Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Lois, Dianne & Gerry at the Toronto Full & Half Marathon



Well, what a weekend! Dianne and our two nephews, Andrew and Jonathan, drove up to our house Friday night. We drove to Toronto on Saturday morning to pick up our bib numbers and schwag (a technical term meaning all the goodies and freebies in your pick up kit and at the expo). Then we spent day resting and digging into our traditional pasta dinner, and early to bed. Our alarm woke us up from our nightmares at 4:00am (both Gerry and Dianne dreamt of missing the start time) and we had a light breakfast in the dark. It's funny that our alarm clock normally wakes us up at 5:30, and it feels like morning, but just 1.5 hours earlier, it still feels like nighttime. We were in the car by 5:30 (still dark) and off to Toronto. There was a bit of a traffic jam at our turnoff (lots and lots of runners: 13,000), but we managed to get a good parking spot. Then, we did what all other runners do. No, not stretch, queue for the port-o-lets (still in the dark).


Gerry lined up at the sub-elite corral, which was really close to the start line. Dianne and I trekked over to the open corral, which was not close to the start line. We heard a lot of noise at 7:00 and thought it must be the start of the race. By 7:06, Gerry would have already passed the 1K marker, and Dianne and I were just about reaching the start line.



The weather was absolutely great. Here's how we all did:

Lois: 2:13:54.8 and 190/371 out of
Women 45 - 49
Dianne: 2:29:18.7 and 138/228 out of
Women 50 - 54
Gerry: 52nd overall. Clock time: 2:56:11.1 Chip time: 2:55:56.5 and 2/245 out of Men 45 - 49.
Dianne and I didn't have personal bests, but we were satisfied with our times and the race we ran. Gerry did have a personal best time. The man who came in 1/245 actually won one of the top masters awards, so Gerry was awarded 1st place in his age category. When the results were posted, we knew we had to stay and watch Gerry collect his award. Would it be money? a plaque? We were so excited. Finally, the awards ceremony started and finally, Gerry's name was announced. We whooped and cheered for Gerry as he went to the announcer's desk to pick up his award. The last photo shows Gerry proudly showing off his .. thermos. Yes, it's a bit of an odd gift to be sure, but it looks just fine on our mantel.
The day ended with a great BBQ, thanks to Jonathan's grilling prowess, and a welcome post-race beer (Gerry and I had been eating super healthy and spurning all alcohol for the month of September to get ready for the race, so the beer went down very nicely....maybe we could use the thermos to keep the beer cold for future post-race parties....)

Lastly, if you notice Gerry in one photo talking to an older gentleman. That's Ed Whitlock, the 76 year old that I mentioned in my last note. Ed was having knee problems, so didn't run this year.

We had a super fun weekend! Now, it's time to prepare for Disney in January (my first full marathon, Gerry's first Goofy, meaning running the half on Saturday and the full on Sunday).
That's all from us!Lois, Gerry, and Schnitzel

Monday, July 30, 2007

Vineman 70.6 Half Ironman

To All, My late blooming athletic career is once again in full swing. Last weekend I completed my second 1/2 Ironmman event, swimming 1.2 miles, biking 56 miles and then running a half marathon. I managed to have a great time in the race for some reason, knocking almost 45 minutes off my last time to finish in a respectable 5 hours and 20 minutes. I didn't train that much, relying on my Spring Ironman in Arizona fitness levels to carry me through. Pretty much everything that could go wrong, did. Without a great sense of humor, all would have been lost.

The race was on Sunday the 22nd and we all drove up on Saturday, with the exception of Parker, who spent the weekend being shuffled from Nanny to Aunt Linda to Grandma.

