LSD. I finally got my 16-miler in today as I prepare for Chicago seven weeks from now. You'll remember I had a little trouble with the heat last month when I attempted a sixteen miler and my running buddy A shut down our run, correctly, after 14 miles. Then I hurt my foot. My injury put me down for a full week and set me back three weeks.
But last week I did a more robust 28 miles for the week, including a track workout, a race and yesterday's eight-miler, when I had energy left over at the end of the run. Today I wanted to do 14 or 16, but I hung around the house putting it off all morning. Finally at 11 am I headed out. Fortunately it was overcast and still relatively cool.
The W&OD, a forty-mile long running trail, cuts right across my back yard line at MP 7. Pretty handy. Mile markers every half mile.
I ran seven miles down to Shirlington and seven back. That took 2:13 (9:30). Going down to the zero mile marker I was running nice 8:45s or 8:50s. But then I got tired. Coming back it was more like 9:20s to 9:50s, and well over 10:00s for the last couple of miles.
I moseyed along a little on the way back. I stopped at the comfort station at the Ranger Shelter. I went by a couple about my age, walking along wearing tie-dye t-shirts. I stopped to chat.
"Tie dye is back in?" I asked.
"Oh, you bet." (Why am I always the last one to find out?)
"I've got to get home and find all those t-shirts I still have from the seventies," I said as I hurried off.
I contemplated extending my run to a 22-miler. But I was getting really tired and I was really slowing down. I made it to my driveway, the fourteenth mile, where I'd laid out food and Gatorade in my car. I was panting and feeling a little woozy. The sun was coming out and it was getting humid.
As I sucked down Gatorade, I considered the fact I'd given blood two days earlier and attributed my weariness to that. Plus I was convalescing my foot. My grand notion of doing 22 miles shrank to 17. I'd do a single repetition of my hill workout, which is a two-mile out and back from my house, and follow it up with my neighborhood mile. How hard could it be?
Very hard indeed. On my hill, I walked twice taking deep draughts of water from the fresh bottle I was carrying. Those miles were on the order of 13-minutes each. Going down the steep part of my hill was painfully slow. My motion was akin to stumble-bum.
I abandoned my new plan to finish up with my neighborhood mile. I gratefully shuffled into my driveway after sixteen and a quarter miles at 2:40:35 (9:53) and pulled the plug. The second half of the run was ugly and getting uglier. Boy, long runs can go down the tubes in a hurry.
But my sixteen is done. My foot feels fine right now, although tomorrow will tell. Now I just gotta do a twenty-miler as I get ready for Chicago, maybe in a couple of weeks.
Odds & Sods: I have a friend at work who is scheduled to take a long-planned vacation to Cancun, Mexico, with long-purchased airline tickets on a flight on Wednesday. All of the tickets are non-refundable. Cancun would be the place where Hurricane Dean, projected to be a Category Five hurricane packing 160 MPH winds, is due to make landfall on Tuesday. For my co-worker, it must be like watching a slow-motion train wreck as the storm moves across the Caribbean.
Thanks! I want to thank my brother for his generous support of my intention to run Chicago as a fund-raiser for a charity, A Running Start Foundation. My brother is a sometimes-runner and a Yankee fan like me.
Sorry we couldn't run together this morning. I just couldn't get out of bed, as I'm still on pacific time. I totally blew off my long run today, in fact. So I have to log 14 tomorrow.
ReplyDeletePeter,
ReplyDeleteSaw your comment on Dori's blog. Good job getting 16 done! Is Chicago your first marathon? Either way, I hope you enjoy it.
I came over to comment because of your comment about noise - I'm with you - sloshing water, clinking keys, stuff like that drives me nuts. I just got the hydration pack and my husband showed me how to eliminate the slosh. If I tell you, you could stop all those runners who are noisy and tell them! Then you'd have a peaceful run...
Every marathon is always a new wonderful experience, many new places to conquer and many enemies to defeat. And remember all the runners ahead are not faster but only scared people. 16 miles are a very good job. Before the long runs I always eat half power (natural) bar and I drink half gatorade and half water at the half marathon mark.
ReplyDeleteI am very, very excited to hear your Chicago report, based on the looks of this one!
ReplyDeletelooks like the black knight found you!
ReplyDeletei think your decision not to give blood til AFTER the marathon is very wise.
too bad, i gave away all my tie dyed whatevers.
Don't search too fast for those shirts. Tie-dye is back if you're 12 or under. Or a hot soccer mom. But males 18 and older ... um, not yet.
ReplyDelete