Saturday 14 July 2012

The Grim Reaper

So, this was it, the main event of the year, the one I've been training for for 6 months or so.  The last two weeks I've been steadily gathering equipment and nutrition together in a corner of the bedroom.  I knew I had too much stuff, but I was taking advantage of the fact that it was 10-mile loop course and that we could pitch a small tent at the start/finish of the lap, perfect for changing shoes, socks, shirts etc.

Firstly, getting there was a challenge as on Tuesday I managed to wrap my car around a tree.  I walked away fine, but the car is written off.  Big thanks go to both my yoga teacher Mark at Ely Yoga Studio who leant me a car and to the people at Admiral Insurance who kept my policy active until Monday to allow me to get to the race.



So my final kit list was
First aid kit of superglue, knife, durapore dressing tape, baby wipes, toilet paper, kinesio tape, vaseline and nappy rash cream as lubes.  The same box also held my head torch, hand torch and spare batteries.
I also had baby powder for the feet, sun block and sunglasses (waste of time for the last two).

The weather forecast was for heavy rain all night and heavy rain for most of the day, so I'd packed several changes of socks, plus shorts, shirts, running leggings, all in plastic boxes and bags to keep them dry.  I'd taken my old Merrell Trail Gloves, Altra Samsons and New Balance MT00. 

One look at the conditions said the Altras had no chance, and I opted to start in the NB Minimus to allow me to fit my sock selection underneath.  I had my last three toes on each foot taped against blisters, plus Injinji socks and then Sealskinz socks on top to keep them dry.  I also started in short sleeve shirt and Ron-Hill running tights, plus waterproof and cap to try and keep rain or sun off my face.

My food bag was way overstocked, partly to give me choice later in the race.
Carb drinks - three types, one with added caffeine in case one became unpalatable
Small box ful of energy bars
Gels - enough for two per ten mile lap
Plastic tub of nuts and apricots
Pack of fig rolls, malt loaf
Nuun tablets
Emergency bounty bar.

Plan was one 500ml bottle of nuun, one of carbs per lap plus a couple of gels one large energy bar and various combinations of small energy bars, fig rolls, malt loaf etc.  Overall it should have given me about 750 cals per lap, or 375 per hour (assuming two hours per ten-mile lap).  Al to be carried in a waist pack.

The day started ominously with the race briefing at 8am, when started raining already.  Catch up with all the people I'd met on facebook, then last minute preparations, toilet stop, waterproof on, check moustache (freshly waxed into handlebar for the event) and then it's time to go.

First lap, starting into the rain about 1km drag up the main drive to the castle and to the start/finish point of a normal lap.

The course is in the grounds of a country estate, about 50% tarmac and the rest off-road on farm trails and field margins.  It was set up with one manned check point and two other unmanned interim checkpoints where you had to punch a card to show you'd completed the lap, with the card checked each time at the start/finish tent.  Last year I did a half marathon here in glorious weather and it was a superb course.  Today was going to be a lot different.

First lap started great, long drag down from the castle on tarmac before the first offroad section up a small hill between fields and woods, topping out to run between some more fields.  Carry on with that for a bit with a few undulations and then down to what I found to be a tough bit last year (and I'd built up in my mind for this year as well).  A stretch of cinder/large spiky stones that I remembered as sbeing about a mile, in reality it was probably less than 500 yds.  A bit more hard packed trail and trun onto a short tarmac stretch again before the fun and games really began.

The first really off-road section as you turn into the woods.  This section was already getting cut up by the time I'd got there, especially the only real serious hill on the course.  Very short probably 200-300 yards, but about a 45 degree angle and muddy.  First lap was OK in the trail shoes, but it was already getting slippery.  I did need to think about managing my HR here though as I went over 160 vs plan of keeping it under 150.  So walk here next time.

This topped out on a long stretch of rough grass through the trees following a fairly well defined path which was wet, but runnable.  You could still pick out dry ground at this stage to run on.  Pretty much more of the same hard trails, dodging the puddles until the first check point.  About 30 secs to drag the card out of my waist pack and punch it then another long stretch down the edge of a field before getting back to the main stretch of tarmac about three or 4 km long, straight as a die and undulating.  Last year on the HM I used this to pick off about 15 rabbits one by one; not today, just keep it steady, maintain my 150m per 2km walk and get the food and liquids in. 

