Four years on and I’ve only missed four days (one in 2012, three in 2010). These poster images are awesome at full size, by the way.
January 2012
Running
11,879 feet total ascent.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 131.5 Mile | 13 | 10.1154 Mile |
Total | 131.5 Mile | 13 | 10.1154 Mile |
Cycling
Ouch.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 3.7 Mile | 1 | 3.7 Mile |
Total | 3.7 Mile | 1 | 3.7 Mile |
Walking & Hiking
Burrrr.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 37.64 Mile | 12 | 3.13667 Mile |
Total | 37.64 Mile | 12 | 3.13667 Mile |
Stairmaster
15,130 feet total ascent.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 29.56 Mile | 6 | 4.92667 Mile |
Total | 29.56 Mile | 6 | 4.92667 Mile |
SHivering Icy Trail Run
And here’s another entry from the better late than never category.
In the month before Fuego y Agua I wanted to do a tune-up race in the ballpark of 10-15 miles. On January 12 there was a large, well organized 20K (12.4 mile) race in Forest Park on pavement. It was a beautiful sunny 50˚F morning. I chose a different option. At 5pm that night I ran the SHivering Icy Trail Run (let that name sink in a minute), a trail half marathon in the dark in 33˚F rainy weather.
I chose wisely.
This wasn’t an actual race, more of a fat-ass event. There was no official entry forms or fees. But a surprisingly large group of 40-ish people showed up in just awful weather for a good time out in the woods. And several people showed up to run hard.
A group of five or six of us went off the front early. Two of us pulled away just before the first section of single track. By the end of the first section I was by myself. Back onto a gravel road a couple miles into the run I had to take off my glasses because they were fogging up. And my vision is the worst in the dark. Then I hit a new section of single track that had been added since the last time I had been to this particular trail last spring. It was very muddy and entirely off camber, so my progress slowed significantly.
Then there was the extra credit. At some point (I had no idea where) along the trail there was a cemetery. We were supposed to find the cemetery and read the name on the largest tombstone there for bonus points or something. I noticed the cemetery and found the tombstone. As I made my way back out to the trail Travis Redden caught up to me and we ran the next several miles of single track together. In all honesty, he was flying and I struggled to keep up on the technical sections in the dark.
Once we made it back out to the gravel road with about three miles to go I dropped the hammer a bit (less because I wanted to win the fat-ass event, but more because I was freezing cold). I finished in 1h43m, a few minutes ahead of Travis. As the first finisher I received a major award.
I was cold and wet while running. The instant I stopped I got really cold… which prompted me to get straight to my car to warm up. So I didn’t stick around long. Of course, in my haste I neglected to mention the extra credit (was it Caroline?), so I guess I’ll never know what that would have been good for.
Rob at the finish line (photo from Rock Racing)
The event was super fun. I got the hard run I wanted, along with practice running in the dark, practice running on a fairly unfamiliar trail, and practice running in shitty weather. Mission accomplished.
You can read the event organizer’s report here.
Running in the Smokies
For the past few months I’ve been training my ass off for the Fuego y Agua 50K on February 16. Last year I handled the distance fine, I handled the heat fine, but I completely fell apart on the long, steep ascent of Volcan Maderas.
I have a score to settle with Maderas
Just as last year I’ve done lots of distance training and as much heat training as I can (in a sauna). But this year I’ve focused much more on hill training. I run as many hills as I can find. I spend a few hours a week on a stair master. I run hill repeats. But I had a feeling that might not be quite enough. The Saint Louis area is quite hilly (particularly in comparison to central Illinois), but the biggest hills we have here are around 400 ft, whereas Maderas is 4,000 ft.
