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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

And, more video

Love making movies with my Mino HD and Flip!

Sunday, September 20, 2009

More video

Getting around to making movies of the video footage I shot on our trip to Penticton. Don't worry, I won't quit my day job just yet.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Sand Key Tri, well, duathlon.....

Swim cancelled due to a few waves. What is coming of this sport.

Friday, September 04, 2009

Ironman Canada '09 race report

Warning, this is long. Read if you dare. 7th Ironman, worst result.
Was going to title this "cut lip, sprained thumb, bruised ego race report" but thought better of it. This is, though, what I left Penticton, BC with. Every year, I manage to have an absolutely horrible day in a race. This year, it ended up being the biggest race on the calendar, unfortunately. Yes, still bitter, upset and moderately depressed. Training went extremely well this summer. I had the Dane around to do the workouts with me and that pushed me harder and harder. Not gonna lie, the goal was to qualify for IM Hawaii in October for my third trip. We had wonderful group on Saturdays to do long rides with in the hills. We had another wonderful group for fast ride on Sundays. I felt these weekly jaunts which pushed me very hard, would benefit me in the end and give me a great bike split on a tough IMC bike course. I was riding the powercranks twice per week along with another mid-week ride to give my cycling a boost. It was showing in training but I hadn't raced since Florida 70.3 so not really sure where it was all going. I had a foot/achilles injury coming out of (and going into) Florida 70.3 so took a week off from running then and decided on a huge change, to rid myself of orthotics. This proved over the following several months to be a good decision as my foot pain mostly resolved as I continued to train. Enter taper week one. Went for regular Tuesday tempo run and got about 1/2 mile before I had to walk home with strange extreme pain in my left hip/upper hamstring area. Funny, I don't remember tweaking or injuring this in my brick the previous Saturday. No biggie, I was sure this was one of those fleeting taper problems. This hampered the taper, no running at all, just some riding and swimming. I admit I backed off the swimming this year due to many reasons but mostly so I could focus more on biking and running - the money events in long course racing. Anyway, I proceeded tapering without running, figuring this would certainly resolve prior to race day. Still felt a bit tired riding but this is usually the norm for me. Got to Penticton and had three ART sessions in the days prior hoping this would cure me. Onto the race. Slept great the night before, not unusual for me. Had my normal breaky and got in thewetsuit and warmed up. I had been paying attention to recommendations on where to line up for this one loop swim and felt I knew where to be to get good benefit of drafting. Don't think I overestimated my swim speed. I was trying to be competitive and go for a Kona slot - can't do that from the "back of the pack". No offense to others. Gun went off, waded/swam behind the fast-looking girl I lined up behind and thought I was in good position.....until the masses came. I will make this very short and just say that I felt I was going to drown and meet my maker on this swim. I had a full panic attack, the legs went numb and felt the day was ending here, needless to say, not a good way to start a long day. I did manage to find clean water inside the buoys and decided this was the place for me and managed to stay there the remainder of the way (with exception of the turns, obviously). I managed to survive the swim and it was much slower than I wanted/expected but I did indeed survive which was a new feeling for me. I felt the leg/hip pain and WALKED up out of the water and pretty much knew this was how the day was going to be. Getting my wetsuit off, I felt pain in my right thumb, not sure if this occurred during the swim or out of but didn't pay much attention, as I would normally do (this swelled during the course of the ride and added to my dismay). On to the bike, ready for my great adventure. It was an adventure indeed. All I can say is that it's hard to do this course if you don't train/descend in mountains. Needless to say, don't have that opportunity living in Florida. No excuses here - I've been working hard on my climbing and was climbing very well and passing folks along the way. Problem is, I was getting creamed on the descents. I am a total pussy descending (and I only weigh 104 pounds), and I know it. It's been a known fear/weakness of mine for a long time. I was freaked out in the water and now freaked out on the bike. I got through the bike and if I was on a "scenic" ride, it would be great but unfortunately, I was in a race. I am disappointed at how fearful I was on the descents but when I learned that the Dane was not that comfortable either, I didn't feel so bad. I had several girls in my AG pass me on the descents but I would pass back on climbs but I never felt good. I found out later, the Dane was having severe cramping issues only a couple hours into the ride. I couldn't hold my planned power numbers on the flats later either and figured I was just too cooked from training. That's the risk when you're self coached and extremely motivated! Anyhow, finally made it back into town and got off the bike and tried, by reflex, to run into transition and had the same pain I'd been having for two weeks. Bummer. Got into the tent and didn't hurry too much. Chatted with the nice volunteer helping me and limped out of T2. I knew immediately, the marathon wasn't going to happen for me today. Wanted to cry but just walked and soaked in the disappointment. Managed to find the Dane coming the opposite direction and told him I was done and he told me the problems he'd been having and wanted out with me. I made sure that he was very certain about this and we walked hand in hand to the med tent. We were treated very well there and had a nice massage. Overall, a good learning experience, I suppose. The thing about having a bad day is that you truly analyze everything that would not otherwise really be looked at too closely with a good race. So, for those reading this mammoth sob session, you might ask: What do I take out of this? Several things, actually.
1. Don't sign up for races with mountain descents, I suck at them
2. Don't smash yourself so hard in training that you are still tuckered for the race
3. No extra-curricular activities within two weeks of a major race (SUP session in the swells I think contributed/caused this last-minute injury)
4. Consider hiring a coach to put a governor on my motivation.....oh yeah, can't afford that at this time
5. Consider not doing races with mass starts with 2600+ people - panic attack is close to follow
What are the good/positive things?
1. I had a solid 7+ hour "race situation" training day
2. No pounding from a marathon
3. Nice Vietnamese meal while others were still running, ugh
4. Awesome trip to Canada where I'd never been before (and may never return to)
5. The crowd support at IMC is second to none. Yellow Lake climb was like (I imagine) climbs at the Tour de France, no lie
6. I still have IM Cozumel at the end of November - trust me, if I can run , I WILL be going for this.
So, I have a couple of appointments with doctors who, hopefully, know more than I do and can figure out what is wrong with my hip/leg so I can get back to running. In the mean time, I will enjoy the beach, walk barefoot, ride my road bike, swim masters, swim open water and move on. I do also have IM 70.3 World Championships here in Clearwater in November. If I'm healthy, November will be a very busy month. I am truly hoping so!!
Cheers