On the Friday evening before our Saturday drive up, I was doing some fine tuning of my triathlon bike, trying to get the rear gears to shift a little better when I snapped a 25 cent spring and couldn't fix it myself. I brought it into the local bike shop Saturday morning. They tried for a while, but didn't have the right tool to fix it, so I decided at the last minute to just use my old road bike. I dusted it off, packed the car, gathered the family and headed out for the two hour drive up to Sonoma. Well, it was supposed to be two hours, but for some reason, everyone else in the world decided to go at the same time as we did. We crawled along for four hours. From the Benecia Bridge to Santa Rosa, there was bumper to bumper traffic. I'm still wondering where all this traffic was going, it's not like there is much to do in Santa Rosa and points north. I suppose the Charles M. Schultz Peanuts Cartoon Museum is a good draw and maybe the Boonville Brewery would pull in a car load or two, but there were literally thousands of cars littering the highway for 40 to 50 miles. Interspersed with the urban dwellers seeking solace among the redwoods up north were many high strung and well tanned triathletes trying to get to registration before it closed at 8:00 p.m.

Registration went surprisingly smoothly. I was checked, banded, bagged, t-shirted, and chipped in under 10 minutes. For those of you Vineman virgins, the course requires two transition areas. One is at Johnson's Beach on the Russian River near Guernville for the swim to bike transition and one is in Windsor at the local High School 10 miles away for the bike to run transition. Due to this splitting of the transitions, the race requires participants to prepare their T2 gear the night before the event. This poses a bit of a dilemma for those of us who over think what to have available for each segment of the race. I spent a good 20 minutes going through a mental inventory of things I would need for the run. Should I carry 1 or 2 Gu packets, hat or visor, extra sunscreen and what SPF, white or black socks, hair gel or hair spray, race flats or lightweight trainers, and the most crucial decision of all…should I change my blue sunglasses I use for the bike leg to a pair with a more neutral colored frame for the run because the blue frames may clash with the red Forward Motion Race Club (FMRC) logo on my hat?

After checking in, we drove to Santa Rosa for the team dinner. We met over 25 folks from the local Danville tri club for a wonderful pre-race pasta dinner at a local Italian eatery. The pasta was plentiful and the case of Chianti we polished off was quite tasty. After leaving the restaurant we headed back to Petaluma to find our hotel, better known as a place to stay for the night. With two twin beds, I somehow got to hang with Conner, who announced at 10:00 that he was not tired and was not planning to sleep that night. At 10:05 he was sound asleep, but continued to toss, turn and other wise disturb me until the three or four alarms went off at 4:30 a.m.

By 5:00 a.m we were headed off into the darkness to find Guernville and the beach on the Russian River. What was supposed to be a 20 minute drive turned into a forever drive as we all tried to meander into this little town and find a place to park. I was supposed to be off at 6:30 and arrived with a few minutes to spare. The start was the most disorganized thing I had ever seen. It appeared that this event, which had grown over the years form a small local thing to a big, national race, never lost its local flavor. Everyone arrived into the bottleneck at the beach with all their bike and swim gear as we were not allowed to check in bikes the night before. Dianne was awesome, bullying our way through the line so I could get body marked, find a spot for the bike, get the wetsuit on and get ready to jump in the water.

Because of the narrowness of the Russian River, the 2000 participants had to be divided into about 50 swim wave starts. Each age group had their own start time plus age groups with large representation were divided even further. For example, the 37 year olds had their own wave start and my age group 45-49 was divided into three groups, the young'uns 45-46, the mid-lifers 47-48, and the 49 year old geezers. Some age groups had even further definition with a separate start time for men born East of the Mason Dixon line between the hours of 4:31PM and 5:02PM on March 28th, 1952. Believe it or not, this wave had over 100 participants in it.

Swimming in the Russian River is always an interesting experience. The race director always points out one of the unique aspects of the Vineman swim course. The swim is probably one of the safest swims in triathlon. The director always says at the pre-race briefing "if you get into trouble during the swim…stand up!". Actually, the swim start is about 6 feet deep, but then gets shallower as you crawl upriver. One of the FMRC guys commented that when he finished the race he looked down at his fingernails and realized they were caked with black gunk. Either he was doing oil changes on the bike or he was scooping out river mud with each swim stroke. One of the team felt he could run faster than he could swim, so he did a slow jog downstream after the turn around. Typically a triathlon swim course is a triangular or rectangular affair. The Vineman swim course is more of a spastic snake shape twisting and turning every which way for 1.2 miles. Not that I swim a perfect straight line, but trying to keep to the right of the buoys was quite the challenge.