Gatlinburg with Mount Le Conte in the background
So I took a little vacation. Last weekend I drove to the Smoky Mountains, the nearest place with 4,000 ft climbs. I drove all day Friday, and got a good night’s sleep in Gatlinburg, TN. The next morning I went for an epic (by my standards) mountain run. Starting around 1,300 ft elevation I ran uphill for 3 hours to the peak of Mount Le Conte at 6,593 ft, just over 1 mile vertical ascent. The trail was around 11 miles. So I ran 5300 ft ascent in 11 miles in the same time (actually, slightly less) as it took me to race 4000 ft in 4 miles up Maderas during the race last year.
It was very cold at the top, with deep snow in places, so I didn’t stick around too long. The 11 mile return trip downhill was easier physically, but it was much harder on my body. My knees were aching pretty bad by the end. There was a lot of ice-covered rock at the top which made for slow going at times. The rest was muddy.
I planned to go hiking on Sunday morning before returning home, but my knees were still too sore, so I did a bit of automobile tourism. On the way home I drove one stretch of 7.5 hours, which is by far the longest I’ve ever driven non-stop. So that was something.
The least prepared I’ve ever been for a race
Better late than never.
Each fall there is a cyclocross race a half mile from my house. I missed out on racing it last season (2011) due to absent-mindedness. I almost missed out on racing it this season (2012) for the same reason. I remembered which weekend the race was, and I thought I knew which day it was on (Sunday). I just finished eating a big lunch on Saturday when I sat down on the couch to check on the start time of the race tomorrow. The race starts at 1 pm. Today. It’s 12:25 pm. I have a full stomach. I haven’t ridden my cyclocross bike in weeks. This is the least prepared I’ve ever been for a race.
I spent about three minutes deciding whether or not to go. I quickly changed clothes, grabbed my bike (which thankfully was in working order), and rode over to register for the race. By this time it was 12:50-ish.
I started mid-pack and spent the first few laps moving up. By half way through the race I could only see one guy ahead of me and I was catching up to him. With two laps to go I dropped my chain and lost some time. With one and a half laps to go I dropped my chain and lost some time. With one lap to go I dropped my chain and lost some time. I had no chance of catching up after that triple whammy.
I ended up finishing, wait for it, 3rd. Apparently there was a guy off the front who I never saw. Anyway, considering my complete and utter lack of preparedness I was quite pleased with the result.
This ended up being my last race of 2012, and it capped off what I consider to be a breakthrough year for me. I raced 26 times (not including the weekly practice crits). I had 3 wins (in 3 different sports), 9 podium finishes, and 18 top ten finishes. Furthermore I made it through such a tough year with no major injuries. Hopefully I can maintain this momentum into 2013.
October, November, December 2012
Well, it’s been a while. November and December were a little bit crazy for me on account of a project I was working on in my spare time.
Running
I haven’t raced since October, but I’ve been doing a lot of high quality training in my build up for the Fuego y Agua 50K in February. As you can see from the chart below, I ran farther in 2012 than any of the past 11 years. This is also the longest I’ve gone without a sidelining injury during that time. June of 2012 was the only month with low mileage, and that was when I intentionally took a break to recover from my spring races.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 78.06 Mile | 9 | 8.67333 Mile |