I didn't take many pictures during the race, just too wet for the camera


Still raining at this point about halfway round the first lap, but the sock strategy is working well and my toes are toasty and dry.  A major difference this year was the river crossing; last year you ran through a dry stream bed, this year you had to take the rickety bridge as there was about 4 feet of water in the stream.  More field edge then up to the final interim checkpoint, stamp the card and carry on.  Similar mix for the next 2 or 3km and the end of the first lap. 

Into the tent, get the time logged, refill bottles, grab gels and bars and out again.

Main difference this lap is that the showers are getting heavier and more frequent and the off road sections more cut up.  In some cases the puddles were right across the track and on the hills water was beginning to run down the paths.  The stretch through the woods was very slippery on just the second lap, this time I walked the hill, and the grass wea getting pretty waterlogged by now.  The socks were still working though and the feet were nice and dry. 

The third lap was where it really started to come down.  On the grass stretches you could no longer avoid the wet bits and your feet were sinking 3-4" into it with every step, with water streaming through your shoes.  The waterproof had been overwhelmed by now, but was keeping the wind out so I stayed warm, and my cap was absolutely saturated with water dripping off it steadily.  The paths were now getting quite difficult where there was no tree cover with some pretty slippery mud, bit no trouble if you took it cautiously. The stretch up the muddy hill and through the trees was treacherous with one faller in front of me.  The stretch that followed now resembled trench warfare with no dry spots at all.  I think it was here that my socks finally came a cropper as I stepped in one puddle just too deep.  The rest of the field margins were the same and the rain was now running in rivulets on the tarmac.  The conditions were starting to take their toll by now and my ITBs were starting to feel the continuous sinking into the ground and the slipping and sliding around. 

I started the fourth lap and went past my longest ever run to date, but feeling pretty tired by now and extending my walking breaks so that I was now around 1 mile run/400m walk and also walking some of the wetter sections.  The ITB and hip flexors were now really tightening up on me and making it difficult to keep going.  Pace was really starting to drop off now from 6:30-6:40 per km to now struggling with 7:00 per km.

With no visible signs of the rain stopping and the prospect of more of the same, I called it a day.  I could have probably continued for another lap, maybe even more but the way the ITB was caving on me it wasn't certain and I could see myself doing some long-lasting damage.

So overall
65.17km in 8:02:43 at 7:24 average pace including time refilling bottles each lap, 7hr 33 moving time

544m elevation gain, AHR 139 / MHR 163.

Broadly speaking I was on plan for my target 2 hours per lap, to finish in 14-15 hours.  Given last years conditions I have absolutely no doubt that I would have finished.  Maybe not to time, but I would have completed.  Overall I was expecting my knees or achilles to be the thing that dumped me out, not the hip flexors and ITB.

Afterwards, I sat in my tent for a while, feeling sorry for myself.  Once I'd started getting changed and made myself some hot coffee things were looking better.  It's surprising how much difference being warm and dry makes.  After that I went into the main checkpoint tent for some physio attention to the ITB and adductors.  One particular ITB treatment was excruciating, but did feel better afterwards.

So what did I learn this time, that will help next time
1) Sock strategy worked well, but I need some longer sealkinz.  No blisters at all, but the feet still got wet.
2) Be prepared to adapt the plan to the conditions.  Maybe if I'd let the walk/run breaks drift adn walk more of the really soggy stuff I'd have put less strain on the ITB/hip flexors and lasted longer, but gone slower.
3) The nutrition and hydration plan worked well.  I didn't quite get in the calories I'd intended, but hydration was spot on at 500ml per hour.  Overall calories were a bit less than target at 300-320 vs target 375, but I certainly didn't suffer a lack of energy and didn't hit "the wall" so the fat metabolism was working fine.  I was pretty much down by a gel per lap and making up at the pit stops, for some reason I was preferring solids.
4) Kinesio taping works.  Having had to scale back training because of knee trouble, I was amazed how good they felt during the race.
5) I need to do more strength work and more speed work, try and deal with the cause of some of these weaknesses.
6) XEndurance tablets.  Someone gave me (and a bunch of others) a sample pack.  Looking at it it appears to be mainly buffers but as the guy who gave it to me said, it really helps with the DOMS.  Now on Saturday evening my legs feel fine, achilles slighlty sore from the work, but the only real pain is in the ITB and hips

I'm supposed to go back on Sunday for a HM again, but with more rain forecast I'm scrubbing it.  In this case discretion is definitely the better part of valour so I've got my first DNF and my first DNS in the same weekend.

