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Ran a 10k in June (9 Viewers)

gruecd said:
Sand, have you tried listening to an audio book on slower runs? Better than music on a slower pace
Can't do those while running. I don't pay good enough attention to really catch anything (I've tried). A lot of times I'll have music on random and not have a clue when I'm done what played.
I do podcasts when I'm trying to keep it slow. I like UltraRunnerPodcast.com, RunRunLive, and a couple different ESPN podcasts (Bill Simmons, Colin Cowherd).
Eerily similar to me. I'm almost always a podcast guy, with URP and Simmons two of my favorites, along with Endurance Planet, TrailRunnerNation, TalkUltra, and of course The Audible as we get to the Fantasy Football playoffs.

I used to listen to The Clash, The Ramones and Ian Dury and the Blockheads when I ran. I was fast but I was always getting hurt. Now I listen to Neil Young, Bob Dylan and Wilco and I am slow, but healthy. I would listen to Michael Bolton if it made me a better runner.
Ok, some things just aren't worth it. I draw the line at Bolton, unless it's him singing the SNL Pirates parody.

 
Ok, whoever turned the suck index back up to 140 please back the #### off. Today's run hurt like a mother.

TIA.
Not mine. But I'm doing the Maffetone / Mark Allen plan throughout December. 6.3M, 147bpm. Hillier course than my usual long run, and roughly 2M was on trail, but the pace ended up being 9:03 Still not sure about this (the part where ALL the running I do this month is aerobic base), but I'm rolling with it.
One month is a drop in the bucket. You'll be fine.Noticing that pace is already quicker than one you posted at similar HR from last week?
Yes.

Is one month enough for this or should I keep going until I'm not improving?
If you can stand it, I'd keep at it until you plateau. That is what Maffetone would recommend, anyway. That's part of why he prescribes the MAF test run at least monthly (warm up then 5 miles on the track at your MAF HR to record your mile splits) so you have a controlled test you can compare over time and see plateaus as they occur. Of course he would then say to try and identify other things in your life that may be interfering with your progress (stress, diet, poor sleep, etc) before he'd suggest adding more intensity. Again, he's coming from the health background and there's some common sense there, but most would say once you plateau to start adding intensity into your training. The thought there is that at some point your MAF pace will approach your V02 max but can never exceed it, so then it's time to work on that.

 
So I had to travel to Kansas City for work today through Friday, all while most of the world's greatest ultrarunners are running my home trails preparing for the North Face 50M on Saturday. So no running into Rory Bosio up on the Dipsea, or having Killian and Emelie say "on your left" as they fly by me up Cardiac. There was even a group run led by the Salomon athletes tonight...that I missed.

Good KC bbq is no consolation....let's just hope the WS lottery on Saturday AM makes up for what I'm missing the next few days!

 
FUBAR said:
Ned said:
FUBAR said:
Sand said:
Ok, whoever turned the suck index back up to 140 please back the #### off. Today's run hurt like a mother.

TIA.
Not mine. But I'm doing the Maffetone / Mark Allen plan throughout December. 6.3M, 147bpm. Hillier course than my usual long run, and roughly 2M was on trail, but the pace ended up being 9:03 Still not sure about this (the part where ALL the running I do this month is aerobic base), but I'm rolling with it.
One month is a drop in the bucket. You'll be fine.Noticing that pace is already quicker than one you posted at similar HR from last week?
Yes.

Is one month enough for this or should I keep going until I'm not improving?
It's not a diet, it's a life change.

Good aerobic training should be the backbone (80%+) of any training you do.

 
Not looking good for me running this half this weekend.

Ice storm warning all day friday.

Can't leave til tomorrow about 11 or 12...supposed to get from a quarter to 3 quarters of an inch of ice accumulation around the Memphis area.

No sense in risking the travel for this one.

 
Not looking good for me running this half this weekend.

Ice storm warning all day friday.

Can't leave til tomorrow about 11 or 12...supposed to get from a quarter to 3 quarters of an inch of ice accumulation around the Memphis area.

No sense in risking the travel for this one.
Shark move to wear iceskates and skate to any easy PR IMO.

 
FUBAR said:
Ned said:
FUBAR said:
Sand said:
Ok, whoever turned the suck index back up to 140 please back the #### off. Today's run hurt like a mother.

