About Me

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Christchurch, Canterbury, New Zealand
50 (Oh Lordy) year old sports 'wannabe' who is more of a 'hasbeen'. From UK but now live in NZ. Working educational ICT

Monday, 2 November 2009

Training - Sunday 1st Nov - Sat 7th Nov 09

Sunday - Nothing. Very tired from yesterday so had family day

Monday - Kayak. 14km on Avon. Lengthened paddle to 208cm to create a bit more resistance. Paddled against the tide for 7km and against quite strong wind in places. Total time was 1:28. The 10km (to 4th Bridge and back, broken up by the extra 4km to estuary bridge and back) was in about 59:30 which at about 75% effort was very pleased with.  

Tuesday - Nothing. Felt quite tired today although it was my legs more than torso. Must be using leg push properly in kayak

Wednesday - Cycling. Mostly short bays but carried on the climb up Summit Rd towards Gebbies for 1-2km. Pretty steady mostly. NW blowing so no fast stuff on flat
Ran fairly quickly for 20mins on road (flat) which was probably about 4.5km to pick car up from garage. Legs not responding to speed which is no surprise as have not been on road since June in UK.

Thursday -

Friday

Saturday

Training - Sunday 25th Oct - Sat 31st Oct 09

Rather poor week again

Sunday - Family day

Monday - Kayaked on river 14km from Woodstock to Gorge Bridge. I was slow and still rather unsteady in boat. God to be on river again though

Tuesday - Nothing

Wednesday - Cycled 1:25 steady on turbo trainer then immediately ran for 50 mins (twice round cave route) which included about 300m of climbing. Pretty slow running but felt quite good

Thursday - Nothing . Rather lazy really but had a lot to do before Saturday's paddle

Friday - Day with Maggie

Saturday - Waimak trip from Mt White bridge to Woodstock. About 53km (??). This was our grade 2 assessment and from paddling point of view went quite well altthough I was very tired for the last couple of hours and really have to work on endurance from now until Feb. 

Thursday, 22 October 2009

Just realised ...

.... since I wrote the Commitments and Expectations post my training has gone to pot! Shouldn't tempt fate should I?!!

Training - Sunday 3rd Oct - Sat 24th Oct 09

A really broken 3 weeks due to a number of things that have meant I had to stay around the house. I'll try and catch up better when I have more time but a quick resume of what I've done that I can remember(!). Running improving, technique in kayaking improving but not really increased fitness, cycling going backwards as took too much time off (weather been poor but have had opportunities but haven't taken them)

Running
- 1 x 2:30 run in hills around Godley Head with Marty. Foul weather but good run.
- 1 x 1:25 run in hills around Crater rim and dropped into Lyttleton. Foul weather again. Ran slowly
- 2 x speed sessions. The first running 5 x 400m (est) on beach. The second was following a hilly 20 min run and did a 400m, 400m, 800m, 400m session in park. Ran the 400s off about 1:30 and the 800 off about 3:03. 
- 1 x 20km race in Port Hills. Very hilly. Came 3rd in Masters age group with time of 1:56 

Kayaking
- Session in WW boats on Hurunui. Great fun!
- 45 paddle on estuary practising balance and smooth paddling in mid sized chop and winds. Very pleased with this session
- 3 or 4 sessions on the Avon including one 20km paddle which I found hard. Paddled first 10km couple of mins too fast (62mins). Suffered on the 3rd 5km especially as still against the current

Cycling: Very little. on 24th did Long Bays with John Mc and couple of other guys. Had terrib;e ride. Felt tired in legs (breathing ok) way before I even got to Gebbies Pass so the 25ishkm home over the hills was rather slow and painful! Other than that I can only remember 1 ride round short bays. Did this in 2nd best time I've done but very tired.

Saturday, 3 October 2009

Training - Sunday 28th Sept - Sat 3rd Oct 09

Very average week. Should be doing a lot more by this stage

Sunday - Mags on call so nothing
Monday - ?
Tuesday - Short run on beach with 5*400m at 90% intervals
Wednesday - Faster 10km kayak (32mins out and 32mins back - Fitzgerald bridge). Felt ok and not really pushing pace
Thursday - Steady 10km kayak on Avon with Simon
Friday - Paddled for hour on estuary. Flat as pancake for half an hour then NW wind picked up incredibly fast and the paddle back was in quite big chop and gusts. Balance getting better. Not sure I could have handled the chop if I'd had to cross it a rt angles though!
Saturday - Family day so nothing

training - Sunday 20th Sept - Sat 27th Sept 09

Very poor week due to bad back
Sunday > Weds - bad back so rested
Thursday - Short kayak session to test back (45mins)
Friday - Steady hour kayak - back still sore
Saturday - Mags on call 

Monday, 14 September 2009

Training - Sunday 13th Sept - Sat 19th Sept 09


Sunday- Nothing. Glen couldn't make arranged river kayak so had family day

Monday - Run on Crater rim Walkway. 400m of ascent and
descent in 9.5km. Slow time (1hr 7mins) but legs
still tired from Saturday (intended to run for 2 hrs but no way) and path narrow, twisty and rocky.





