Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Reflections on 2014



Well I am pretty happy with what I accomplished this year.  It was a year off Ironman racing-so I was focused more on speed than endurance.  Also added some bike racing into my schedule and really had fun with that.  From a race accomplishments here are the highlights:
XTerra:
  • Canadian National Champion
  • 11th at World Championships 
  • Overall Woman at XTerra PDX
Olympic Distance Tri:   
  •  9th World Championships
  • Overall Master at Portland Tri
Sprint Triathlon:  9th World Champs.
 
70.3 Triathlon:   
  • Calgary 70.3 5th – with fastest swim and bike split for my AG.  Set a PR by 5  min  with a horrible run.
  • St George 70.3 7th AG
OBRA Road Race State Champ.:  2nd 50+
Cross season is still going but I am going to end up with my highest placing in the series since I started racing 4 years ago

So—I have a lot to be happy about.  I also learned a lot and have some things to apply going forward.  Here is what I learned this year:
  1. I like racing - -what I mean by this is I am happier if I get out to a bunch of races rather than picking one or two races race for the year and training focused on them.  It is tougher to schedule and still be able to peak for the important races and for the C races you have to make sure that you put the right amount of effort into them so that you don’t screw up your training plan.  I also like trying new races.  We kind of got stuck in a rut for a few years and were doing the same races -- those races are great, but it was a great adventure this year doing mostly new races!
  2.  Bike racing is fun.  I added some bike road racing into my schedule - -it was a lot of fun and a great workout.  I will continue to include bike racing in my schedule going forward.
  3. Strength training is really important as you get older.  In 2013 I made a big mistake and did not keep my strength training up towards the latter portion of the race season (2 Ironmans) and I really paid for it this year.  Let’s just say I had a chain reaction of several events caused by lack of core strength.  I ended up with tendonitis in my foot and have not been able to run much for most of this year.  I was religious with my strength training this year and am using off season to get rid of the last bit of the tendonitis.  I want to have a healthy 2015 
  4.  Nutrition issues can sneak up on you.  I had issues caused by incorrect nutrition right before my biggest race of the year (XTerra Worlds).  They could have been avoided—but I was not paying close enough attention to my electrolyte intake in the weeks right before the race (high intensity and also trying to heat acclimate) and this caused me to almost not be able to start the race.  It certainly compromised my performance. 
  5.  I need to figure out how to peak better.  I did a bike performance at the Portland Tri—3 weeks after Olympic Distance World Championships –on legs tired from an entire build week and a hard brick the day before that was about 15W higher average power than I did at the World Championships (it was actually my highest average power ever for an Oly tri)
  6. I can push a lot harder than I thought I could.  This mostly applies to biking since I couldn’t run much this year.  But hope to apply it to my running next year.  Yes, it hurts – get used to it.

What I really love about this sport it the continual learning process.  This year was the 30th year for me doing triathlon – so hundreds of races later, I find that I still have a lot to learn.  I also feel that in the past couple of years I have embraced the joy of this lifestyle and racing.  When I was younger, in pretty much every race I did I would always ask myself “Why am I doing this?  It’s hard, it hurts.”  Somehow, I always got past that and once the race was over that moment was forgotten and I went on to the next event.   I have noticed the absence of that question over that last couple of years – I look at each race as a gift and a celebration – regardless of whether it is going well or not—there is always something to be learned and there are always others to help and encourage—just doing that is enough to get me to the start line.  I’ve also spent more time in the past few years mentoring new athletes—I think this is where the joy comes from.  Watching people transform their lives is so rewarding and being part of that is the best gift ever.

What will 2015 bring?  Hopefully I will be able to apply what I learned this year and continue to grow as an athlete.  I will be racing Ironman again next year-at least one, potentially 2.  It will be fun to see what the year of speed will do for my long course racing.

Of course it actually takes a team to do all this.  I want first of all thank Don for being the most wonderful husband in the world and putting up with all this in addition to being the world’s best Sherpa and keeping all my bikes in top working order.  Special thanks to Kirk Whiteman of Tempo Cycling  who not only kicks my ass but has shown me I can do more than I ever thought I could.  Also thanks to Jarod Warf at Adapt Training for keeping me strong,  Altra Running for keeping my feet happy and Athletes Lounge for gear and sponsoring the worlds best cycling team!