TIA.
Not mine. But I'm doing the Maffetone / Mark Allen plan throughout December. 6.3M, 147bpm. Hillier course than my usual long run, and roughly 2M was on trail, but the pace ended up being 9:03 Still not sure about this (the part where ALL the running I do this month is aerobic base), but I'm rolling with it.
One month is a drop in the bucket. You'll be fine.Noticing that pace is already quicker than one you posted at similar HR from last week?
Yes.

Is one month enough for this or should I keep going until I'm not improving?
It's not a diet, it's a life change.

Good aerobic training should be the backbone (80%+) of any training you do.
okay, okay...

Just realizing that I've trained myself pretty well to run a 7:15-7:30 pace over the past decade, which is why it feels easy. But I haven't been getting any faster over distance. So here I am, 20 years into my running career, relearning how to train.

 
ran into this guy yesterday morning. I was probably 20 ft away when I noticed it and it never moved. When I got to about 10 ft, I yelled to scare it away before I was right on top of it. Interesting way to break up a run...

 
Made it to Memphis just fine. Roads were wet, no ice except in the trees. 19* or so in the morning. Cold...but it's go time.

 
Welp, I was due and the timing is good. Pulled a calf. I think the ten hours of yard work the last two days was too much. Son of a...

 
Good luck guys :towelwave:

Only 2.2 miles for me tonight, took an hour.

Started off with 50s, kept them in the :37-:39 range, ended with a 500 with fins, 6:40

 
Or not...they just cancelled it.

Low overnight temps and wet roads...they are worried about it all icing.

wish they would have done this about 6 hours ago.

The good is that they will apply my registration fee to the Country Music half in April...so we are only out tbe cost of gas to get to my Sister in law's house.

 
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Or not...they just cancelled it.

Low overnight temps and wet roads...they are worried about it all icing.

wish they would have done this about 6 hours ago.

The good is that they will apply my registration fee to the Country Music half in April...so we are only out tbe cost of gas to get to my Sister in law's house.
Just heard this, a buddy of mine was supposed to run it. Sucks, but seems to be the best call.

Nashville is fun, so if they'll get you in there, you'll have fun. I won't be doing it this year but have run it or the half 5 times.

 
I live in Nashville. I run the half to raise money for a friend's charity...so it covers what id already have to pay which is good.

 
Or not...they just cancelled it.Low overnight temps and wet roads...they are worried about it all icing.wish they would have done this about 6 hours ago.The good is that they will apply my registration fee to the Country Music half in April...so we are only out tbe cost of gas to get to my Sister in law's house.
Bummer man, sorry to hear about the cancellation but the weather doesn't sound too appealing. Glad they flipped the entry too.Good luck Duck & BnB! Hoping you guys make it in, be super cool to see you both at WS!

 
Or not...they just cancelled it.Low overnight temps and wet roads...they are worried about it all icing.wish they would have done this about 6 hours ago.The good is that they will apply my registration fee to the Country Music half in April...so we are only out tbe cost of gas to get to my Sister in law's house.
Bummer man, sorry to hear about the cancellation but the weather doesn't sound too appealing. Glad they flipped the entry too.Good luck Duck & BnB! Hoping you guys make it in, be super cool to see you both at WS!
:goodposting:

:popcorn:

 
Thanks fellas. I'm hitting the road in a few to head up to the lottery. They were expecting 6-8" of snow in Auburn overnight, so hopefully I can get there!

It'll be broadcast live on lottery.ultralive.net as well.

My buddy Jim finds out about Hardrock today as well. Could be a big day!

 
2:25 today. Had a hard time keeping my heart rate in the zone. Don't know if it was the wind, wet, or I need a rest day tomorrow. I'd be going o.k. at 145, then look at my watch and see it jump to 160s and one time 187. Still averaged 147 but the pace was over 10.

I did discover I don't like most of linkin park's last album. And met two nice dogs who followed me for a mile. One that looked like a white German shepherd just stayed next to me, the other, a smaller black mutt, was following him.

 
Big Red X for me and SF.

Unfortunately SF Duck had to listen to them read SF...XXXXX on three different occasions.

I'm hoping he'll get in on the special drawing for those in attendance.

 
Big Red X for me and SF.

Unfortunately SF Duck had to listen to them read SF...XXXXX on three different occasions.

I'm hoping he'll get in on the special drawing for those in attendance.
Fingers crossed. We had one guy here in my locale get in. Seemed like a lot of CA folks.