I exited the water onto the "beach" although I've always thought for a place to qualify as a beach there were certain requirements like sand, waves, seaweed, bikini babes, and those little flies that always seem to be buzzing around your head. I was dismayed to find out that no one was there to help me pull off my wetsuit. Having been pampered at my last bunch of Ironman's, I was shocked and and had to think about how to get the darned thing off without looking like a complete fool. I found my bike amid the other 2000 bikes and performed my T1 ritual of rolling in the mud trying to get my suit off, bike shoes on (whoops forgot the socks!), putting my race number belt on, ripping my race number off the belt accidentally and then strapping on the brain bucket. I remembered to stuff my wetsuit, goggles, and swim cap into the official Vineman Ironman 70.3 approved T1 swim gear transition plastic bag otherwise my wetsuit would have been relegated to the heap-o-crap at the end of the race. I found out from Dianne later that they forgot to start the clock with the first wave of people, so my time out of the water was a littler faster than it appeared.

I bolted onto the bike course only to find that something was rubbing and I wasn't going very fast. Three stops later I finally figured out my back tire was not aligned and quickly made an adjustment. A few minutes later I went to do a quick check of my heart rate and pace and realized I forgot to turn it on. The bike leg was fairly uneventful except for the flash of light and the vortex of wind as 20 year olds blew by me. Pit stops consisted of Gatorade and Powerbars. For those who have never had a Powerbar in the heat of day, I can only say that they become a gooey mess and are impossible to get out of the wrapping, let alone eat. Volunteers at the stations obviously had the problem figured out and unwrapped the bars, tore them in half with their hands and then let the pieces dangle in the wind hoping riders would cruise by and grab them out of their hands. I'm not generally a picky eater, but the thought of those bars melting in the volunteer's hands was positively the most repulsive thing I've seen in a long time. I doubled up on the Gatorade, as did everyone else I saw. Being in the 2nd of 50 swim wave starts, there wasn't much evidence of racers to come that were going to be littering the course. There were reports from those that left after me of seeing the usual flotsam and jetsam associated with the bike leg like water bottles, spare tubes, spare tires, Gu packs, and a bike shoe or two, they also spied one helmet (where was the owner?), a floor pump, a disk wheel, and one of those mini kegs Heineken is making now. Not sure if the keg fell off a bike or out of a race officials car, but it was empty, so someone was having a great time on the bike course.

T2 arrived very quickly, so fast that I thought maybe I had missed 15 or so miles of the course. I racked my bike, clipped my heart rate monitor/GPS on something and sent pieces flying everywhere. I removed the remains, threw it into the bag and ran out of transition. The run course, like the bike course, was open to cars, and so they had blocked out a small two feet wide area for the 2000 of us to run on the shoulder of the road. I quickly realised the problem of a narrow shoulder on an out and back course. Those speedy folks ahead of me were heading back to the finish. We were all assigned the same two foot wide space. It was comical to watch runners coming at each other trying to determine who was going to dodge left and who was going to go right. I spent the last 10 miles swerving around people. Of course all water stations were on the same side of the road and runners collided reaching for water and gatorade. The course was pretty hilly. I hit a low point around mile 8 runing through a vineyard when the 90 degree sun was bearing down and I began to feel like one of those ants I used to torture with a magnifying glass back when I was growing up. I thought maybe all those little ant souls were up there in heaven seeking revenge for my childish antics.

I made it back to the high school without a clue as to how I had done. Dianne, Kira and Conner were hanging out by the large speed bump into the school for most of the day so they could watch hapless riders flying off their bikes, realizing a little too late that a speed bump at 20mph around a corner was not a good thing.

I felt great at the end. I had heard about the traditional white wine dunk tank, but alas, Ironman had eliminated that post race activity due to safety and health concerns. Allegedly, a few years back two athletes, after soaking in the tank for an unspecified amount of time, became overly amorous and the tank had to be drained. It was hot, so we hid under a covered tent and snacked on some pretty good food. After hanging out for a bit, we headed over to the large field to gather my swim bag that had been trucked from the beach to the high school. When I arrived I noticed that they had just started to unload the truck. For some reason they only used one very large truck and two very slow guys. Of course the bags were packed from highest number to lowest. My number 117 was at the very front of the truck. A bunch of us, realizing the disaster in front of us, starting helping to unload the truck, sort the bags and help them organize. About 90 minutes later my bag finally arrived and I was free to go. We headed back to the hotel for showers, made it to a local greasy spoon and then headed home.

