Sunday, September 30, 2018

Triathlon X - Half X

Triathlon X - 30.09.2018
View near the top of the run

So I did the toughest half ironman race in the world Triathlon X! And I did quite well, placing about half way in my age group, and overall.

Here's a 'brief' race report, the long report is way too boring.

This race is really hard on paper. It's a normal distance Half Ironman, but the 1.9km swim in Lake Windermere has water of around 13 degrees C, which is cold. The 90km bike route has six hill climbs at over 20%, and the steepest pass in England at 33%. Finally the run is a half marathon up a 1000 foot mountain, over rough terrain. It sounds horrible, and I was a bit scared.

Me, Pelle, Mette, and Lars training
I went to Wasdale a few days before the race to acclimatise with friends and fellow racers.
Waswater is the deepest lake in England, and it was beautiful, refreshing, but cold. I was shaking when I got out, even though the sun was shining. When I got to Ambleside I bought a warm hat to wear under my swim cap - I already have neoprene boots for my feet. My bike preparation was all done in the weeks beforehand by finding the hardest hills in my area, and cycling up and down them until I got bored. As to running, well, any run over 2 miles since August has caused a painful calf injury - so I've only managed 5k runs recently. My last run over 10k was several years ago. 21k up a steep mountain  - unknown territory.

Swim start, new warm cap
The weather in the Lake District is variable at best.
The morning came and it looked OK - overcast, but not windy, and not raining. I'd been very apprehensive about choppy water - thankfully it was like the proverbial millpond. I focused on the day ahead. I got into the lake for the deep-water start, and we were off. I thought I was being sensible, staying at the back, not rushing. But something happened after about 5 minutes. Suddenly I couldn't get my breath and I couldn't front crawl. I felt a bit dizzy. I breaststroked. Severe doubts about whether I could go on - I almost asked a nearby marshal in a kayak to take me home. It's not the first time I've felt like this - it's happened in triathlons and in cold water training. But I thought about how much effort it had taken to get there, and how disappointed I'd be if I gave up. After a minute or two I tried swimming front crawl again, it was manageable. I passed the first buoy, at least I was making some progress. There were still swimmers near me (some kicking me, and swimming sideways past me). I kept going. I never felt so bad again, though the worry was always there - was it too cold for me? Will I get dizzy again? Eventually I found myself alone, seeing swimmers in the distance ahead. Was I in last place? So many questions, your mind has nothing else to do when swimming long distances. I got to the finish after about 50 minutes with relief - and checked my watch, not as bad a time as I'd expected.

In transition, I noticed that it had been raining during the swim. I dried myself as much as possible, and got dressed. I saw some friends - they were taking their time changing into cycling gear too and it was good to know I wasn't that far behind them.

I was cold and a bit wobbly for the first few minutes on the bike. Luckily (!), almost immediately it was time for the first big 20% climb of the day - aptly named "The Struggle" - surely this would warm me up. As is normal for me, being a slow swimmer, I was behind the good swimmers who are slower cyclists. I started to overtake people on the ride. I'm a good climber, and most other people hate it. I was surprised to see some friends already, and passed about four of them here. The great thing about a mass start triathlon is that anyone you overtake and stay ahead of is one place gained on the leader board. They are not in a different wave, you don't need to do mental calculations, you are actually ahead. Of course, the same applies if you get overtaken again :)

Coming back down to Ambleside after the climb I started to get a bit cold in the wind, but my Gabba cycling top, and arm warmers did the job - I never felt too cold all the ride.

Enjoying the climb up Wryenose
The climbs are very, very hard, so my plan was to take it steady on any flat portions. It wasn't till the next steep bit that I passed another friend, and the next one, Wrynose East,  where I finally caught Lars, the person responsible for me being there (thanks Lars!). He overtook me again later as he is faster on the flat, and we swapped places till I finally lost him on the return climb up Hard Knott pass west. I caught another friend from my triathlon club there as well.

It started to rain a bit and the wind picked up too. The descents were treacherous - I know some people fell on the slippery surfaces, and one required an ambulance. It didn't help that there were so many cars on the single track roads, or that one had spilled oil on the steepest section. But we had supporters on the hills, cheering and playing music - that was very nice to see.

I got down safely, and was feeling good - I sprinted the last few kilometers into transition. The hardest 90km I've ever done was in the bag.

I again took my time in transition. The biggest unknown for me was this half marathon. Because we climb up into the mountains, we have to be prepared for dangerous weather which can suddenly appear. I had my mandatory rucksack packed with raincoat, leggings, water, food, map, compass and whistle, and emergency foil blanket. Running with this on my back would be a new first for me.