Tuesday - Nothing

Wednesday - 55km cycle ride on flat. Struggled to keep speed up

Thursday - Bad back again

Friday - Bad back again

Saturday -

Friday, 11 September 2009

Commitment and expectations

Never quite sure whether I totally commit to any event as I often feel too tired or jaded a couple of months into the training. However, this is probably my best training period for many years, possibly since my early 20s slalom days. I have trained for about 9 months non stop with admittedly some light weeks (June was poor month) but have been able to keep my focus and have often trained 4-7 times a week some days with double sessions.

Still not sure what my expectations are though. If I had trained this long and hard for a road marathon I would certainly be expecting a PB. Having never done anything like this sort of event before and still being rather wobbly in kayak on moving water I don't know what expectations to set. To simply finish is not me. Unless I do something like the Marathon de Sables it never will be me. I'd like to beat my training partners but as to what sort of times to focus on I am at a loss. Perhaps that's a good thing as over two days I will take at least 14hrs most likely.

Have to hand it to the majority of entrants though. I get to train in the daytime 4 times a week. Most people are at work during those hrs and will have to train in the dark etc. Weekends are harder for me but still not as hard as for some people. 

Next few months will be even harder as will have to get used to 3-4 hrs in kayak and get my distance running legs back. Will also have to run through different sections of the course a few times so those will be long days. For once, I am positive about my training. I know it hurts (or will hurt) but I can feel myself getting fitter which is always a good incentive. 

 

Training - Sunday 6th Sept - Sat 13th Sept 09

Sunday- Skiing

Monday - 10km Kayak with Simon. Took long time as Simon had nightmare paddle

Tuesday - Mags on call so rest

Wednesday - Cyle short bays (40kph). Felt strong today. PB by 6:20mins although quite a chunk of this will be to do with new bike.

Thursday - 18km kayak on Avon. Felt smooth and good rhythm all the way. Tired at end (2hrs). Borrowed club endorphin 206cm paddles. Harder on shoulders but enjoyed using them.

Friday - 1:30 slow run at forest. Lots of sand! Quite tired still

Saturday - 65km cycle with Glen, Sam and Marty. Halswell>Gebbies>up and over Dyers Pass. Ave about 32kmh to Gebbies. Felt reasonably strong on climbs 

Monday, 31 August 2009

Training - Sunday 30th Aug - Sat 5th Sept 09

Sunday- 1:30 with Simon on Avon. Very steady pace so did about 6*100-200m sprints. Tired at end due to sprints and 8th consecutive day training. Felt very smooth and comfortable whilst paddling though

Monday - Running. Meant to be a rest day but Glen phoned. Had 55min run up Mt Vernon from Farm Park. About 420m climbing.

Tuesday - Rest day
Wednesday - Still tired so had another rest day

Thursday - 1:30 kayak on Avon

Friday - 8km run along beach etc. 10km kayak in pm

Saturday - 70km flat ride with John. Ave about 30kph. Getting stronger but still find I have to shelter behind John most of time!

Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Training - Sunday 23rd Aug - Sat 29th Aug 09

Probably the best week so far

Sunday- Nothing. Mags still on call

Monday - Cycled Short Bays. Felt rather tired. Dipped out of paddling in pm as so knackered

Tuesday - Hilly run. Short but 400+m of climbing in 7km (twice round cave route)

Wednesday - 1:15 kayak on Avon (really strong NWer on estuary). Paddled club eclipse 5.2. Poor boat upstream IMO but ok downstream. Very stable

Thursday - 1:30 on Avon (NW on estuary again). Back to my own boat and paddled about 11km then tried a couple of other paddles out. Tired at end as used 210 blade (Zastera Z1). Surprised that even with this tiny blade my SPM didn't improve.

