumbup:

wraith - Good to see you getting after it again!

Started off a bit slow, was on phone :bag:
Party foul!
Seriously. WTF is that??sho nuff - Nice work on the 12/6T. That's a tough workout!

jb1020 - Good luck next weekend. I predict a solid PR.

2Young - Sounds like a fun run next weekend. I'm looking forward to tackling the trails after Green Bay!

prosopis - Nice run, and congrats on the weight loss. I know you don't have insurance, but if there's any way you can afford it, you should really get that foot checked out.

BNB - Nice job by you and the kid!

Ned - Solid work on the relay!

tri-man - Glad to hear you're feeling better!

beer 30 - Like Ivan said, it just takes time. Be patient, and stick with it!

 
Two straight nights of drinking and insufficient sleep + warm weather + hard 6-miler last night = crappy, dehydrated 12-miler this morning.

Average pace (7:51) was fine, but my legs felt like crap the whole way. SRD tomorrow, then mainly just easy runs this week before the half in GB on Sunday.

Speaking of which, I'm convinced that the weather gods hate me. It's usually near-perfect for this race, but the forecast is calling for overnight lows in the 60s on Saturday and highs Sunday in the lower 80s. Ugh. Race starts at 7AM, so I should be done before it gets too warm, but still gonna make it tough to get the big PR that I'm chasing. More importantly, it's gonna suck for the friends of mine running the marathon. A couple first-timers and a couple chasing their first BQs.

 
Speaking of which, I'm convinced that the weather gods hate me. It's usually near-perfect for this race, but the forecast is calling for overnight lows in the 60s on Saturday and highs Sunday in the lower 80s. Ugh. Race starts at 7AM, so I should be done before it gets too warm, but still gonna make it tough to get the big PR that I'm chasing. More importantly, it's gonna suck for the friends of mine running the marathon. A couple first-timers and a couple chasing their first BQs.
That sucks. I'll never BQ, but I really feel bad for guys who are right there on the cusp of that time only to catch bad weather on race day. That's a really high-stakes time goal that can be disrupted by stuff outside of the runner's control. Good luck with the half.
 
Speaking of which, I'm convinced that the weather gods hate me. It's usually near-perfect for this race, but the forecast is calling for overnight lows in the 60s on Saturday and highs Sunday in the lower 80s. Ugh. Race starts at 7AM, so I should be done before it gets too warm, but still gonna make it tough to get the big PR that I'm chasing. More importantly, it's gonna suck for the friends of mine running the marathon. A couple first-timers and a couple chasing their first BQs.
Tell me about it...Of course, it wouldn't be the first time the weather weren't what it was predicted to be a week out. Let's hope for the best!

 
gruecd - sucks about the forecast. Let's hope the weathermen are about as accurate as they usually are that far out and it's 30 degrees cooler.

 
I'm not worthy to post in here considering Ned's kid would push me but in my defense I'm old, fat, slow, unmotivated and have only seriously been running since January. I don't push myself much and do it more for recreation than racing or time. I've never run a race and probably won't anytime soon but I'm not against it should the opportunity come up with the group of people.I had every intention of trying to best my personal distance by going 8 miles yesterday but it just wasn't in the cards. I haven't really done much distance the last few weeks and was thinking I was better prepped than I actually was. My pace was decent for me up to mile 4 and then the monkey jumped on my back and I struggled to make it home. I feel most comfortable in the 4 mile range and it seems like when I go over that I lose direction on how I should be running meaning I start worrying about how ad I feel, my feet hurt, etc. Everything but concentrating on the run. What do you distance boys do?
beer 30 - post away! We all love to share experiences and advice, and then celebrate successes.One thought would be to deliberately break your longer run down into segments. E.g., run 9 minutes, then walk 1. Let your body and mind get used to the feel of being in action for a longer period of time without the pressure of continuous running.
 