I ran a little way out of town, and when we crossed the main road into quieter lanes, took out my cheese and ham bagel for a well deserved snack. I walked a bit, ran a bit. The sun was out, then it started to rain - I put on my raincoat, then took it off again. I reached the mountain section and Nikki from my club was there with biscuits. She told me I was 2nd in the club to go past her - wow!

Raining on the run
It was a very steep climb - I had no chance to run, and no energy. As we got higher the views over Windermere, and in every direction, got better and better. Eventually the terrain became less technical, and some running was possible. Here I caught up with Pelle, another friend, but not in my triathlon club. There were many false summits where I thought I'd got there, only to see a long track going up again in the distance. The wind really picked up, the rain turned to sleet, and the temperature dropped to about 3 degrees. I didn't care - just pulled my raincoat hood tighter. It was fun to see Pelle. We didn't really run together, but we raced each other and made it to the top at the same time. Too good an opportunity to miss, the sun came out, and we got an amazing photo.


Descending
Going back down I slipped on wet rock and hurt my leg a little, and a finger (which went black over the next few days, and still hurts nearly two weeks later). I was more cautious after that, and Pelle with his walking poles, and his experience (he'd done this race many times before) gradually pulled away from me. I was feeling OK to run on any flat and downhill bits, but the very steep section was slippery so I was slow and careful.

At the final road section towards the finish I could only run for short periods before needing to stop and walk.I was definitely dehydrated by now but my water was at the bottom of my rucksack. I met a few others here, overtook one, and got overtaken. Finally found enough energy to run into town.
Finished!
Anna and Lyra and the rest of the supporters were there cheering.

And I got the biggest medal ever!


Some numbers:

63rd out of 132 competitors
Bib 157
Swim 49:21 T1 8:59 Bike 4:23:48 T2 7:44 Run 3:28:31 Final Time 8:58:24

Full Results here, for now.
Strava Swim Bike Run

Photos from the amazing Coast to Coast


Saturday, August 11, 2018

Parkrun #11 - Maidenhead

11.08.2018

Up early on a Saturday morning and a bit of a rush to get everyone ready for the drive over to Maidenhead for our first family Parkrun.

It was a bright and sunny day, maybe even too warm even at 9am.

We met a group of other buggy runners, and the organizer of the Buggy group.

I wasn't going to try to be in the front at the start, but this was probably a mistake. Due to some earth works, there is only a narrow passage now to get through to the main path, and I got stuck for a while with no way to overtake. Not pushing the buggy into people's ankles is difficult, and I had to walk at times. Anna and I ran together for a bit, but then I saw a gap and pushed Lya into it and lost her.

After my slow start things got better, though it was still quite variable where I needed to overtake, or where I ran up the small steep hill - pushing was hard and a little slippery there.

Happy to finish my first buggy Parkrun - the time 26:01 (79th out of 279) doesn't really matter much. Anna beat 30 minutes again with 29:48.

Links
Strava - Link
Parkrun - Link
Photos on Facebook group

Sunday, August 05, 2018

London Triathlon 2018

05.08.2018

I felt almost ready for this one. I went for a non-wetsuit swim this week and had no issues with around 900m. Last year I struggled with the end of the swim but this year I have had more practice. My bike times have been pretty good on the Evo Friday night TT. And my running is OK - I can do 5k, and hang on for the rest, as usual.

I stayed overnight at Olivia's, which was probably a mistake. I hardly slept at all and woke up very tired. Neverthless Olivia, Luke and I got out just after 6:30am for the short ride along CS3 to the start. I was in a wave 20 minutes after them (at 8:05) but we went together.

Registration was where we got our chips and numbers, which isn't ideal, as last year they were posted out and so there was less faffing around in the morning when you've got enough to think about.

I watched Luke and Olivia run off to their start at the last minute, and felt fairly calm - I was ready, and the weather was good, and the threatened non-wetsuit swim had not materialised.

In the water, I tried to start my watch, but it wouldn't find a satellite and so I had to give up when the horn went. I swam my own race, though masses of other fast swimmers came up behind me after only a short time and one bashed me on the lip. The advice was to stay on the left - but if you do that you have to swim farther. I got to the end without further incident, maybe I slowed a bit too much to sight, as my 40:32 time is pretty sedentary even for me.

A fairly poor wetsuit removal, and an average T1, and I was out on the bike. This was fun, my Garmin was working this year, and I felt fast. I overtook a lot of people, and was only overtaken once. Unfortunately the long tunnel we ride though skews the Garmin's figures so it's impossible to really know how you are doing. I pushed as hard as I could, knowing there was a 10k to run later. Very pleased to find I was nearly a minute faster than last year with 1:02:09. When I took off my TT helmet, a mass of sweat poured out.