Friday - Easy 1:20 on Avon with Simon

Saturday - Long Bays with John Mc. and a group of his mates. 75km with ave 26.7km/hr. Found it just as hard as the other week especially the hills between Gebbies and Governor's Bay.

Saturday, 22 August 2009

Training - Sunday 16th Aug - Sat 22nd Aug 09

Worst week since beginning July!

Sunday
- Rest. Tired after yesterday's ride

Monday - 2 hr hilly run. Around cave, up Eastenders track, up to gun emplacements, down to summit road then along track to Taylor's Mistake (opp side to Capt Thomas' track) , Scarborough, beach , home.
Hard run but slow pace.

Tuesday - Rest day

Wednesday - 1:30 kayak on estuary. Incoming tide. Few harder 80 stroke reps

Thursday - 1hr on estuary, incoming tide. Tried C22 paddle and felt lot more stable

Friday - Nothing. Alistair ill

Saturday - Nothing. Mags on call

Monday, 10 August 2009

Training - Sunday 9th Aug - Sat 15th Aug 09

Sunday- Still skiing


Monday - Felt a bit tired today from weekend but got a good 1hr/1hr10 kayaking session on Avon. Very windy at times and a bit of chop which made it more interesting. Felt quite smooth.

View of Cave route. 200m+ of climbing in 5.5km run!





Tuesday - Run at night up cave route in dark with Fly. Found it hard as ever on way up but ok. Slow on way down as headlight fading a bit.

Followed this by 3*400m at 90% with 100m jog in between

Image shown above


Wednesday - Cycle ride to Cashmere>Dyers Pass>Summit Rd>home. About 31km with 650m+ of climbing

To give some idea of the climbing here's a profile of the ride:

Thursday - Rest

Friday - 1:10 kayaking on Brass Monkey course on Waimak. River up a bit. Less wobbly than last visit but still long way to go. Went with Marty

Saturday - Ride out to Lincoln with John McKie- 75kms at about 30kmh(18.5mph). Pretty flat ride (only a couple of short climbs). The rest involved hanging on to John's back wheel and then for about 10% of the time setting the pace. Bit fast and furious for me but good to have someone push me on bike.

Sunday, 2 August 2009

Training - Sunday 2nd Aug - Sat 8th Aug 09

Sunday- Brass Monkey Race 4 - Kayak race on moving water for 12km. Good to be on moving water again after all this time but truly awful performance. Wobbling all over the place with poor route choices and terrible technique! Rather a long way to go yet re kayaking well.

Monday - Tired today so easy paced run down to and along beach and promenade to Scarborough clock tower and Lifeboat shed- then back. Less than 5 miles

Tuesday - Rest day

Wednesday - Still not feeling great (another cold think!) so did 35min run on beach with slow lap between shag rock and Cave Rock - about 800m or so then faster lap with splits of about 3:41.Did this 3 times. Not fast just stretching legs. Sand slows it down rather though.

Thursday - Simple flat ride for about 35mins at 85-90% effort. Really slow for the effort- still not up to par. Damn colds!

Friday - Nothing

Saturday - Gone skiing!

Tuesday, 28 July 2009

Training - Sunday 26th July - Sat 1st Aug

Sunday - Cycle ride on flat at 80-95% (mostly 80%) - averaging 29kph for 35km. Then run straight after the cycle. 30mins on my (hilly) cave route. Had to walk briefly 3 times on ascent as legs buggered!

Monday - Kayak on Avon 1:20. Mostly at about 60-70%. A really good session and felt smooth for once. Probably the best session I've had for a couple of months


Tuesday - Nothing (was going down the gym but still tired and want next 3 days to be good ones)

Wednesday - Similar session to last Friday with run along beach warm-up then session running up rocks. This time did 30/31 ascents (but not sprinting this time) and slow descents. Felt this was a more realistic session for getting used to running up boulders

Thursday - 1hr 15m kayak session on estuary with Desra. Quite a good session as paddled against current for ~20mins then back down at about 60%. Found out that my boat quite quick upstream (not very useful in down river race!) and have to keep very smooth and some speed up not to get wobbles when in (very small) wave train. Then did pyramid session on slightly less current with 20/40/60/80/100/
100/80/60/40/30/20/10 strokes (e.g.20 each side) working at about 95-100%. Was pretty smooth until the 80 and 100 ones.

Cycled 45mins later in pm (30mins on rd bike and 15mins on mtb picking up Alistair- Bloody hard work climbing hill with him on front!)

Friday- Rest. Wanted to do a run and bike ride but body tired.