February | 75.2586 Mile | 9 | 8.36206 Mile |
March | 126.15 Mile | 14 | 9.01071 Mile |
April | 146.28 Mile | 16 | 9.1425 Mile |
May | 166.75 Mile | 18 | 9.26389 Mile |
June | 54.83 Mile | 7 | 7.83286 Mile |
July | 115.76 Mile | 9 | 12.8622 Mile |
August | 91.81 Mile | 9 | 10.2011 Mile |
September | 123.61 Mile | 15 | 8.24067 Mile |
October | 115.4 Mile | 12 | 9.61667 Mile |
November | 118.23 Mile | 13 | 9.09462 Mile |
December | 129.98 Mile | 14 | 9.28429 Mile |
Total | 1342.12 Mile | 145 | 9.25599 Mile |
Cycling
Cycling was virtually non-existent for me the past few months. I did one cyclocross race in November on no training and somehow still wound up with a good result. The lack of bike miles towards the end of the year almost allowed my modest running mileage to catch up.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 25.33 Mile | 2 | 12.665 Mile |
February | 40.08 Mile | 3 | 13.36 Mile |
March | 213.43 Mile | 20 | 10.6715 Mile |
April | 253.27 Mile | 23 | 11.0117 Mile |
May | 322.147 Mile | 24 | 13.4228 Mile |
June | 282.57 Mile | 13 | 21.7362 Mile |
July | 260.12 Mile | 16 | 16.2575 Mile |
August | 81.87 Mile | 8 | 10.2338 Mile |
September | 45.46 Mile | 8 | 5.6825 Mile |
October | 35.37 Mile | 8 | 4.42125 Mile |
November | 10.58 Mile | 1 | 10.58 Mile |
December | 22.7 Mile | 6 | 3.78333 Mile |
Total | 1592.93 Mile | 132 | 12.0676 Mile |
Walking & Hiking
There was a big drop off here as well, mostly because I needed the extra hours to work on my project.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 51.53 Mile | 16 | 3.22063 Mile |
February | 42.92 Mile | 18 | 2.38444 Mile |
March | 41.15 Mile | 14 | 2.93929 Mile |
April | 31.89 Mile | 12 | 2.6575 Mile |
May | 37.5107 Mile | 13 | 2.88544 Mile |
June | 39.4 Mile | 18 | 2.18889 Mile |
July | 2 Mile | 2 | Mile |
August | 64.99 Mile | 25 | 2.5996 Mile |
September | 85.88 Mile | 25 | 3.4352 Mile |
October | 32.34 Mile | 10 | 3.234 Mile |
November | 16. Mile | 5 | 3.2 Mile |
December | 15.22 Mile | 4 | 3.805 Mile |
Total | 460.831 Mile | 162 | 2.84463 Mile |
Stairmaster
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 0 | 0 | 0 |
February | 0 | 0 | 0 |
March | 0 | 0 | 0 |
April | 0 | 0 | 0 |
May | 0 | 0 | 0 |
June | 0 | 0 | 0 |
July | 0 | 0 | 0 |
August | 0 | 0 | 0 |
September | 13.85 Mile | 4 | 3.4625 Mile |
October | 12.87 Mile | 3 | 4.29 Mile |
November | 0 | 0 | 0 |
December | 9.34 Mile | 2 | 4.67 Mile |
Total | 36.06 Mile | 9 | 4.00667 Mile |
Swimming
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 0 | 0 | 0 |
February | 0 | 0 | 0 |
March | 0 | 0 | 0 |
April | 1750. Yard | 2 | 875. Yard |
May | 8050. Yard | 7 | 1150. Yard |
June | 4100. Yard | 3 | 1366.67 Yard |
July | 2993.61 Yard | 3 | 997.871 Yard |
August | 2150. Yard | 3 | 716.667 Yard |
September | 0 | 0 | 0 |
October | 0 | 0 | 0 |
November | 0 | 0 | 0 |
December | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Total | 19043.6 Yard | 18 | 1057.98 Yard |
Farmdale Trail Run
Melissa and I ran the 30 mile Farmdale Trail Run on Saturday near East Peoria, IL. We heard about this race just a couple weeks ago from our friend Chris, and since Melissa’s parents live nearby they were able to watch Will while she and I spent hours in the woods.
All the pieces had fallen into place for me. My training in the weeks leading up to the race was top notch. I had run personal best times on two of my favorite trails in the Saint Louis area without trying very hard. My heart rate was lower than ever for the pace I was running. I was running up hills with ease, thanks to the time spent on the Stairmaster. I was finally fully recovered from Howl at the Moon and I felt my fitness had even improved since then.