I was up at the crack of dawn Monday morning. Sunday, the day of my Vineman race, was also the date for Ironman Lake Placid. That meant that the lake Placid event would be opening up entries for 2008 at 8:00 am Monday morning. A bunch of us from Danville had decided that we were going to try and get into this event. Last year the event sold out in a few hours, so I had to be fast on the computer if I wanted in to the 2008 race. I logged on at 7:00 to catch news of the event and was told that the race entries for 2008 would be available at 8:00. At 7:30 I checked in again and the website stated the event was sold out. At 7:45 the page changed and stated there would be an announcement at 10:00 and that this year's participants, given a chance to enter next year's race before us, had taken most of the spots. I raced off to work and logged back on to the website. I tried again at 9:55 and found out that the entry process had just started. I typed madly for 5 minutes filling out the 10 page entry form\legal disclosure\medical checklist, plunked down $500 and hit the send button. One minute later I got a message back.. Congratulations! I was in. 10 minutes later the website posted a "sold out" message.

After sharing my elation with Dianne and other friends, I quickly realized what happens when 2000 athletes and their 4000 friends find out they get to go to a town of 2000 for a large race one year later. They all need a place to stay. A mass panic over the internet ensued over the next of a couple of days. Of course athletes for this year's race all got first pick of houses for next year and most houses didn't come available until a few days later. Luckily, Dianne was fast on the draw and we managed to secure some accommodations right down down, a mile or so from the Olympic stadium. The house is huge with 5 bedrooms and a massive porch. Anyone looking to vacation in upper New York state next year and wanting to watch a triathlon are more than welcome to join in. If you don't like to watch the triathlon, I've heard the Olympic bobsled run is open to the public in the summer and you can descend at 80 miles per hour catching flies in your teeth. We've got the place for 9 days and plan to hang out, go swimming and generally relax.

With another race next July 20, it's time for a little more R&R and then back to the training. For now, it's off to bed. More news later. tom

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Tom's Ironman Arizona Update

It's time once again for my annual Ironman triathlon update. As you are probably aware, I completed the Ironman Arizona triathlon on April 15 th in Tempe Arizona. This was number three, and in case you were wondering, they don't get any easier! You may also notice that there are no pictures attached. As always, we are camera challenged and they always seem to fail at the most inopportune time. I think we've owned 10 digital cameras, all of which fit this trait. Dianne purchased a disposable camera and we may have some pictures developed at a later date.

Kira and I arrived in Tempe on Thursday afternoon and Dianne came up Friday after work. None of us had been to Tempe before, so it was fun just to hang out and check out the local sites. Tempe is right next door to Phoenix, 10 minutes from the main airport. The biggest thing in the city by far is Arizona State University (ASU), home to 50,000 full time students. We didn't rent a car as we stayed right down town at the start of the race.

I believe there is only one main street on town and true to any college town, Mill Street had bars every couple hundred yards. The town came alive at 10:00 p.m., so we naturally saw very little of the nightlife. Kira and I spent Thursday and Friday hanging out and watching the goings on. It was pretty funny to watch the same group of characters wandering up and down the street showing off and trying to be cool.

Tempe weather was also pretty good when we arrived with temperatures around 80 during the day, although it was cool in the morning and in the evening. It is definitely a dessert town with no grass to be found anywhere. Outside our hotel window were views of cactus and dirt. I've heard it sits at over 110 all summer and thankfully we were long gone before such temperatures to set in. It may be a dry heat, but 110 is still hot.

