Tuesday, October 30, 2007

20.5K, Quicker.


TUESDAY 30/10/07, 20.5K (1.41, 4.59min/km)

Set off later than usual- 8pm- after being held up at the restaurant. My now-standard 3 laps of the Nepean Bridges was on the menu tonight.

Warm enough tonight to not need a shirt. Started off feeling a bit rough- acidic stomach, burping up some nasty stuff- but on the second lap got into a groove and picked up the pace more the third time round. Surprised myself by dipping just under 5min/km at the finish. Nice improvement- previous two weeks this run was at 5.11 and 5.09 pace respectively.

Recovered nicely from Sunday's crash-and-burn.

Monday 29/10- 12K Kayak.

Two laps of the Nepean Bridges, starting at 6.30pm. Felt good although my hands suffered a fair bit- some blistering today. First lap was 46 minutes, the second 47. Coming back to finish the second lap the sun had set and I was paddling towards the silhouette of Mt Portal, framed against the purple and orange twilight.

It was near dark on the water but the slapping of waves against the kayak and the slash of the paddle striking the water were clear in the near-silence. It was fantastic and, dare I say it, romantic. All five of my senses were very alive for those 15 minutes.

Sunday 18K- Hilly, Humid, Horrible.

SUNDAY 28/10/07, 7AM, 18K, WEEKLY TOTAL 60.5K

Shogun and I set out to run a 22K loop we'd looked at for a while- from ym front door, down Rickard Rd to Long Angle Trail, up to Singles Ridge Rd at Yellow Rock, down to Illingworth Rd and descending an old bridle trail to the notorious Riverside Trail by the Nepean, between Emu Heights and Yarramundi. Long uphill on an old powerline service trail to Mt Riverview, down the Elizabeth St trail to Long Angle again, and out. About half road, half dirt, with a 4K long uphill from the river to Mt Riverview shops. I even had ambitious plans of running 2 laps of this course.

Early on I was battling with the heat and humidity- when we reached Illingworth Rd we could see the whole Nepean Valley below us and 'twas wreathed in mist, and when we dropped down to the Riverside Trail we were in full glare of the sun as well, no shade. The Illingworth bridle trail that drops down to the river seems to be a secret of the local mountain bikers, very rough underfoot but some great views down to the water.

I did a lot of walking from here and Shogun started to get oedema (swelling) in his fingers from dehydration. He eventually took off back to his place to get the car and gave me a lift home from the Mt Riv shops.

Not a good experience. Bloody hilly loop- I'll post map and profile tonight- but I think over summer I'll need to do my longest runs at night....

Saturday 27/10- 6K Kayak in 47 minutes.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

22K Road Run.

THURSDAY 25/10/07, 9AM, 22K (1.58, 5.22min/km), WEEK TO DATE 42.5K

Worked from home today. Set out on a drizzly, cool morning around 9am to run from home to Winamlee Shops and back, via Waratah and Tusculum Roads and the Hawkesbury Rd bikepath.

The coursestarts at 280m ASL and rolls a bit for the first couple of Ks, then there is a steady climb to around 400m ASL at the Hawkesbury Rd Reservoir. Then a rolling descent to 310m ASL again. I tacked on an extra couple of kilometres by running out to the end of White Cross Rd and back once I'd reached the shops.

My legs were wondering what the hell was going on for the first couple of kms (quads still pounded from Spin y'day) then I got into a pretty good rhythm for such hilly ground. Felt a bit rough on the way back but overall a pretty good pace for a fairly hilly course, quite pleasing.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Wednesday Lunchtime Spin Class.

Another class at FF Market St. Bashed myself fairly well....

Scary to report, I spotted the long lost BOOF in the gym there.... who remembers Boof?

20.5K.

TUESDAY 23/10/07, 7PM, 20.5K (1.44, 5.09min/km)

Same course as last Thursday on a muggy night- the Nepean Bridges, 3 laps thereof. Got round about a minute and a half quicker than last Thursday. Legs felt a bit off for the first couple of Ks as a result of the lunchtime spin class, but then I got going fairly well.

Tuesday Spin Class.

Did bugger all on the weekend for a few different reasons. Back into it Tuesday 23/10 with a lunchtime Spin Class at Fitness First Market St.

Friday, October 19, 2007

20.5K.

THURSDAY 18/10/07, 7PM, 20.5K (1.46, 5.11min/km), WEEK TO DATE 29.5K

Western Sydney's rough equivalent of the Bay Run is the Bridges on the Nepean- 6.85K from the Victoria Bridge up the Nepean River to the M4 Bridge, crossover and back. The Penrith side is on bike path, the Emu Plains side either bike path or (my preference) grass. Early in the morning a lot of runners trot around here.

Wanted a faster tempo run tonight so did 3 laps of the Bridges at solid but not hard pace. A bit spooky on the Penrith side- running past trees at forehead height which are full of bats... I was hoping to get round at sub 5min/km but didn't quite manage it. I'll get there again before long.