Saturday - 75km Cycle around long bays with John, Glen and Sam. John set the pace and (for me) we rather 'gunned it'. Lots of climbing (over 550m (1700ft)) and really knackered by last climb but still a good day

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

Training: Sunday 19th July - Saturday 25th July 09









Bought new bike!

Sunday- Still feel grotty

Monday - Bought a new bike! Had 20mins ride in pm as cold still there

Tuesday - Nothing

Wednesday - Sick of having a cold (and asthma) so went for an hour or so ride on flat. Felt ok although not bike fit. New bike great although saddle bloody hard! Think new bike offers me a couple km/hr even without fitness

Thursday -1hrs kayaking on estuary. 10*100m sprints with 30-90secs recovery plus obligatory 30mins at 60%. Feeling more comfortable in boat at moment. Used shorter paddle again (206.5cm for sprints)Still feeling bit grot though and asthma not under control enough for running

Friday -Session on Sumner beach with Glen which involved a 1km warm-up then every 1min a climb up and back down boulders (probably 12 in total). Then another easy 1km then similar again but this time we worked hard along promenade for 20m or so to accelerate after the climb (probably 8 of these). Tiring session!

Saturday- Nothing

Thursday, 16 July 2009

Training: Sunday 12th July - Saturday 18th July 2009

SundayNothing (Mags still on call)
Monday
53min run with Fly. Went round cave (160m climb) then along beach.Took in a brief jaunt over rocks
TuesdayNothing
Wednesday

Kayak session. 1:20 mins. Did 5*2min working quite hard with 2 mins break. Also did 8 mins working at about 75-80%. Got a bit wobbly at end as getting tired
Thursday

Hill Run. About 13.5km in 1:30. About 430m of climbing so time slow obviously. Walked some shorter steep sections but quite a good effort although not that fit at moment. Photos here
FridayYesterday's slow time rather explained by the stinking cold I have today! Thus, no training

Saturday


Still not feeling great


Wednesday, 15 July 2009

Sunday 5th July - Saturday 11th July 2009

SundayNot risking back. Still a bit sore
MondayGot an hour of aerobic stuff in gym
TuesdayShort gym session
WednesdaySaw Phsyio. All clear
ThursdayNothing
FridayKayak session for an hour
SaturdayMags on call so nothing

Training: Sunday 28th June - Sat 4th July 2009

Now back from UK

Sundayjet lag!
MondayStill bit tired from travelling but joined a gym!
Tuesday1hr aerobic stuff in gym
Wednesday
kayak:1hr.Just getting back into flow found it a bit followed this by 30mins aerobic stuff in gym.
Thursday45 mins kayaking. Tried doing some work but tired!
Friday??? Forgot what I did!
SaturdayNothing but pulled muscle in back which stuffs me for a few days

Wednesday, 27 May 2009

Training - 18th May to 27th

Bloody cold and windy last 10 days and, with Mags on call a lot, rather a poor week.

Monday - Kayak on Avon 1hr

Thursday - Kayak on Avon 1hr

Friday- Hill run (walk?!). Incredibly windy and very cold. Only did a few kms of planned run as was hard to stand up on the tops never mind run!

Monday - Kayak 1hr on Avon

Wednesday - Kayak 1:10hr on Avon

Wednesday, 20 May 2009

Training (25th April- 17th May)

Oh hell! I knew I'd forget to record my training at some point and have now missed 3 weeks!

So, I know in that 3 week period I have done 5 or 6 kayak sessions (about an hour a piece), a couple of hard runs although nothing greater than about 1:10 and a couple of bike sessions (one short one on the road and a longer one on mtb).

May have done more but can't remember! Been in Oz for a few days so nothing there and pouring with rain and about 3degrees today so have chickened out!

Will still aim for 3 or 4 more kayak sessions and a couple of runs and a bike ride before leaving for uk

Sunday, 26 April 2009

Training plans

Some quick thoughts on training over next few months. Not cast in stone but.......

I am reckoning on getting into shape fairly quickly for running so will really try and get into some sort of shape re hills and distance over next couple of months and then tick along for a couple of months whilst getting cycling to acceptable fitness. Kayaking will take priority as long as not too cold over next few months and perhaps right the way through to the event in Feb.

May - get as much kayaking in as possible interspersed with a few runs and a cycle a week

June - pretty much focus on running (with some core stability exercises) as back in UK and can't take bike or kayak with me!