As with past Ironman events it is always inspiring to just hang around, meet some new people and hear some great stories. There was a mandatory athlete meeting Friday night that Kira and I attended. On stage the oldest and youngest participants were introduced. The oldest guy was a 76 year old who started exercising about 15 years ago. He finished in about 14.5 hours. (Dad, there is hope for you in this sport!) The youngest person was an 18 year old girl from Sonoma. When asked about her training she stated that she was completely uncoordinated and never played sports in high school. She started training for triathlons early in the morning after high school. Asked if she missed hanging out with friends late at night because of her early morning training, she replied she hardly ever slept. She qualified for Hawaii by winning the female age group award. The emcee then asked all the athletes to raise their hands if they were competing for the first time in an ironman event. There were over 800 first timers out of the 2100 athletes. He then asked if anyone had lost more than 30 pounds training for the race. Probably 100 people stood up. He asked people to remain standing if they lost more then 40, 50, 60 all the way up to 90 pounds. With two people remaining standing they were invited to the stage to tell their story. One guy lost 170 pounds in just over a year. It was pretty incredible. As he said, the best thing someone ever said to him was "Who are you?"

These triathlons are not a poor man's sport. I think the value of the 2100 bikes surpassed the gross national product of most African nations. Walking around the Expo on Saturday Dianne asked why I didn't have those cool wheels like almost everyone else. As we walked by the "sale" on bikes and other equipment I showed her the price tag (per wheel) including the $150 event discount. At $1000 per wheel, Dianne seemed to be a whole lot happier with my several thousand dollar "clunker". It's funny though, because everyone was grabbing for the free Gatorade.

My calf muscle, which had been bothering me since January seemed to feel pretty good during the week before the race. I had taken off about 5 weeks of running and had not run more than 8 miles since early January and it was certainly making me nervous. Lots of stretching over the past few weeks seemed to do the trick.

Having done a couple of these now I wasn't quite as nervous as I was in past. Saturday we spent hanging around and watching the goings on. I decided to train like Floyd Landis and so we sat outside and had a beer at one of the local breweries. We wandered back to the hotel in the afternoon and were subjected to two weddings in the court yard. I thought it was very weird to have your wedding out in the open. All hotel guests were asked to keep the noise down as the ceremonies proceeded. Not all the 5 year olds agreed, especially after the first 20 minutes or so. Very odd indeed.

It was early to bed Saturday night and early to rise Sunday morning. Both Kira and Dianne were good sports didn't stay up late. By 5:00 am we were down to the start of the event. I spent the time limbering up, getting my body markings with my number and age plastered on my arms and legs, waiting in line to empty my bladder like everyone else and then putting on the wetsuit. The swim course was an out and back one loop course in Tempe Town Lake. We started in the middle, about 50 yards off shore. Having done a couple of practice swims in the lake earlier in the week, I was now most afraid of getting some sort of skin disease. It is certainly odd to have signs stating "No swimming in the lake – except for triathletes". The fact that I couldn't see 3 feet in front of me didn't help my confidence. When the cannon went off at 7:00, my heart jumped, I thought to myself, what the heck am I doing here, and then off I went. As with the other mass start Ironman events, there was a bunch of thrashing, kicking and otherwise near drowning events for the first couple of hundred yards. After that, it was pretty good and I only got kicked once pretty hard on the chin. I didn't do a whole lot of swimming in practice leading up to the event, averaging about an hour a week. I wish I had spent more time learning to look where I was going. I was swimming in a zig zag fashion and added what seemed like an extra mile to the 2.4 mile course. In the end I was out in just under 1 hour 20 minutes, almost the same amount of time in the previous two ironmans. I was in 1218th place. Nowhere to go but up!

Once out of the water the volunteers were great. A couple help pull off your wetsuit (what a great job title – stripper for a day!) and then others help you find your bag of biking stuff. Once changed, all the guys lined up to have the college girls put suntan lotion on them and then on to the bike for the 112 mile, three loop course.