Good training day.

Thursday Morning Kayak.

Last weekend I hired a Dagger Discovery kayak for a month from Horizon Line at Penrith, to see if I could fit regular kayaking into the schedule before making the decision to buy one.

12K paddle this morning on the Nepean River in 104 minutes.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Night 9K.

My usual 9K local route (half bush, half road) done at night with the PT Apex . Only my second night bush run since Glasshouse in September last year (the other being the Turon Rogaine in April). Kind of spooky to hear unseen creatures crash off into the bush, but quite nifty also.

Felt reasonable, a little tired, puttered around at 6min/km pace.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

43.5K.

SUNDAY 14/10/07, 7AM, 43.5K

Nathan and I started from the Long Angle trailhead on Winnicoopa Ave, Blaxland for a somewhat over marathon-distance session- first run for me since the Upper Murray Challenge.

The route we were to cover followed Long Angle FT all the way to Singles Ridge Rd at Yellow Rock, then dogleg into Yellow Rock Creek FT up to the bottom of Lee Rd at Winmalee. Turn around and go back for 22K, then repeat it all again.

Very sandy underfoot much of the way. Knee was sore for the first couple of hours then gradually improved. We puttered along okay for a few hours but a bit slower than anticipated, which meant I decided to turn off at the Rickard Rd trailhead on the way back and run directly home, which took about a kilometre off the total distance for me. Faded fairly badly at around 38K- it got fairly hot out there also.

Still, 'tis done. Not a fast course- lots of short steep hills and sandy, loose footing. Good to log another long run, en route to Bogong and Six Foot Track.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

6K Kayak.

No running since the Upper Murray Challenge. A few knee twinges being worked on with new orthotics, anti inflammatories and acupuncture, plus some staff shortages at the night job.

Did an easy 6K paddle on the Nepean today with Mel in a double kayak.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Upper Murray Challenge.

... or perhaps better titled "how I bullshitted my way through an offroad multisport race off zero mtb/kayak training..."

Still pretty satisfying though!

The Upper Murray Challenge ( website ) is a multisport race in the foothills of the western Snowy Mountains- starting in Khancoban and finishing in Corryong. It commences with a 38K mountain bike ride before transitioning to kayaks for a 26K paddle down the Swampy Plain and Murray Rivers to the hamlet of Towong, then donning the running shoes for a 600m of vertical to the summit of Mt Elliott and descending to finish at Corryong College.

As regulars might note, training of late has consisted of bugger all cycling and definitely no mountain biking (not that I ever had any mtb skills to begin with) and one weekend of whitewater paddling at Penrith, otherwise no paddling.

So why try this event? I liked the look of the video on the website and wanted an excuse to get down to the High Country again.

So Mel and I drove down Friday 5th October with the race starting 9am the following morning, with my old Learsport mtb and a hired kayak strapped to the roof of the car. After a 5.5 hour drive we arrived in Corryong for dinner and registration before driving 20 minutes to our digs in Khancoban. From most of the Khancoban area you can see the snow capped Main Range soaring into the distant sky. Closer at hand, I studied all the bikes and kayaks atop vehicles in both towns and concluded that I had just about the crappiest equipment of anyone in the event! I quite expected to be last off the bike and close to last out of the kayak, then to pass a few people in the run.

38K MTB
9am Saturday morning I was at the tail of the bunch as we rode out of Khancoban- according to the start sheet 85 solo competitors and 23 teams. We started climbing on a steep firetrail right away and I found myself passing people on the uphills, then they'd all come past as I inched down the other side- this course had a lot of steep downhill. Shaped more or less like a dumbbell, the course described a loop through the hills behind the town on a mix of firetrail and singletrack before descending past the kayak transition area and then into the farm "Khancoban Station" and riding through paddocks to another hill loop, returning to the transition and hitting the kayaks.

A long downhill early on gave me the heebie jeebies- I had the brakes half on to slow my descent and the wheels locked, however I was going too quickly to put my foot down. In a triumph of arse over class I managed to "ski" the bike to the bottom and went on my way. After that, though, I did the "hike-a-bike" thing on the big downhills. I found myself regularly swapping positions with a collection of Army guys- I'd pass on the uphills and they'd pass on the downs.

One minor routefinding error after being directed down the wrong track by a marshall, otherwise the course was thoroughly well marked and interesting and I got off the bike right near the back of the pack but with a couple still behind me. It was just after midday.

26K KAYAK
Spray skirt, vest and helmet on and into the kayak, a few hundred metres downstream from Khancoban Dam. We'd been told the night before that the water level of the Swampy Plain River was too low for safe paddling, so Snowy Hydro (main sponsor) was releasing extra water down the spillway to raise the river's level for the race.