July and August - Cold months here so probably still try and do quite a few kayak technique sessions and some good runs (as well as a couple of races in both disciplines). Cycling will rather suffer I imagine so will have to use turbo trainer more

September - Start cycling more and get some moving water in for kayaking.

Training (18th April- 24th April)

Good training week for kayaking!

Press-ups still happening (apart from some kayaking days) sit-ups not!

Saturday Zip all. Mags on call so no training opportunity

Sunday- 1:10 hilly run (see here for further run report)

Monday - New kayak arrived so hour or so on Avon concentrating on technique and trying different paddles out

Tuesday - Zip all. Really tired after yesterday

Wednesday - Kayaking on Avon concentrating on technique. (Rolled the thing under controlled conditions - mind you, failed on first attempt!

Thursday - Zip all. Really tired after yesterday

Friday - Kayak for 1:10 concentrating hard on technique (Avon)

Sunday, 19 April 2009

Distance versus climbing

Had another good run today in Port hills. The link here gives a little bit of the route just to give a taster of what these hills are like. If you can't be bothered to follow link then terrain is a bit of a mix of running some of the moors in West Yorkshire, some of the route of Seven Sister's marathon etc etc. Thus, there is quite a climb to get on to summit road then all the paths round there are fairly hilly but with shorter sharper sections.

This photo gives an of idea of the sort of terrain along the tops (actually the track to the left is the easier track that comes up from where I started to the same point at summit). Summit Rd is the road running left to right and is where all paths from base of hills come out.

Photo borrowed from this guy (who I hope doesn't mind!)

For the Surrey boys, this terrain is much harder than any of our terrain on our Sunday runs but for Jock, this is more similar to the hills running behind your house (only the climbs are possibly a bit longer). For the Coventry boys and Bham contingent; forget about it! The only terrain anything like this would be Malvern Hills but with smaller and more rock strewn paths.

Only did about 10km in total in about 1:10hrs but with about 330m (1000ft) climbing in first 2.4 km on small track with lots of twists and turns plus rocks, and a further couple of climbs that took ascent in total to about 450m (about 1400ft) it was pretty tough for me.

Anyway, pretty tired after hour or so and got to thinking what a hilly run like this was equivalent to on the flat. Obviously hour on the flat would be easier but would definitely have run faster on flat. Fell runners reckon that running on hard fells is equivalent to running twice that distance on roads. This run wasn't 'hard fells' but certainly would have fallen into a fell running event category if the route was ever raced (and in UK of course!).

So, what do people think? Is an hour or so on hard and hilly terrain equal to 2hrs on roads/flattish terrain (about 14-15miles/22-24km) or impossible to tell? Partially wondering as not sure that I could run strongly over 2hrs even on road at moment but could plod my way round 1:30 on hilly terrain without killing myself

Saturday, 18 April 2009

This weeks training (11th-17th April)

Another mediocre training week

Press-ups and sit-ups still happening

Saturday Zip all. Although had lovely day floating around in hot springs!

Sunday - 3 hr trail walk (wasn't going to include this in training report but legs hurt next morning so ......!

Monday - Turbo trainer session pushing hard on bigger gears

Tuesday - Zip all

Wednesday - 1:20 kayaking on the Avon. Really concentrating on technique (had further 10 mins coaching from club president). Tired at end

Thursday - 1:45 cycle. Felt pretty awful but tried a few smaller hills and got better as time went on

Friday - Zip all

This weeks training (4th-10th April)

Writing this a week after I did all this so hard to remember! Mediocre training week

Picked up press-ups and sit-ups again

Saturday 1:45 cycling with Glenn. Blinkin' cold first thing (5degrees!)

Sunday Rest

Monday - 1:30 mins running on hilly course. (further report on run here)

Tuesday - Cycle training on turbo trainer. 1 hr including some hard pushing on big gears to try and get used to pushing bigger gear

Wednesday - Zip all. Tired after last couple of days

Thursday - 1:30 mins mountain biking in forest followed by 8km run at decent pace

Friday
- Zip all

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Keep it Real

In my last training week post (here), my mate Chris asked when the 'real training' would start. When I read this comment I knew exactly what Chris meant and responded. However, over the last couple of days I mulled this question over and I am not so sure anymore. Thus, this muse constitutes some thoughts around what constitutes real training. (I have no idea what "keep it real" means by the way. Just seemed like something I wouldn't say to anyone unless they had trainers on 2 sizes too big, a baseball cap on sideways and a hoodie. Even then, I would only say it under torture.) I'd get a coffee now if you are going to attempt to read this inane post.