I'm not worthy to post in here considering Ned's kid would push me but in my defense I'm old, fat, slow, unmotivated and have only seriously been running since January. I don't push myself much and do it more for recreation than racing or time. I've never run a race and probably won't anytime soon but I'm not against it should the opportunity come up with the group of people.I had every intention of trying to best my personal distance by going 8 miles yesterday but it just wasn't in the cards. I haven't really done much distance the last few weeks and was thinking I was better prepped than I actually was. My pace was decent for me up to mile 4 and then the monkey jumped on my back and I struggled to make it home. I feel most comfortable in the 4 mile range and it seems like when I go over that I lose direction on how I should be running meaning I start worrying about how ad I feel, my feet hurt, etc. Everything but concentrating on the run. What do you distance boys do?1 - 9:04 2 - 9:39 3 - 10:004 - 10:365 - 10:326 - 11:187 - 11:07
Last year when I started this running thing...running a mile hurt.Trying to run a 9 minute mile really hurt.Fast forward to march and I managed a 1:54 half marathon and am going for a full marathon this december.Everyone start's somewhere.Biggest thing is how much have you run to try building up to 8 miles?How much do you run in a week.Id say start out slower. 10:30 may be right for you for those long slower runs (I run my long runs at anywhere from 9:50-10:20 depending on what I am doing.
 
Finished the week with a 35 mile bike ride - on the front half I was doing about 18mph, but the way home (as usual) I was way slower. Would love to blame it on more uphill (it's not) or the wind (a "brisk" 10mph), but I think it's just me. More reason to keep working at it I suppose.

So glad Monday is a SRD - my body is worn out after my first full-on training week:

3 runs for about 22 miles

3 rides for about 68 miles

1 swim for 1100 yards

 
just to remind myself that I haven't lost all my conditioning with the rough week.
Isn't it funny how that works? These past couple of recovery weeks have really screwed with my mind. I totally get this.
My wife took Ian and I took Zack. We separated at the start thanks to Ian refusing to run. He was petrified of the crowd. Once the crowds dispersed some Zack and I took off with him squeezing the hell out of my hand. About a quarter mile later he finally let go and was on his own. He ran thru the first half mile and then said "Daddy why does my chest hurt?". We took a quick walking break as I explained what was going on with his breathing. We ran the rest of the way with two other quick breaks. Of course I took my watch and timed him. 14:10 average over the 1.33 miles. :thumbup:
Ahem. You left out his HR data. :coffee:Seriously, this sounds a blast of a weekend. Fun times.
:lol: of course I told my wife I'd put the HRM on him, but that little twerp is just too skinny.
 
Great reports guys. Ivan, way to go on the PR. You ran a great race.

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Whole lot of nothing to report for me. Still recovering, but all I did was spread 8 scoops of mulch this weekend and some other various projects around the house. I kind of wish that I ran though because I am a walking zombie right now.

 
Last year when I started this running thing...running a mile hurt.Trying to run a 9 minute mile really hurt.Fast forward to march and I managed a 1:54 half marathon and am going for a full marathon this december.Everyone start's somewhere.Biggest thing is how much have you run to try building up to 8 miles?How much do you run in a week.Id say start out slower. 10:30 may be right for you for those long slower runs (I run my long runs at anywhere from 9:50-10:20 depending on what I am doing.
Typically I run 3-4 miles T&Th and then some distance on Saturday. On my off days I get in some cardio but I've been trying to concentrate on speed work rather than distance. I typically don't have a lot of time on the off days as I lift so I have about 15 minutes to jam in a mile & a half or so.
 
I was originally planning on a recovery run today, but I think I'm going to have to bag that -- I'm stiffer/sorer today than I was yesterday. DOMS should go away by tomorrow and I'll get back out there then.

 
Last year when I started this running thing...running a mile hurt.Trying to run a 9 minute mile really hurt.Fast forward to march and I managed a 1:54 half marathon and am going for a full marathon this december.Everyone start's somewhere.Biggest thing is how much have you run to try building up to 8 miles?How much do you run in a week.Id say start out slower. 10:30 may be right for you for those long slower runs (I run my long runs at anywhere from 9:50-10:20 depending on what I am doing.
Typically I run 3-4 miles T&Th and then some distance on Saturday. On my off days I get in some cardio but I've been trying to concentrate on speed work rather than distance. I typically don't have a lot of time on the off days as I lift so I have about 15 minutes to jam in a mile & a half or so.
I'm a firm believer in beginners doing zero speed work. Its all about building the foundation first, which is all endurance based. Aside from that, you're opening yourself up for injury by doing speed work first since you're body isn't accustomed to the demand you put on it by running fast. Comfortably numb is a great example of what you can do when you focus on that foundation first...Each run should be done at a comfortable 'conversational' pace. If you can't carry a conversation, then you're running too fast. It's going to take some getting used to, but trust it. Put in a couple of months of solid slow distance, and you'll be amazed at how quickly your body adapts. Keep on posting your workouts here. There's a huge array of experience to lean on here. :thumbup:
 

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