In any case, as I keep saying, I'm right here close to Pinhoti...

 
2:25 today. Had a hard time keeping my heart rate in the zone. Don't know if it was the wind, wet, or I need a rest day tomorrow. I'd be going o.k. at 145, then look at my watch and see it jump to 160s and one time 187. Still averaged 147 but the pace was over 10.

I did discover I don't like most of linkin park's last album. And met two nice dogs who followed me for a mile. One that looked like a white German shepherd just stayed next to me, the other, a smaller black mutt, was following him.
187 is probably a bad reading. It happens at times during the winter when the air it's dry. You'd certainly know if you were actually hitting 187. That's near 5K effort. You'll probably notice some cardiac drift. Your HR will increase as you go longer. That'll begin to happen later and later with more focused aerobic work. This is where the big payoff comes in (90+ mins training runs).

 
Big Red X for me and SF.

Unfortunately SF Duck had to listen to them read SF...XXXXX on three different occasions.

I'm hoping he'll get in on the special drawing for those in attendance.
Fingers crossed. We had one guy here in my locale get in. Seemed like a lot of CA folks.

In any case, as I keep saying, I'm right here close to Pinhoti...
CA dominated the lottery pool.

Pinhoti is definitely on the radar for 2014. Massenutten lottery is early January. With WS a no go, BSG is confirmed on my calendar.

 
Big Red X for me and SF.

Unfortunately SF Duck had to listen to them read SF...XXXXX on three different occasions.

I'm hoping he'll get in on the special drawing for those in attendance.
Fingers crossed. We had one guy here in my locale get in. Seemed like a lot of CA folks.

In any case, as I keep saying, I'm right here close to Pinhoti...
CA dominated the lottery pool.

Pinhoti is definitely on the radar for 2014. Massenutten lottery is early January. With WS a no go, BSG is confirmed on my calendar.
I don't know if the Beech Metric is gonna work, but BSG is also still on my list.

I haven't updated much lately, as I've been struggling with typical winter cold stuff. But I did manage to get in a nice 8 mile trail run today. This makes 30 for the week - more than I have put up in a very long time. I'd love to add to it tomorrow, as the legs feel good, but the weather is supposed to be absolute ####. So we'll see.

 
On the topic of music while running, there are some lines that always seem to help me pick up the pace.

Running like the wind,

A shadow in the dust,

Like the driving rain,

LIke the restless rust.

Animal, Def Leppard

Moving fast down 95,

I hit top speed, but I'm still moving much too slow

Detroit Rock City, Kiss.

There are others, anyone have any other lines that perk them up?

 
Big Red X for me and SF.

Unfortunately SF Duck had to listen to them read SF...XXXXX on three different occasions.

I'm hoping he'll get in on the special drawing for those in attendance.
Fingers crossed. We had one guy here in my locale get in. Seemed like a lot of CA folks.

In any case, as I keep saying, I'm right here close to Pinhoti...
CA dominated the lottery pool.

Pinhoti is definitely on the radar for 2014. Massenutten lottery is early January. With WS a no go, BSG is confirmed on my calendar.
:violin: for me and BnB. And yes, three times I heard "Sean....". I wish I had my HRM on as I'm sure I hit Zone 5, especially the first time that happened.

Although the worst "bad beat" was the guy in attendance who heard his name...but then a different city. He was standing and cheering before realizing it wasn't him.

One of my old fraternity buddies did get picked, so at least I'll have a guy to go crew for. He's probably too fast for me to pace, but we'll see. He was a 2 time loser coming in, so I'm really happy for him. Extra cool for him in that his dad ran States back in the early days as one of the original few crazies.

The guy I finished my last 50 miler with also got picked, and I got a chance to congratulate him afterward.

Fun experience to be there in person, definitely worth the 4 hour round trip in the car. Now hopefully the lottery guys will be kinder to me on Thursday as I look to get into my first choice for a qualifying race for the 2015 Western States, Miwok 100K.

 
Sorry to hear you & BnB didn't make it in, lotta folks disappointed today but that race has grown into a monster, they have to limit somehow.

Ran my first ultra today, 31.2 in 7:05:55. Everything hurts, RR sometime.

 
Sorry to hear you & BnB didn't make it in, lotta folks disappointed today but that race has grown into a monster, they have to limit somehow.