So, working on the principle that Chris (whom I'm not having a dig at by the way!) didn't mean that I was doing pretend training at the moment what else could real training be?

Lots of people I know (Jock for example) use running plans for their next marathon and as much as possible follow the plan (or at least Jock used to do this!). So they have their long slow days, their hill repeat days, their fartlek days etc etc. Does this constitute real training ? For some I suppose it does but for others it may not. For example, take Runner A who follows the plan to the letter never missing a session. S/he runs a PB by 5%. Take Runner B who tries to follow the plan but for one reason or another can't and misses quite a few sessions over a period of a few weeks. If Runner B also improves his/her PB by 5% who has done the real training?

Perhaps, real training constitutes specific training for the event that is to be attempted. In running terms this would mean only running and in multisport terms e.g. the coast to coast that I am trying to prepare for it would mean only doing road cycling, moving water kayaking and mountain running. For most people this would be impossible as they live geographically too far away from moving water and the mountains. So, if they chose to run on the roads have they stopped real training? Today, I went mountain biking. That is not an event in the coast to coast so if real means specific then I wasn't doing real training.

Perhaps real refers to quantity or quality. Well I have tried both these approaches when marathon training. When I do quantity I get faster and stronger but also more chance of getting ill. When I do quality I get quite a lot faster but don't get the same endurance and die at the end of the race. Thus, in my case, neither quantity or quality constitutes real training. There is a chance that a mix of quantity and quality constitutes real training but if I train 5 times a week doing a mix of the pair or 7 days a week doing purely quantity which one constitutes real training?

The trouble with considering real training in purely physical terms is that it doesn't take into account the mental side of things. Both Jock and Chris have witnessed times when I have been physically strong enough to continue at a certain pace in a marathon but mentally haven't got it. Does real training include mental training ? I am yet to see a training plan that gives any decent and consistent advice on real mental training (if you discount the constant drivel in articles that say things like says "visualise the 20mile point and see yourself bursting through it full of energy". Noone says how to do this and achieve this state of 20mile super strength, just that we should do it)

The trouble I have with thinking about real training is that I usually end up being a slave to training and not really enjoying myself. I am already thinking about how I fit in skiing into my daily training rather than adjusting my thoughts and calling this part of real training. When I was at college (19-23yrs old) I was really fit. I trained hard in kayaking/canoe slalom, climbed regularly and did some running on the fells. I never planned much of this (apart from canoe sessions when we started to get quite good) but I was fit and enjoyed training. I also ran everywhere (to lunch, between lectures etc etc) and got fit like that but that would never be considered real training in any sports magazine I've read.

OK, so here's my take on real training:
  • It involves training at an effort that means that you feel pain/discomfort fairly regularly.
  • It involves spending lots of time doing specific training for the event that you want to complete but doing other stuff (even lots of other stuff) is ok.
  • It involves doing what fits in with your life and lifestyle so if a detailed plan works for you then great - it doesn't for me.
  • It involves getting better at something - not necessarily faster (age doesn't always allow this) just more experienced.
  • Doing reading and mental preparation is involved also (whether this be " I'm a winner, go go go" or "I'll survive the pain, it'll be ok").


Thus, my training has started already. However, as the months go by I should be doing a lot more training. At which point I start real training I don't know but I may have already started and then again I may never achieve it!

And finally (hate starting sentences with 'And'!), in this blog I am bound to use the term real training at some point or other to mean something different!

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

Coast to coast course video

Can't work out how to embed this video on sidebar so have to be here. Gives a flyover of the course as well as live vids from previous races

Monday, 6 April 2009

To hell with feeling unwell!

For a week or so I've felt like I've had a cold brewing. Tired all the time and lacking any energy. Today I got sick and tired of waiting for it to come out so decided 'to hell with it' and went out for a run in the hills. If that doesn't bring the cold out then I can forget about it and get on with training!

To those who know me they'll tell you that I don't run for enjoyment with a happy smile on my face but more because I enjoy the feeling of having completed something. Thus, only about 1 in 20 runs do I actually enjoy and only 1:50 do I feel that I am really floating along. Today's run was definitely a 1 in 20 run and would have crept into the 1 in 50 runs if I had been fitter.

Sometimes I have a really good run just before I am ill and today I was slightly concerned that this was one of them (post script, not feeling bad the day after).