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Xterra Worlds Race Report



So I’m going to start my race report a week and a half before race day.  I had a business trip to Germany the week before going to Hawaii—leaving Monday and getting home Friday.  My trips to Germany are usually really packed and I don’t get much time to workout.  First time I got a chance to go out for a run was Thursday morning. I set out on my run and about a mile in my right quad totally cramps up – I stop to walk it off but have a horrible feeling about what is going on.  I give it a rub, walk a bit more - -but nothing loosens it up.  I turn around for the painful walk back to the hotel.  A couple hours later it finally starts to loosen back up.  On Friday flying back, walking quickly through the airport causes more cramps.  Taking the dogs for a walk on the weekend—you guessed it, more cramping.  I was supposed to do a cyclocross race on the Sunday but know that I won’t even get through the warm up without a cramp.
I’ve had this before - -first time in my late 20’s—and until I figured out what it was (with the doctors help) I was sidelined from doing any exercise for a couple months.  These particular cramps are mainly caused by a Magnesium deficiency.  I am a heavy sweater and I guess my body also has trouble absorbing this mineral.  Since then I have always had to take supplements and watch my diet.  I have gone through several bouts of this cramping over the last 25 years.  The solution of course is to get my Mg up –but that takes time—usually a couple weeks to get the cramps to go away—or a visit to my naturopath for an IV of Mg and other vitamins.  On Sunday, Don urged me to try to contact my doctor on the off chance that she could give me an IV before our plane left at noon on Monday—it was a long shot.  She was great—responding to my message on a Sunday—but unfortunately she was in New Orleans at a conference.  The best she could suggest was to up my Mg supplements to taking 200mg every 2 hrs of a highly absorbable for of Magnesium called Magnesium Glycinate (just for reference the daily recommended dose for Mg is 400 mg). So we left for Hawaii on Monday unsure if I would even be able to race.
Tuesday we went for a swim in the ocean—getting past the shore break was enough to cause my legs to cramp—I treaded water for a few minutes before attempting to get back through the surf to the beach and limped back home – I was not a very fun person to be on vacation with—this was my A race for the year and I might not even get to start – saying I was in a beautiful place on vacation sounded good - -but not really what I wanted.  Wednesday we decided to go for an easy bike ride along the coast - -so no hills—I felt like an old lady—because that is the speed we were going—the legs were happy to be moving and mentally it really helped to be doing anything.  We managed to get the 10 miles down to Lahaina without my legs cramping—a few twings but they didn’t actually cramp.   We walked around Lahaina and checked out the shops and had a wonderful Oceanside lunch.  After lunch we got back on the bikes and rode home—I pushed just a bit harder on the way home (still nothing like normal riding) to see how they were—made it home soaked-it rained really hard on us for most of the ride home-but no cramps.  This was my first indication that my body was starting to get some Mg back - -still not ready to race but enough that I was hopeful I could make it to the start line.
Fast forward to Sunday—hopeful that I can crank the effort up enough to at least finish the race.  Given the nature of these cramps (the fact the once the cramp starts it lasts for 1-2 hrs) I know that getting one is race ending I have to set a very conservative race strategy – plan is to take it easy on the first half of the bike (which contains the largest portion of the 3000 ft of climbing they have crammed into 20 miles), push it a bit more for the 2nd half and then keep the entire run pretty controlled - -for cramping running down is just as hard on your quads as running up.  So I know this will not be an ‘A’ race effort – but I really want to finish.
Race morning seems pretty typical on DT Flemming Beach—it’s more of a surfing beach than a swimming beach and the waves are not disappointing.  The race director promises that they will start us when there is not a large set of waves coming in—the plan was Pro’s at 9, men at 9:02 and women at 9:04—subject to the size of the waves.  I am glad I was not a guy as they did not seem to give them mercy and the cannon goes off for them with some pretty large breakers 