I had never run the trail before, so I didn’t know exactly how fast I would be able to go, but I made some educated guesses. As long as the trail wasn’t too hilly or technical I thought I had a realistic chance to average 8 minute miles to finish in 4 hours. And based on previous results, that should put me near the top of the field. It was a bit of an audacious goal for me, but, for the first time ever in a race of this distance on this sort of terrain, I felt I could back it up.
The rain began to fall lightly just minutes before the start of the race. The 30 mile race and the 10 mile race started together, while the 50 mile race had started 3 hours earlier. With the faster 10 mile runners and the slower 50 mile runners all on the trail together there was a bit of confusion as to what my place was at any given time. I started with a pack of 10 milers and by 4 miles in I had passed and left them all behind. The early miles were effortless. Despite the light rain the trail was in terrific condition. I finished the first 10 mile loop in 1:20, exactly on my desired 8 minute pace. Only 3 of the 113 10-mile runners were ahead of me. Old Rob (which was actually the young Rob) would have crashed and burned late in the race after pulling a stunt like this. But not today, I felt great.
I picked up some food and water and set back out. The rain was picking up and the trail was getting a bit muddy. Now that the 10 milers were off the course I asked a few 50 milers as I passed them if there were any 30 milers ahead of me. Most of them were just as confused as I was, but I had a strong suspicion there weren’t. I just hoped/assumed I was in the lead, but pretended I wasn’t.
Around 14 miles in I had to take off my (prescription) sunglasses because the sky was so dark. I simply wasn’t able to see the trail. And without my glasses everything was blurry, but this effect wore off a bit as I continued on. By this point it was absolutely pouring. I had to slow down around all the (numerous) turns to avoid sliding right off the trail. Then on the second half of the loop there were about 3 miles of trail that were covered in standing water, which slowed me down even more. I still felt great, but it was obvious I had no chance of making my time goal. With the trail in this condition I couldn’t have run a lap at that pace if it was the only lap I had to run all day.
I completed the second lap in 1:28, almost a full minute per mile slower than the first lap. And the trail kept getting worse from there. I picked up my headphones and listened to music for the third lap to try to keep me motivated. I started to get a little tired, but I still had plenty left in the tank. It was just all I could do to keep from falling over on the turns, or sliding on my ass down the frequent ravine traversals. I had slowed down a lot by now. With 2-3 miles left I picked up the pace and finished really strong.
I had been passing 50 milers the whole race and on my third lap I was passing 30 milers as well. I hadn’t seen Melissa yet, but I thought she probably wasn’t too far ahead. She’s not a highly experienced trail runner and she picked a hell of a day to gain experience. I exited the woods into the open field to head to the finish line and I saw her just ahead. I caught up and finished my third lap at the exact same moment she finished her second lap, 4 hours and 27 minutes after we began. She was in good spirits and was preparing to gut out one more lap on the trail in horrendous conditions (it just kept getting worse and worse all day).
As I was chatting with Melissa the race timer informed me I was the first 30 mile finisher. Huzzah. It was a long, hard, nasty (at times) race, but I felt really great and I ran well. Melissa went back out and did what needed to be done. It was not pleasant for her, but she showed some serious guts. In the meantime I changed into dry clothes and ate and drank everything in sight. I chatted for a while with a few old friends and made some new ones. Melissa finished a few hours later, happy the race was finally over.
She was worried that she would finish dead last, but she was right in the middle, 24th of 47 overall and 4th female. Pretty good for her first trail ultra.
Blowing It
A little over a week ago I raced the Veldrijden Columbia cyclocross race. My friend and teammate, Mark, did an excellent job organizing the event. I was in the Cat 4 (newb) race. Warming up before the start I got a pretty good idea what was in store for me… I was out of breath and I had to get off my bike to walk up a hill that was so muddy my tires just spun and I started to slide backwards when I tried to ride up it.
A last minute bathroom trip left me at the back of the pack of 30 or so riders for the start. Which is exactly where I didn’t want to be. The start of a cyclocross race is so important to one’s chances of success. I took off like crazy, passing several people, to get up into 12th or so place by the first turn. Then there was a fast section where I moved up a few more places before we hit the challenging parts of the course.