Ran my first ultra today, 31.2 in 7:05:55. Everything hurts, RR sometime.
Nice, congrats! Can't wait to read the report.

 
Sorry to hear you & BnB didn't make it in, lotta folks disappointed today but that race has grown into a monster, they have to limit somehow.

Ran my first ultra today, 31.2 in 7:05:55. Everything hurts, RR sometime.
Sweet! That's a heck of a run.

 
Ran my first ultra today, 31.2 in 7:05:55. Everything hurts, RR sometime.
That's awesome!Which one?

10 minute workout today

90 seconds x 3, plank front, right, left

5 minute kettle bell, 60, 50, 40, 21 (time ran out)

 
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Congrats Beer...good that somebody had some good news this weekend.

After some reflection...my only issue with what St. Jude did was that, in my opinion, they could have made the call earlier than they did.

The weather had been bad and coming for a while.

In the end, the course was not all that bad ice wise from what I know. One section that runs through a park had some worrisome issues with overhanging trees that were icy and you just can't risk limbs falling on runners and volunteers. In addition ,the sidewalks where volunteers may be and specatators were apparently bad in spots.

One of the biggest issues that led to it was that they finish in Autozone Park (minor league baseball). The field was apparently like a skating rink and I would imagine the concrete stands were not much better. Can't have runners that just gone done with 13.1 or 26.2 going up those icy stairs...nor volunteers and "fans". In addition, they had about 30% of the volunteers cancel as well as 15% of the emergency services have to be redirected to be ready for the general public more with some being without power and other issues the weather could have been causing. I understand the call...but waiting til 6:45 when a majority of people have already made all their travels seems to be my only sticking point. For me, that did not matter much. I was with my wife and kids staying at her sisters house...so they got some more time to visit (we had just been there for Thanksgiving) and I guess I got a free shirt out of it as my fee will apply to my next half anyway.

On the shirt...my SIL apparently got in the wrong line when picking up our packets (with the weather they allowed others to pick it up so I sent her a scan of my license and the form)...she got me, her, and my niece "marathon" shirts rather than halfs. I joked and told them to just convince people they were disappointed as they prepared the run the full.

I will likely only wear it under stuff or on cold days to run anyway...and its not like I ran the half that day either.

Hopefully St. Jude listens to the posts of many, including me, and donates the medals to the kids at the hospital there. They talked about mailing them to all the runners. I have no interest in a medal for a race I didn't run...and I think it would be foolish for them to spend the money on postage when they need that money elsewhere.

 
Sorry to hear you & BnB didn't make it in, lotta folks disappointed today but that race has grown into a monster, they have to limit somehow.

Ran my first ultra today, 31.2 in 7:05:55. Everything hurts, RR sometime.
Congrats!!! I am looking forward to the report.

 
Crazy weather here. Friday I ran shirtless in 74 degrees. This afternoon I needed a hat, gloves and pants in 34 degrees and rainy.

 
2013 One Epic Run

3rd year for this event, first 2 were run by a different RD. This year it was taken over by an ultra runner who knows how to do a race. She was fantastic. Set at Croft State Park in Spartanburg, SC the format was simply run a 3.1 mile loop as many times as you want within a 24 hour period, could be once, could be 50 times, whatever you felt like doing. Not sure what the winner finished up with but he as at 27 laps this morning with 2 hours to go. Knowing him he's one of the locals here I run with) he probably got in an even 30 unless someone was pushing him. My goal going in was a 50k (10 laps, 31.whatever miles). It would take an epic (pun intended) act of the Lord to get me through it given my woefully inadequate training but I was challenging the spirit of BnB and hoping for a miracle.

The course, from looking at information posted on the web, didn't appear to be overly difficult with a modest elevation. Don't believe the internet, ever. The modest elevation was due to the mountain goat climbs canceling out the break neck declines. Entire course was up & down with about one or two areas of flat. The weather all week was alternating from 50% to 70% chance of rain but right as we drove into Spartanburg, the skies parted and the rain held off (except for one brief time) for the entire day. Temps were mid 50's so the conditions were good but due to the rain all week in the area, the trail quickly got sloppy. Not muck monster pull your shoes off sloppy but slippery. The coating of leaves didn't help but you run with what you got.