I figured it would take me around 2 hours per loop, six hours in total. The first half loop was great and I settled in on the bike. It was pretty cool to be out riding past cactus. I passed the turnaround in about 50 minutes, 10 minutes ahead of schedule and feeling great. As soon as I turned, I realized that the slight breeze at my back was now a raging wind in my face. It was incredibly demoralizing to be zipping along at 25 miles an hour and all of a sudden be doing 12 mph and holding on for dear life, hoping not to be blown off the bike. The return trip into town was a very tiring 70 minutes. It felt great to see everyone in town, turn around and have the wind at my back again. By loop two, there were lots of very tired bike riders and everyone was cursing the winds. About ¾'s of the way around we were passed by the leaders who had now lapped us. They were flying by like I was standing still. I'm not sure they even noticed the wind. At one point a huge piece of sage brush came flying at me from up the road. This was desert country for sure. I never saw anyone get blown off their bikes but I saw plenty of people with taped up shoulders and arms. Post race conversation was dominated by the sites of people being blown off their bikes. All in all, the bike portion took a lot out of me, although I did finish in just over 6 hours, I was certainly glad to hand my bike over to a volunteer. I finished 1006th on the bike, so I was now moving up the field!

The second transition was incredibly well run by volunteers once again. I heard there were over 3000 volunteers helping out and they were all great. It was like a personal valet service, taking your bike, helping you to find your run clothes bag, helping to change if you needed it and then wishing you well again. We all lined up for more suntan lotion again. With the dry heat, there was nothing to show for my 7.5 hours of training except for a bunch of salt stains over my tri suit. I'm not sure applying suntan lotion to a bunch of smelly athletes was quite as fun as it was in the morning, but they were all good sports about it.

The 26 mile run course was also a three loop course and we ran along the Tempe Town Lake, over the bridge and down along the banks of the river again. I was very nervous about my leg giving out, but decided just to run and see what would happen. I clocked the first mile in about 7:30 and felt good. The run turned out to have the same wind issues as the bike and it became very demoralizing running into the wind. I turned my hat backwards after nearly losing it to a gust a wind a couple of times. Most people walked into the wind and I ended up passing a bunch of people. I was determined not to walk any portion of the distance until I absolutely had to. I ran through all the aid stations. By mile 15 I was at 10 minute miles a fading, but still running. The problem with running loops is you know what is ahead, and the wind was not something to look forward to. Running into town was definitely fun though, and the crowds were very supportive. I "high fived" 50 plus kids each loop. It made it very motivating to keep moving. On Saturday family and fans were given poster boards and markers to make up signs, which were then placed around the course. They were mostly blown over, and I never did find the ones that Kira and Dianne made up, but it was inspiring and funny to read these signs as I plodded along. The best one was probably " Racer XXX, I'm pregnant". I saw Dianne and Kira on the first lap of the run but missed them on each of the next two loops, which was also demoralizing. By mile 24 I was at a 15 minute per mile pace, still "running" but was approaching a near walking pace, but then I met up with some one and we sprinted the last two miles at about an 11 minute mile. I never did walk. I was certainly glad to be finished. With a 436th place run I ended up 591st overall for a time of just over 11 hours 55 minutes, a new PR by about 35 minutes.

Just passed the finish line, Kira spotted me, and Dianne, who had just returned from the medical tent trying to find out about my fate, (I think she was relieved to see me) got to see each other again. I felt great, but when asked for a third time by volunteers to take a blanket, I did was I was told. All in all, I ended up fairing pretty well. My feet were great (I may not lose any toenails this year, compared to the 10 from last year). I ended up with a pretty bad sunburn on area on my lower back that didn't get any lotion and I had some pretty serious chaffing from my shorts while biking that I didn't notice until I got into the shower.

After hanging out for a bit, we headed back to the hotel, I showered and we went out for dinner. My eyes were bigger than my stomach. I ate a bit, finished the beer and then we headed back to the room where I promptly fell asleep.

Dianne and Kira were awesome, putting up with me for the weekend and the hours of training for this event over the past 6 months. I felt sorry for the many spouses/family members who spent the whole weekend waiting for two second glimpses of their athlete zooming by at high speed and then off again for another two hours. In the morning after, there were plenty of spouses rolling their eyes back into their head when the conversation turned to next year's race.

We spent the morning taking one last look around Tempe before catching our flight back around noon. All in all, it was a great weekend. Can't wait until next year! tom

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From Gerry's awesome Admin:

http://www.photoshow.com/watch/np3JN7iN