I handled my bike well and I remained patient. I would seize any opening I could find to pass somebody and move up a bit. There was one guy way off the front and nobody had a chance of catching up to him. By about halfway through the race, though, I had caught up with the chase group. My teammate Mike was in 2nd, some other guy was in 3rd, and I had moved up into 4th. It took a while, but I eventually passed the guy to move into 3rd. Then Mike and I opened up a bit of a gap. I passed Mike, he passed me back, then I passed him back. The longer the race went on the stronger I felt and the more I could see the other riders fading.
With one lap to go in the 35 minute race I was in 2nd place and I started to pull away from Mike a bit. I took a few unnecessary risks and got away with them. Then I blew it. On a fast, muddy downhill section I lost control of my front wheel and went down hard, smacking my (helmet-protected) head on the ground. I slid to a stop and quickly moved my bike out of the way so Mike didn’t go over top of me. My first reaction (as is the case any time I’ve crashed on a bike) was that I was seriously injured. My head was killing me. My next reaction was damn, I just crashed out of the race with half a lap to go when I was in 2nd place. After wallowing in self pity for a few moments it occurred to me that nobody besides Mike had passed me yet–I was still in 3rd place. I was still in podium position. Was I really injured? Could I actually get back on my bike and ride half a lap?
I decided to try, just as I saw two more guys coming down the hill. I jumped on my bike to get out in front of them only to discover my chain had fallen off. Crap. I pulled over to the side to let them pass as I put the chain back on, then I took off behind them, but I was unable to catch back up. I held on to finish 5th place. My head hurt, but I wasn’t injured. My body was fine. My bike was fine.
Looking on the bright side, I had a really good race. I moved up from a long way back up into 2nd place. I stayed strong throughout the whole race while other riders were slowing down. I have the fitness. I just need to learn to ride my bike.
September 2012
Running
I continued doing a lot of shorter runs throughout September (if 8+ miles per run can be considered short). More importantly I got back on track of running 3-4 times per week. I raced the Forest Park Cross Country Festival, my first race after the epic Howl. Later in the month I gradually started ramping my mileage up in preparation for The Next Ultra in October.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 78.06 Mile | 9 | 8.67333 Mile |
February | 75.2586 Mile | 9 | 8.36206 Mile |
March | 126.15 Mile | 14 | 9.01071 Mile |
April | 146.28 Mile | 16 | 9.1425 Mile |
May | 166.75 Mile | 18 | 9.26389 Mile |
June | 54.83 Mile | 7 | 7.83286 Mile |
July | 115.76 Mile | 9 | 12.8622 Mile |
August | 91.81 Mile | 9 | 10.2011 Mile |
September | 123.61 Mile | 15 | 8.24067 Mile |
Total | 978.509 Mile | 106 | 9.23121 Mile |
Cycling
Unfortunately, I missed out on Gateway Cup this year. My knee just wasn’t ready for bike racing yet. I took a few more weeks off before starting to get back into the swing of bike racing at Gateway Cross Cup.
Bike | Distance | # Rides | Avg per Ride |
Bianchi | 16.65 Mile | 2 | 8.325 Mile |
Pocket Rocket | 17.2 Mile | 5 | 3.44 Mile |
Thundercougarfalconbird | 11.61 Mile | 1 | 11.61 Mile |
Total | 45.46 Mile | 8 | 5.6825 Mile |
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 25.33 Mile | 2 | 12.665 Mile |
February | 40.08 Mile | 3 | 13.36 Mile |
March | 213.43 Mile | 20 | 10.6715 Mile |
April | 253.27 Mile | 23 | 11.0117 Mile |
May | 322.147 Mile | 24 | 13.4228 Mile |
June | 282.57 Mile | 13 | 21.7362 Mile |
July | 260.12 Mile | 16 | 16.2575 Mile |
August | 81.87 Mile | 8 | 10.2338 Mile |
September | 45.46 Mile | 8 | 5.6825 Mile |
Total | 1524.28 Mile | 117 | 13.028 Mile |
Walking/Hiking
I found walking and hiking to be the best thing for helping my knee recover. I could stretch out my legs and get blood flowing to the problem areas with no impact and little risk of further injury.