In preparation, I packed everything I owned. Food, gatorade, water, ice, clothes for a two week stay, 3 pair of shoes, you get the picture. I was pretty nervous all week and didn't sleep Thursday or Friday night leading up. One night of insomnia is normal, two was tiring but I was still jacked to the sky when I arrived Saturday. I tried desperately to rid myself of any extra weight (if yo know what I mean) but the body wasn't cooperating so I knew somewhere along the way I was going to need to make a pit stop and ruin some poor bathroom attendants day. True to form, about an hour into the trip I left some holiday cheer for a wonderful worker at a QT mart in Gaffney, sorry bud. Got to the park fine with plenty of time to spare, race started at 9am and I was there by 7:30. Got settled, walked off some energy and then started chatting up some of the locals that made the trip from Fort Mill.

We got our instructions which was pretty much carry a bottle at all times and make sure you check in when you complete a lap. The aid station was stocked with every conceivable want and the food stocks were rotated throughout the day so the selection stayed fresh. We started out doing a lap around the parking lot to try and thin the herd some as there were 175 registrants and most of the trail was single track. It didn't really help until lap 2 but it s what it is, lot of walking on lap 1 until we all found our groove. From there it was lather-rinse-repeat.

Lap 1 - 37:27, aver. 12:29/mile

Even with the walking and weeding out on the 1st lap I felt pretty good about the time, having never seen the course before I quickly realized it was not going to be a cheery walk in the park (pun intended).

Lap 2 - 37:09, aver. 12:23/mile

Turned right back around and went back out. The course starts with a pretty good downhill that you share with runners heading up to the aid station so it could get crowded but it never turned into a problem. You crossed the river via the wooden bridge then the goat path uphill started. I ran it the first two laps.

Lap 3 - 37:29, aver. 12:30/mile

Still chugging along but doubt starts to set in as I have to walk a couple of the uphills and I'm not 9 miles in. In hindsight this should have been the plan all along as I did this on every lap afterward.

Lap 4 - 40:51, aver. 13:37/mile

The herd really thins now as everyone starts to find their pace. Really starting to doubt things now as I'm feeling the ankle but I tell myself just get to halfway way, take a break and just see what happens. Started eating potatoes covered in salt. Was going through about a bottle of Gatorade every lap or so (4 bottles in 5 laps)

Lap 5 - 40:50, aver. 13:37/mile

Told myself just get through this one and you can have a break, eat some food & regroup. Made it through but my confidence in completing the the full 10 laps was pretty low. That did however end up helping out in the end. I think this was the lap that I really started hammering the downhills and formulating a strategy but I didn't realize it.

Lap 6 - 44:22, aver. 14:47/mile

I took the break, regrouped and decided if I wasn't going to hit my goal I was at least going to document the event so I grabbed my phone with the intent of stopping to take pictures along the way and just enjoying the run. I walked a good portion of this lap (which was what most everyone else was doing as well). Even took a video of motivation alley. There was a stretch in the middle of the course that was literally right next to a firing range s all day long for about a mile or so you heard loud booms & automatic fire as you passed by.

Lap 7 - 45:43, aver. 15:14/mile

My ####off lap was in the books, time to get serious and try to get in as many as I could before I died. By this time my feet were hurting some (toes mostly from getting jammed into the front of the shoe) and my quad that I did something to 2 weeks ago started reminding me how old I am. I started out pretty strong but about a mile in I ran into one of the local guys who races quite a bit and does well. He was walking the same stretch I was so we struck up a conversation and ended up walking damn near the whole lap because he was hurt. I did get a little back at the end but the lap was a waste timewise. The conversation however was excellent and well worth the sacrifice.

Lap 8 - 42:39, aver. 14:13/mile

Ok, ####off lap #2 done, really need to get going. This was the lap that I put into place the strategy that got me to the end, walk the uphills and hammer the downs. My powerwalking skills are nowhere near those of Duck or BnB, I was going at a 15:00-17:00 minute pace but was hitting mid 9's on the downs. It was one of those things where I couldn't miss a step on the downhills and was just flying. It was a great feeling and set teh tone for the rest of my time on the course.

Lap 9 - 46:17, aver. 15:26/mile

I knew I would finish now, it was just a matter of how long it was gonna take and I really didn't feel like talking to anyone. So many folks walking now, very little running going on by anyone so flying down the downhills was getting to be a bit of a challenge if there was a pack walking down. Thankfully most everyone was overly courteous all day long and would get out of the way as they heard you coming. Also very cool to hear them shouting encouragement to anyone still running the on the course.