Started off at Sign of the Taheke which is cafe a good way up Dyers Pass but still with 100m or more of ascent. It's really easy running actually and now understand why those I see at the top of the path where it comes out at the summit of the pass usually look ok. I then moved on past Sign of the Kiwi and kept going along Crater Rim Walkway. This is all off road and although follows a well trodden path there are enough twist and turns, hard ascents and roughish descents to make it interesting all the way. Ran to the Sign of the Bellbird which was about 45mins of fairly slow running before coming back the same way.

Legs definitely feel stronger with some of the cycling I've been doing as was climbing the steep sections OK without quads crying out.

Anway, all this inane rambling is to simply say that sometimes you have to say "to hell with it" and go out there whether feeling grot or not!

This week's training (28th March - 3rd April)

Not a great week for training!

Missed press ups and situps on quite a few days although blame this mostly on not feeling too well (Mags and Alistair got bad colds and doing their best to pass on to me)

Saturday - Rest

Sunday - Raced 12km and followed this with 13km run home (tired legs at end), Race and run report here

Monday - Half hour spinning on turbo trainer

Tuesday - zip all

Wednesday - 32km on bike (flat). Averaged 26.4kmh. Winy on way home and legs still feel very tired

Thursday - Zip all

Friday
- Zip all

Friday, 3 April 2009

When I'm 51yrs old

Apparently it takes 6 yrs of training to build up the kind of strength to cycle strongly at the end of the race and to kayak that far. My running legs should be ok thankfully as after all those years of stumbling around the roads, hills and mud I can get myself into decent shape for long distance stuff (not PB shape of course) in a matter of a few months. Trouble is, all that running has done for me is to help lose 2 inches off chest and the (even if I do say myself) toned lats, pecs, deltoids, etc etc. All that living in Surrey and Leicestershire has reduced my leg strength to zilch.

I'm not giving up hope though as (according to the above theory) when I reach 51yrs I should be well prepared and strong enough for doing this type of endurance race (45 at moment). What sort of shape my body (joints etc) will be in by then is rather questionable of course!

Sunday, 29 March 2009

Race report- City2Surf



A 12km totally flat race from Christchurch cathedral square out to QE2 sports stadium (interestingly and rather disappointingly about 2km from any beach or surf!). Course map here

I was surprised just how big an affair this race was. It would rank as a large race in Europe. I can only guess at moment but I reckon there were a few thousand in it. Lots of walkers and kids on scooters etc etc and plenty of joggers and also decent runners.

Something else which is different to Europe was the price to enter. I had a late entry and it cost $10 (about £4). I got a bottle of water at the end and all the roads were closed to traffic. This sort of event would cost in excess of £25 in UK and if sponsored by Nike it would cost £60+

The race:

Naively, I started too far back in field and for the first two km I was sometimes walking, sometimes jogging and swerving walkers, scooters etc. Still not really going properly until about 3km as many runners had underestimated their abilities and had slowed considerably or even started to walk.

Decided that I wasn't going to do the race flat out so for once I remained calm (yes Chris, no Mr Grumpy in this race) and got into my stride when I could. No km markers that I could see before the 7km marker so didn't do splits but noticed time at 10km was something like 45mins. Kept up the pace I was running at quite well and finished the 12km in something like 54mins (wiped the data from watch!). Considering I lost about 2 mins to walking and dodging etc and could probably have done the course a bit quicker e.g. 60-90 secs I was quite pleased with this. I haven't run on roads at all for months and have done very little on the trails really. Thus somewhere around 7min miling if you subtract the couple of mins lost.

Finished the day with the run home (map here) which took 1:16 to cover 13km (8.1miles). Rather hot though so not too bad

Thursday, 26 March 2009

This weeks training (20th-27th March)

Good week for training. At this stage in the game I am not totalling mileage etc. Just need to consistently train

Started press ups and situps and have maintained 30-50 press-ups and similar situps each day

Saturday - Run up Capt Thomas' track and then onto first few hundred metres of crater walk. Probably no more than 7km running but with about 275metres of ascent.

Sunday - Run up to cave in Barnett Reserve (climbs about by about 150 metres in about 1.5km (then 45metres climb back to house!)). Legs tired after yesterday

Monday - 1 hr kayaking. Good session (described at length in previous post)

Tuesday - zip all

Wednesday - 1hr kayaking. Mostly skill session by myself trying different length paddles so little distance paddled. OK session though

Thursday - 52 mins running. Hard run around Barnett Reserve doing 2 loops up to cave and back down other side (150m ascent in about 1.5kms * 2). Second lap wnet easier than I thought it would as knackered after first and went over on ankle at top of first loop and sore.