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 51.53 Mile | 16 | 3.22063 Mile |
February | 42.92 Mile | 18 | 2.38444 Mile |
March | 41.15 Mile | 14 | 2.93929 Mile |
April | 31.89 Mile | 12 | 2.6575 Mile |
May | 37.5107 Mile | 13 | 2.88544 Mile |
June | 39.4 Mile | 18 | 2.18889 Mile |
July | 2 Mile | 2 | Mile |
August | 64.99 Mile | 25 | 2.5996 Mile |
September | 85.88 Mile | 25 | 3.4352 Mile |
Total | 397.271 Mile | 143 | 2.77812 Mile |
Stairmaster
And now for something completely different. I found a reasonably priced, high quality, used StairMaster stepper machine on Craigslist and bought it. I have wanted one of these for years. I first started using a machine nearly identical to this during the winters at the UIUC gyms a few years back. I wanted to do it more, but going to the gym was a bit of a hassle. Here in STL I don’t have a gym to go to, and going would still be a hassle. With this machine at home I can use it whenever I want. I’ve mentioned repeatedly how I don’t run on consecutive days as a rule. With this stepper I can get a comparable workout with zero impact on my knees. As a side effect, I’ve already noticed (after less than 20 miles of stepping) that my hill running has dramatically improved. I might just have a chance on the slopes of Volcan Maderas next year…
Month | Distance | # Workouts | Avg per Workout |
January | 0 | 0 | 0 |
February | 0 | 0 | 0 |
March | 0 | 0 | 0 |
April | 0 | 0 | 0 |
May | 0 | 0 | 0 |
June | 0 | 0 | 0 |
July | 0 | 0 | 0 |
August | 0 | 0 | 0 |
September | 13.85 Mile | 4 | 3.4625 Mile |
Total | 13.85 Mile | 4 | 3.4625 Mile |
Gateway Cross Cup
Cyclocross
Gateway Cross Cup snuck up on me this year. I was out of town at a conference in Chicago the weekend before the race. The Cat 4 race was 40 minutes. I hadn’t ridden a bike for 40 minutes in several weeks, let alone raced. But, whatever.
I took the afternoon off work and went over to Heman Park. It had rained heavily the entire day before the race and the course was ridiculously muddy. I was the last person to register for the race and was unfortunately placed at the very back of the pack for the start (last year I was in the front row). This made things difficult. I spent the entire race going slower than I needed to and trying to find the right place to pass people. I steadily moved up the whole time. I caught up with my teammate Mike with about a lap to go and passed him with half a lap to go. We finished 14th and 15th. I moved up through more than half the field, but I just started too far back to have a chance at a good result.
Cross Country
A couple hours after the bike race was the “5K” cross country run. This year it was only a half mile longer than advertised (last year it was a full mile longer). The turnout was even smaller than last year with just 9 starters. From the gun one guy took off and would never be seen again. I hung back in a small pack but broke free about a mile into the run. I ran the last 2.5 miles alone and finished in 2nd place. Just like last year. There was a payout for finishing 2nd that exactly covered my entry fees for both races, so I broke even on the day. Just like last year. I also received a bottle of Michelob Ultra, which I gave to Melissa.
More Cyclocross
I stuck around for the Men’s Open race, the Women’s Pro race, and the Men’s Pro race. It was a lot of fun to watch really good riders on the extremely sloppy course. Here’s a bunch of photos.
Quantum Mesa Cycles in the open race:
Pro race: