Monday, November 30, 2020

November into December


Whew, busy November. We were in lockdown so I was home from work. Fortunately the kids were at school and the wife working from home. So I got after it and did a ton of painting ceilings and walls, removed and rebuilt a cupboard in the kitchen to accommodate a new big refrigerator, removed the old fridge, repurposed the old fridge location as a pantry, removed and replaced the flooring in our downstairs bathroom, then a ton of little projects.....
 

Lame long run selfie


It’s been muddy! 


Ankle deep

Took advantage of the extra time during the day as well and caught up on sleep. The early morning running I love but it does wear me down. So a few shorter runs I normally do early I did in the afternoon. Besides there’s only so much painting in a 7 hour time span before you get dizzy! I feel bad saying it but it was great not being pestered by kids while trying to concentrate.


A little sun on the canal



Really fired up for this race. I probably mentioned this but previous 100’s I’ve only ran 2, maybe 3, 20 mile runs leading up to a race. I’m currently at 7 or so long runs and mostly 25 milers on hilly, muddy trails! Specificity! I’ve also been dead on with my strength and power work. Heard a podcast where a top women’s mountain biker said she only hit 80% of her training which was reassuring since I do get down if I miss workouts. I’ve only missed a couple long runs so I’m doing pretty good considering I’m training around family. 


Foggy morning 


Fog engulfing Stourport in the river valley


About 8 weeks until the Arc of Attrition 100 and things are going well. I’m finalizing my kit and have 4 big weeks of training coming up. Mostly two long runs a week. Then it slowly reduces down to a two week taper. As of now the race is going on but it looks like one threat is that if the covid goes up in my immediate area I may not be allowed to travel to the race in Cornwall. 

The UK has a three tier system that rates the severity of the infection rate specific to your immediate area. 1 low, 3 high. If you’re in tier 3 you’re not allowed to travel to lower tiers. Most of the country is in tier 2, Cornwall being rural is currently tier one. Fortunately we are tier 2 and it seems to be going down. Let’s hope it continues that way. I won’t be happy if a week out from the race after putting in all that training I’m not allowed to travel! 






So that’s where things are at for me. Back to work as of yesterday, running, trying to keep a smile on my face when I’m tired. In general everyone here has been in a good mood and happy. Been really nice, usually Christmas is a stress and I’m grumpy, must be the running!

Friday, November 20, 2020

Another week where life gets in the way. 

Our kitchen lights have been shit since we moved in. It’s an obvious DIY job gone wrong. We finally got the lights together and I finished painting the ceiling. The electrician arrives Wednesday and we’re expecting an easy fix. I’m also expecting to run an easy 7 - 10 miles so opt to not run early. 

12 hours of electrical work, cutting 5 access holes in the freshly plastered and painted ceiling, we only have 1/2 the lights working and I haven’t ran. I say “we” because the electrician is a friend and I’m there to help. He exposes an utter shit show of amateur work and plans to write out the circuit at home trying to figure out what the fuck this guy has done! 

A day goes by, I finish painting the toy room, and the electrician returns, today, Friday morning. I have a 25 mile run planned. 

I’m guessing it will be an easy in out within a hour. We have two lights to link up with the switches and the 14 other lights already linked and rewired. 

He’s got a few ideas, they don’t work. We then discover a hidden switch that has been linked to the other switch. The previous asshole didn’t have the correct wiring and used what he had,  using the earth as a live wire to link the switches! The reason why we ended with everything overloading. The friggin’ earth was live! 

So we end with answers, a plan to eliminate the dual switches, and a plan to avoid tearing apart the walls. He leaves four hours later leaving me with 2 hours to run 25 miles. Ain’t gonna happen.

Frustrated about training I motivate to at least get in 10 trail miles before the kids get home. I nearly just didn’t go. 

It was no one’s fault. It’s just an example of how life gets in the way. I struggle mentally with it though. It’s “just running“ says one side of my head, the other says “I need” to get the miles in! Training is going so well! 

During the entire run I tried to figure when I could run. Run 15 tonight after the kids go to bed, run early tomorrow and late at night, etc. the list goes on. I’m still toiling over it. It’s just running. 


Friday, November 13, 2020

Friday Long Run.... mainly photos!