Friday - Big day for me at moment. Short bays bike ride (40km ish at ~21.6kmh). Really hard ride as lots of climbs and wind in face a lot of time. Legs tired after yesterdays run. Followed this with about 1:10 kayaking with Glenn on the Avon. Some 70% and 100% efforts along the way

Monday, 23 March 2009

Interesting day

One of the big choices that I have to make before not too long is what sort of kayak to buy. As I have kayaked in the past (many moons ago - see previous post) I am not a complete beginner. However, I can hardly class myself as experienced or even confident when it comes to paddling one of these long kayaks (loads of volume, usually 5-6m in length and a rudder).

I posed a Q on a discussion group and to cut a long story short, I was advised to go for a faster kayak with makings and shape of a really fast one (I won't bore you with the hundreds of pages of discussion on this subject). As a light guy (60kg) I don't have too many choices.

Thus, as the kayak club I have joined has one of the recommended boats for club use I have set about trying to paddle this boat with varying degrees of success and failure. Today, having had an average paddle (getting balance a bit better) but still not great, I headed back to the clubrooms. With 200m to go I noticed a guy watching me so I set about putting my best style of paddle stroke together. I thought I was doing quite well as most of the effort was via my torso and shoulders (correct) rather than arms (wrong!). Well, as I approached the club this guy (who I recognised as the club president) started yelling at me that my paddle wasn't vertical enough. He then said I needed a much longer paddle as I was only really taking half a paddle stroke. Taking his advice I chose a longer paddle and hit the water again using a more vertical paddle stroke. Well, stuff me, I was really cruising along. The president then gave me 5 mins or so instruction and I reckon I was streaks better in that 5 mins than if I'd ploughed on by hours by myself.

It's really hard to find true experts when you need advice. The bods on discussion groups are always helpful but who knows how good/experienced they are. Meeting someone face to face is invaluable. A few weeks back I was advised to have a bike fitting from a shop with an ex pro cyclist who had designed a computer programme to analyse all sorts of things. (My wife was flabbergasted at me paying $120 for "someone to show me how to sit on a bike"!). The advice and subsequent alterations to my bike from this expert were superb and I straight away knocked 6mins of a 40km hilly ride I do.

Sunday, 22 March 2009

The beginnings

OK. Let's start with a few bits and bobs about what this blog is about and a bit about me.

This blog is my attempt at recording my training, thoughts etc etc towards entering and hopefully completing (competing in?) the NZ Coast to Coast race in 2010. This is basically a race across NZ's South Island running, cycling and kayaking. It can be done as an individual across 1 day or 2 days (there is a team event but I am not really interested in competing in that). More discussion on which event I decide to go for in later posts.

The format is basically a:
3km run
55km cycle
33km run
15km cycle
67km kayak
70km cycle

The best overview is to look at the overview of the course at http://www.coasttocoast.co.nz/Coast_to_Coast.pdf


My biography (sporting)

Running
Running on/off for 27 years (more on than off). Completed quite a few marathons both on roads and in hills/cross country. Completed numerous half marathons and shorter distance events as well as a few longer distance events over 50km-80km (30-50miles).
PBs - 10km 38:50 (a long time ago), half marathon 1:27:45 (4 years ago), marathon 3:19:xx 6 years ago

Cycling
Never really trained at cycling as an end in itself. More as a necessity for competing in triathlons from 1991-1998. Not done very much until a couple of months ago since then

Kayaking
Did lots of whitewater and slalom paddling back in the 80s. Got to quite a respectable level (div1) in C2 slalom in UK and lower divisions in C1 and K1. Nothing before in multisport boats

Recent training (with respect this event)

Started cycling again after 10 year break (apart from odd couple of week periods of training) in November 2008. Can now cycle a very hilly 45km route without too much difficulty and suspect I could complete a ride called "Long Bays" without killing myself. Need to work on this discipline quite a bit as have very little leg strength nowadays.

Started in long multisport boats in Jan 09 and have had about 8-10 sessions so far. Need lots more experience in this discipline especially in terms of longer distance stuff and moving water. Live very near the estuary and open ocean which hope to use a lot once own kayak purchased.

Running has been very sporadic over last few months although with a lot of years in the legs I know I can get back to fairly comfortably running 30km in a couple of months. However, since a great deal of the run section (should probably call it mountain section as not sure what sort of rhythm you can keep up) is very mountainous and rocky I need to spend a lot more time running steep hills and boulder hopping.