The women get a surprise start—we are standing there thinking we have about a minute to go—when boom, the cannon goes off.  Upside—they timed it so we were not running into a wall of water.  I still did not execute getting past the surf very well and got pushed back a bit after I got through the first set of waves.  Eventually I got going - -man was the water rough—it was not the smoother swells that you often get once past the shorebreak—it felt like you were being beaten up the entire swim.  There was also a pretty strong current so you had to adjust your sighting so that you did not get dragged to far past the turn buoy.  Don said that the men’s wave swam a huge C out to the buoy as they got dragged down the coast.  Because of the closer wave start, it didn’t take long before I also had to navigate around the obstacle of the slower men swimmers. 
 
  The swim course is an M—meaning you have to get our halfway through the swim and do a little beach run and then into the second half - -meaning you get the joy of going in through the shore break and out of the water onto the beach twice in the race.  Eventually I got space to swim and settled into as much of a rythmn as I could given that the entire swim felt like you were in a washing machine.  I get out of the water and look at my watch—31 minutes—probably the slowest 1500 I have ever swum (my usual 1500 OWS time is about 24 minutes)—but then these were not your typical swim conditions.

I make the long uphill run to transition and grab my bike.  Have a decent transition for an XTerra race (so much more to do than for a road tri).  I jump on my bike at the mount line and start on the adventure.  This race is really about the bike—on this course it takes a disproportionate amount of the time.  The first 6 miles are pretty much uphill – ending up at about 1500 ft—and some beautiful views of the ocean and Molokai.  Some of the climbs are really steep and at this point there is a lot of traffic—so as soon as somebody ahead of you loses it—everybody has to get off and walk.  I won’t say that I was capable of riding all of the hills—but there were a couple that I know I could ride that I was forced to walk because of people in front of me falling.  On one steep hill the guy beside me fell over into me- - pushing me off the trail into a barbed wire fence.  Not horrible but there is definitely some blood running down my arm for the rest of the race.  The slick course conditions that occurred earlier in the week from the hurricane the weekend before are mostly gone - -there were a couple of low spots with some pretty good puddles (6-8” deep) but the rest of the course was just damp – much better than the dusty conditions that can occur here—especially for the long downhills on the second half.  As we start the second half of the course—with more down than up I start to increase my effort a bit—without the steep climbs there is less chance of cramping.  My friend Ron catches me – he is a great descender—so I try to follow him the best I can.  Now I am starting to pass quite a few people.  The rest of the ride is really fun—a good mix of ups and downs and twisty single track.  Not my fastest bike ever—2:36:54


After a quick transition I’m headed out on the run – basically a 3 miles up hill (about 1000 ft) followed by a 3 mile downhill—with a couple of nasty surprises thrown in.  Like the bike I take it conservatively, walking up the steep sections, running the rest of the time. Mile 3 is the top of the climb—we run around a small pond and then start the winding trail back down—most of it is fun flowy twisty trail with reasonable footing - -there are a few steep rocky/rooty sections that you need to slow down on and be careful.  There are also several downed trees that require scrambling over or under.  There is one paved section near the end - -but there is no celebration for easy footing—it is so steep that everybody ends up walking it—but we know that the end is near—a short run down an exposed ridge with some decent views and then down—to the beach.  So just when your whole body is screaming that its ready to be done—you pop out onto the beach - -and are faced with about ¼ mile across it before the short uphill run to the finish line – and they don’t let you choose your line (i.e. any sane person would run in the hard damp sand at the waters edge), we have to run the whole way in the deep loose sand.  Despite not pushing super hard—was was definitely hot and ready to stop by the time I got to the finish line.  Run: 1:12:20  For a total time of 4:21:36 And 11th place.  Given how the week started I am very happy with the result.  

This is a beautiful but extremely challenging race—The race director definitely has it nailed—everything was executed great—from packet pick up to pre and post race dinners that actually have really good food (you would hope so with the Ritz Carlton catering) to the actual execution of the race.  The sense of community of the racers is also much higher than for road triathlons.  I will be back again, healthy, so that I can really test myself against this course.