Saturday 7 July 2012

Sydney and Christchurch

Normally I don't get a chance to see much when I go to places, but in June I had a trip to Sydney and Christchurch, two days in each plus the chance to stay over a weekend with my cousin who emigrated to christchurch about 8 years ago.

The original plan was fly Friday to Sydney, arrive SUnday, work Mon/Tues, fly to Christchurch Weds, work Thurs/Fri fly home Mon, arrive LHR Tues.  Ten days, two of which would be spent in an aeroplane, in economy class.  Call me spoilt, but for long haul, I really hate economy class!

However, Sydney's client screwed up and forgot about a public holiday on Monday, so I ended up with a day spare in Sydney but the hassle of working on Wednesday and then taking a three hour flight to Christchurch plus two hours time difference, arriving at the hotel after midnight.

June in Sydney and Christchurch is very definitely winter.  In Sydney, it was raining on the Sunday when I arrived stopped briefly while I went for a run with a fellow minimalist runner, Adam and then did not stop again for two days, not the best weather for a spot of tourism.  I'd had it all planned out to get a day pass on the public transport system and go down to the harbour area, pop over to Manly for lunch on the beach, back to Darling Harbour and then back around the city centre botanic gardens.

The reality was; look out of the hotel room window, see the rain and get a bit of work done; head down to the town centre and do a bit of sales shopping (in the dry) including replacing the waterproof coat I took with me, but turned out to be leaking; have some lunch; wander about and get wet; visit a couple of museums (indoor); get wetter; go back to the hotel and finish some more work.

Did manage to get a few photos though.
Went down to the harbour for dinner on Sunday, there was a light show with laser projection on the Opera House

Sydney Harbour Bridge by night

 Another view of the Bridge from the Rocks area, one of the original settlements
blogsite keeps turning the photo round!
Just to give an idea of the rain, it was running down the streets 
Another turned round shot of Sydneys tower in the low clouds

Christchurch by comparison was dry, but much colder, similar in fact to a UK winter, cold but not too cold with typical temperatures around freezing but not normally much below that.  Both with the two days work and acting the tourist with my cousin the one thing that you just can't get over is how much damage those three big earthquakes caused.  When you consider that the first big one was in Feb 2011, there is still a huge amount of devastation with buildings still being pulled down in the city centre, 6000 homes that need to be abandoned and rebuilt elsewhere and large parts of the city deemed unfit for building.  My cousin was telling me some very interesting stuff about the work he does for an NGO in disaster resilience, all around building mental wellness in the population as part of the recovery process. 

He lives in an older house (100 years, that's old for NZ) which being made of wood flexed a bit and took some damage, but is still liveable.  Lots of others are in the same boat as him, but even those houses will need to be moved out of, and repaired eventually. 
This bridge was simply twisted by the quake, one bank of the river dropped by about 2m.  Most of the road bridges have had to be built up on one side to compensate

 This is typical of the city centre now, lots of gaps.  My cousin's office was the other side of the remaining building
 Some stuff is still being pulled down
The cathedral was massively damaged and its future is still in doubt

There are still almost daily earthquakes, mainly small at less than 3 on the richter scale, a few 4 plus.  There's still a lot of uncertaitny in some areas such as out on the coast where they have roads closed and narrowed off with shipping containers against further rock falls.

 
 Sorry, photos on their sides again.  Soem houses had very narrow escapes, but are now unliveable and at risk of further rock falls
A rare Volvo 262, with right hand drive, in good nick in the UK, this would go for about £15k+
Shame about the rocks.

One of the things that has started, and my cousin is involved in is soemthing called Gap Filling, where people do something with the vacant space where buildings have come down; art work, gardens, pop-up bars or shops etc


 
I did manage to get my botanic garden visit in though, in Christchurc.  Had intended going to the main museum, but that was closed pending repairs.

They had some great trees including this twisted elm, perfect for bonsai. 
 
And the obligatory holiday snaps
 

 
Me, top and cousin Steve, bottom