Lap 10 - 44:00, aver. 14:40/mile

Had to grab a head lamp to finish this one but set out behind another group of locals who had just got back on the course after an hour or so break so they were all pretty fresh. They took off ahead of me but I caught them on the first uphill. I was walking and they decided to run off. I lost sight of them pretty quickly but when my favorite downhill came up I caught them and surprised the hell out them. We played tag like this throughout the lap until we all finished and they went back out for their 10th.

Feel pretty good about this one, not gonna lie. My longest run since June was a 15 miler two weeks ago and I could hardly walk afterward. My cardio was pretty solid but my legs are hurting today. Actually gong for a walk after I finish this up to try and work some of the muck out. Thanks to Duck, BnB, grue and all the other distance guys for their advice and knowledge. There is an encyclopedia of knowledge in this thread and an unending amount of advice if you ask. Thanks to all of you. I know not all of you are religious so I won't go into it but I attribute a lot of this to Him and His strength getting me through those last few laps. I never fell, slipped or twisted an ankle on the course and there was plenty of opportunity. The celebration beer last night tasted great!

 
Great job, Beer! I remember reading your posts about this event but forgot it was the weekend. Congrats! Amazing how far you've come in the last year!

 
2013 One Epic Run

Feel pretty good about this one, not gonna lie. My longest run since June was a 15 miler two weeks ago and I could hardly walk afterward. My cardio was pretty solid but my legs are hurting today. Actually gong for a walk after I finish this up to try and work some of the muck out. Thanks to Duck, BnB, grue and all the other distance guys for their advice and knowledge. There is an encyclopedia of knowledge in this thread and an unending amount of advice if you ask. Thanks to all of you. I know not all of you are religious so I won't go into it but I attribute a lot of this to Him and His strength getting me through those last few laps. I never fell, slipped or twisted an ankle on the course and there was plenty of opportunity. The celebration beer last night tasted great!
Congrats again, a hell of an accomplishment, especially considering the level of training you had going in. Sounds like you stuck to the primary rules of ultras - drink (but not too much), eat (but not too much), and just keep moving forward - Relentless Forward Progress as Bryon Powell (irunfar.com) says.

I hope to hear you've caught the bug and I'll be reading another ultra race report from you in the spring!

ETA: nice job on the pics and the ####off laps! When you're out there to just finish a run I'm all about making sure you soak it in and enjoy it, and you all know I love to snap a photo or two on a run.

 
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Funny how hydration & nutrition play such a part in something like this. I was on the fine line of overhydrating most of the middle loops because it's just so easy to gulp down whatever is in your bottle. After 4 Gatorades I switched over to water to help combat that as well as to offset all the sugar. I didn't eat a lot of junk but focused mostly on the primary stuff I heard you guys talking about, potato's dipped in salt to help with muscle cramps, banana's for that as well as cheap energy and a couple of Roctane GU's because I remember you saying something about Amino Acids and I noticed they had some on the ingredients. Incredibly scientific I know but it's amazing the snippets you remember from this thread. Thanks again guys and yes Duck, I plan on continuing my march to 50 at 50.

Oh one other thing, I never really understood "time on your feet" until yesterday. As you mentioned Duck, moving, preferably forward, was the pace for a large group of folks there. I can't tell you how many times I heard I'm just going to keep moving forward and see what happens. A lot less running than what I expected. I'm not sure what I thought there would just be maniacal robots clipping off loop after loop but it surprised me until I saw the logic in it. Had I had a different distance goal in mind I would have suffered horribly had I approached it the same way. A much more strategic event than I gave it credit for. You don't understand how physically difficult it is take that next step until you put yourself on that island in the middle of the course and are forced to keep going. Time on your feet indeed. I had a lot of respect for you ultra guys before this, it only increased from yesterday.

 
Wow, beer. Great job and great writeup. I can imagine with all those dramatic ups and downs your legs had/have to be screaming

 
And to think I ran 30 miles this week. During the whole week. And it was the most I've run in a week in about 2 years. Damn, Beer. You rule.

Add on 2 short, brutal bike sessions and I got my 6.5 hours in this week. Definitely the hard way, as the running beats me up worse than the other two.

Swimming got postponed due to crappy weather and bad luck. Double up there next week.

 

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