The river did not have difficult rapids, but there were regular "gravel races" where the river bed was shallow enough to scrape the kayak and the surface was choppy and turbulent. More tricky though was the velocity of the water, emphasised several times in the race literature. There were always currents cutting across the river from one side to another which did require good river-reading skills, and my kayak got rolled twice early on before I got used to the patterns of the flow. The first time the kayak was caught between the regular river flow and the swirl of an eddy on the bank and flipped- and being snowmelt, the water was definitely cold. I dragged the kayak to the bank, tipped out the water and resumed. About half an hour later I came to a near u turn in the river, took it too sharply and a current turned the kayak sideways and over again, but I was underway reasonably soon.

I passed a couple of competitors on this leg, folks who had gotten into trouble with the currents or just had the wrong equipment, such as the Army guy who had a tiny whitewater kayak which was almost impossible to control. Physically it wasn't taxing, just mentally demanding from concentrating on the river's currents and I could have easily gone over four or five more times but saw the problem in time and corrected.

There were the occasional marshalls on the river banks, but for the most part my only company were the willows that entangled either side of the water- another potential risk if you didn't pay attention. Funnily enough I never noticed where the mighty Murray River joined the Swampy Plain River I had been paddling down; later I was told that the Murray was more or less a trickling creek at this point and was hard to spot from the water. Interesting.

I was aware that there was a cutoff at 3.30pm, 6K into the run leg. For that I figured I needed to be off the kayak around 2.30-2.45 just in case, so when at 1.45pm I passed under the Murray Valley Highway bridge with Mel and a marshal standing on it and they told me I was but halfway, the swearing started in earnest. The minutes ticking over on my watch assumed new importance, and when I steered the kayak into the transition at Towong Bridge it was 3pm and I was most unimpressed. Vest, helmet and spray skirt off, running shoes and hydration pack on and I was running up a dirt road with sweeping views of the Snowy Mountains in front of me and a cutoff looming.

25K RUN
Felt pretty good in the run and quickly passed an Army guy named Aaron. The view was fucking awesome and it helped inspire me in a fast start- the first couple of kilometres were 4.40s. However, the dirt road started to climb from there and I was losing time against the cutoff.

Mel drove past a few hundred metres before the cutoff checkpoint with Aaron in the passenger seat (DNF) and bike and kayak on the roof. I muttered something about arguing with the marshal if they tried to pull me out- my watch had ticked over to 3.32 and I was cursing the wrong turn I had been sent down on the mtb leg. However, they happily waved me on and I crossed into a farm paddock and started climbing across a grassy slope. Mel met me at the next marshal's location about a mile further on with an Up&Go (I had been subsisting on bananas and Up&Go drink all day) and informed me two fellows had just left the checkpoint, walking pretty slowly.

I ran until the course went up a narrow gully in amongst trees; above me I could see the two competitors nearing the top of the gully. Walking strongly after them I emerged onto a rough 4WD track which arched skyward towards the summit ridge of Mt Elliott, 600m above the river and 930m above sea level.

I quickly left the two dudes behind and, mixing the walking and running, emerged at the top of Mt Elliott where antennas maintained a vigil over the Khancoban and Corryong valleys. The track followed the Elliott Ridge, gradually descending but with enough uphill to keep you honest. Eventually I was dropping steeply through bush then farm paddocks towards the hamlet of Thowgla, negotiating a herd of dozens of cows as I did so.

Mel was waiting at Thowgla Hall. I took another Up&Go, dropped my hydration pack and set off for the last six kilomtres of road running into Corryong, chasing the three competitors I could just make out down the road. Although I made up plenty of ground, I didn't have enough room to haul them in and they finished a minute or two ahead as I ran into Corryong, pumped a fist, then under the finish banner in 8 hours 58 minutes.

Piece of cake. (-:

Fantastic, fun even which tests all the skills of an athlete in a wonderfully impressive setting. Support crew is essential and they have to be resourceful, as there is no aid of any kind on the course, even at transitions, which makes this somewhat unexpected finish Mel's as much as it is mine.

With a little skills work on the mtb and kayak and some better equipment I could easily take 90 minutes off my time next year....

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

23K.


TUESDAY 2/10/07, 7PM, 23.5K (2.17, 5.49min/km), WEEK TO DATE 32.5K
Same route as last week- a little faster. Finished fairly strongly. Right knee sore- got some acupuncture etc on it this morning. Orthotics need replacing.
Very hilly down around Lapstone way.

Monday, October 01, 2007

9K.

MONDAY 1/10/07, 7.30AM, 9K (58min, 6.24min/km)

Much better recovery from yesterday's long one than the prior weekend's- no real soreness, some stiffness and fatigue. Ran my 9K Sun Valley loop, which is about half road, half soft firetrail, with one big hill.

Took it veeeryyy easy and walked up Sun Valley Hill. Better than the shattered mess I was last Monday after 8 hours on the WildEndurance course the day before....