As I was leaving T2 (where I had actually run down the wrong line with my bike and had to duck under the scaffolding poles - rookie mistake) I saw Olivia arriving. I must have missed overtaking her on the bike. Then I saw Luke and said hello. I hadn't caught him, he was on lap 2 of the 4 lap course (changed from last year's 3 laps)

I now saw Anna and Lyra who had arrived to support. I felt ok, tired obviously, but chugging along. Near the end of the 2nd lap something went wrong with my left calf. I assumed it was the usual problem. I limped for a bit, gave the calf a bit of a thump, stamped my leg hard and tried to get running again. I stopped and stretched it a bit, but not much, I was losing time. It was getting hot, and the segments inside the Excel were quite welcoming in their coolness. I kept going, not as fast as before sadly, but as good as I could. Watching my aveage speed, it seemed ok, with no real idea, I wondered if I was going to be able to finish near a time of 2:30:00.

In the finish chute I bumped into Luke again, who decided to sprint for the line - I had to let him go as my leg was hurting quite a lot, and I'm not a sprinter anyway.

Curiously, my run time was a MASSIVE 54:17. My Garmin reports 11:67k. As a lot of running was inside, I don't know what the real distance was. It wasn't 10k. I'm pretty annoyed they changed the distance - I have no way to compare against last year now.

Overall my time was 2:43:11. This is slow for Olympic, so the longer run (and they still report it as 10k) messes everything up.  I was 454th out of 1887. In my age group I was around 21st out of over 100. If I could swim I'd be top 10 there. Something to think about.

Olivia did 3:15:00 and Luke 2:57:40 - off the back of hardly any training.

Results
Sporthive here
Photos Unlikely to still be here
Strava Bike Run

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Parkrun #10 - Portrush

28.07.2018

We were lucky with the weather today. Rain overnight cleared and thought it was cloudy and a little windy, conditions could have been a lot worse.

Anna and I went down first so that we could have a bit of a warm up. Carol and Jon arrived a bit later but still in time. It's actually 3 years since we all ran Portrush Parkrun together.

I wasn't going for any records as I haven't really run fast for a while. I know it's easy to say after the event, but I'd expect to be able to do around 22 minutes.

It's 2.5k out along the beach, and 2.5k back. I was doing OK on my average speed by the turnaround, though I could feel myself slowing. On the way back I seemed to be running with two other men, none of us willing to let the other gain any advantage. I pushed a bit harder, or so I thought; my speed was still going down. This is perceived effort working it's magic.

One of my rivals dropped back a bit, the other was on my shoulder. It's always amusing to see mid or low ranked competitors trying to outsprint each other for what is not really a very important victory - one place in a race that doesn't matter. But when you've spent 10 minutes trying to outrun someone, it becomes vital to win that meagre prize. I pushed as hard as I could with about a minute to go - there wasn't much left in my legs, and I have a feeling the other guy just didn't care and let me have the place anyway.

The rain was beginning as I finished, and Carol and Anna had to complete their races that way.

I came 29th out of 278, in a time of 21:51

Anna did 29:45 and was pleased to beat her target of 30:00
Carol did 25:12, and Jon did really well coming 5th with 19:35

Results
Parkrun here
Strava here
Flickr 1 2 3
There are photos on Facebook, but I haven't bothered to track them down for this blog yet.

Sunday, January 07, 2018

Cliveden Cross Country 2018

07.01.2018

As is fairly usual these days, my run taining isn't up to scratch. I can run 5k, but rarely go over this, and 10k, paticularly a hilly off-road 10k, was always going to be a bit of a stretch.

I drove over in plenty of time. The weather was cold but OK - probably around 5 degrees C. I wore my Asics trail shoes, and joined a big crowd of other Evo people from my club around the start.

It was 2 laps, though lap two is a bit longer.

I felt fairly Ok for lap one, found my place and pace. I didn't like the massive steps but I was running quite well.

On the second lap I was getting more tired, the terrain was slippery and the up and down draining. Running along the river towards the steps for the second and final time I felt I could manage it, but then my lack of preparation gave me a surprise, a sneaky detour up another hill, then back down to the bottom of the steps. It was around here that my shoe lace came undone - oh well, put up with it, no time to stop.

I had to walk a bit up the steps - the Strava segment says 2:32 vs 2:17 for the climb on the first lap.

Feeling pretty weak I finally finished.

I sat and drank coffee for a while afterwards to recover.

Results look like this:
103 601 Robert Shiels 10k 00:48:27 Male 91 50-59 17

Placed 103rd out of 601, and I think 2nd in my club. 17th in the 50-59 category. 91th male. 48:27 is not a terrible time for a difficult 10k with not enough training. I think I'd like to be higher in my age group though.

Links
Burnam Joggers Results
Strava Cliveden
Flickr Chris Drew