Back into the groove again as the next four week cycle begins in training. Have had a decent week but still have today, Saturday, and tomorrow to go. Nothing crazy really but as I’ve learned life can build and get in the way. 


Had a solid long run yesterday. All of the photos are from it and taken with my GoPro. I didn’t edit any of them on the blog but if you happen to see them on Instagram or to the right they’ve definitely been manipulated a bit. Still getting used to using the camera for videos and still images.


Not much really to report. It was a sunny yet cool autumn day yesterday which was nice. Today looks to be rain all day for my planned 12 miles. It’s been really muddy where expected but fortunately no falls. Good testing though for shoes, mainly to see not only how well they grip but how well they drain water and shed mud.



Got to see the loggers working with their harvesters which was cool. I posted a photo in my last post of one of these machines. So cool how they fell the tree, cut all the branches off, then cut it into shorter lengths all without dropping the entire tree! 



Managed 25 miles and just shy of 4000 feet of vertical which was what I needed. I was expecting a couple more miles but my estimate came up a bit short. My foot continues to bother me but it’s runnable so I avoid spending money on getting it seen by a professional. I just need to be diligent with what remedies I know if I’m going to roll those dice a bit longer.  


Leading up to my goal 100 mile race the end of January I’ve ran more 20 plus mile training runs than ever before. I was having a look back at my training logs and it’s unreal how few I had ran! It looks like 2, maybe three 20 milers were my normal lead up. I have another 8 to 10 weeks of training until I taper and I’ve logged five 25 mile runs and one 20 miler! All with a suitable amount of vertical as well! Fingers crossed Covid doesn’t cancel the race! As long as this mild injury gets better things are right on track! 


Bonus of running through an orchard! 

Yes, a great day out running yesterday. And I’ve gotten a ton of house DIY done this week as well! 

Sunday, November 1, 2020

I was trucking along really well and hit a speed bump! Last week I was exhausted from the accumulation of lack of sleep and it continued into the week. The kids were off school and I was expecting a tough week since I wouldn’t have time to run for four hours at once, my weekly long run. I also missed two other sessions, an easy 7 miler and a 10-12 miler. I wrote the week off. 


Logging equipment 

I knew it was coming and I think I actually needed a easy week. It’s mentally tough taking time off and getting off the program. You feel like you missed out, but it’s never advisable to try to “make up” the missed miles. This week I’ve got a rest week anyway, although it still involves a solid long run, just little to no strength work, so right back to it I’ll go. 


Newish shoes

As of this Thursday I’m off work due to another full lockdown. I believe I’ll still be paid fortunately and I do have plenty to do at home (interior house painting). The kids will still be in school, kind of an odd lockdown I guess! My wife will continue to work due to her usually working from home anyway. We’re damn fortunate thanks to her job situation. The government says “4 weeks,” we think it will last much longer. Yes, people will die, but I feel we’re just kicking the can down the road. Anyway... 


Autumn colors at cemetery 

Big bummer is all extracurricular activities are shut down. No martial arts, no football, no gymnastics, no gyms, no swimming. This hurts the most I feel, and not just for adults but for the kids. 



The Arc of Attrition is still slated to happen the end of January. Fingers crossed. I saw some video footage on Facebook of some of the race course and it’s amazing. Crazy single track with steep drop offs to the sea! It looks really rad! 

The virtual challenges are popping up again too. I’m considering a 100 mile training week as part of the Centurion Running “One Community Challenge.” A virtual event for charity put on by the Centurion race promotion company. I’ve done a handful of their races which are great. You get a belt buckle for a 100 mile week and I figure it would “commemorate” this era in running. They did the same before and I passed on it. I believe I have a big 75 mile week planned anyway so maybe could add an easy 25 more miles with little detriment, it’s also followed by a rest week going into December before I start my peak training loads. 


Dirt augered watch

Took a really nasty fall ten or so days ago. Slippery mud threw me about ten feet downhill. My watch, above, shows how bad I augered in! My watch band tore off but I found the parts and fortunately fixed it. I caught myself with my forearms and a knee. Tore my jacket and packed grit and rocks into my skin, nasty looking caked clay and mud with blood seeping through. I sacrificed some water to clean it up my knee in case it has livestock poop packed in there too. Shook me up pretty good honestly but still managed another 19 miles!

On to a few more days of work until lockdown but back at training again. I’m hoping the time off work will be productive for running as well.