Thursday 31 May 2012

Stretching the truth

Last week Joy and I had the opportunity to be pilot/co-pilot for the 49th annual Calgary Marathon. Hmmm, might have to run the 50th. Check! We were given a three page single spaced list of directions for the race. Luckily the one line that said 'turn right on 11th avenue and head west' was not followed and we turned left to save a marathon catastrophe. I must say that 2 hours and 22 minutes of having your wife tell you where to go was not all that bad...

As for telling YOU all where to go, let's enjoy some NW Calgary routes and meet at the Bowness Park Lagoon parking lot. If you don't know where that is you are not a Calgarian...or should I say one block west of 85th Street and 48 Avenue NW. See you there at 8 am sharp-ish. Click on flowers to find the map.



Congrats to our friend Tamara who ran the Red Deer half a couple weeks back and did a very good race. Half way there girl...and good luck to all those doing the Underwear Affair this weekend. I have seen many of you getting your gitch in gear. I look forward to the shared photos next week...

I was visiting with an old running buddy Ned Bell at his new restaurant in Vancouver call Yew. I highly recommend it if you like to eat, drink, and go out. What else could you want? He was looking for some marathon options this summer and I tried to help him with a selected few options. I suggested the Canadian Derby Marathon in Edmonton, the San Francisco Marathon (I know, you are asking why the polar opposites? Proximity), and I found this website that offered a really good list of races. What would YOU suggest for Ned???

So last weekend I received a wonderful gift from Joy. She set the two of us up for a golfing date. I know what you are thinking...two and a half hours of telling me where to go and then spending another couple of hours competing for strokes? Surprising as it is to some, we did enjoy the game until Joy heard the following question from me...

Now I know why the game of golf should be kept to a whisper. Just kidding Joy...

Hey, did any of you do the Mother's Day Run and Walk in Calgary? They created a wind up video that I thought was nice. I see a few familiar faces in there. No Sadie and John driving the pace car though...

Great work Sara!
I am sure you all well know that my stretching involves reaching for the top shelf, tying my shoes, and petting my Westie. While these are all effective to some point, I thought we should get some information from more reliable sources than myself. Brandi from Camrose asked me today some questions on hamstring stretching and I sent some advice. Further to this I found some great stretching sites from our fellow athletes that have pictures to explain the more correct way to protect your body from injury.
My personal experience with stretching is a positive one…when I was a competitive athlete at SAIT we were fortunate to have a coach that really stressed the stretching need whole training. In three weeks of 15-30 minutes of stretching I was able to improve my speed by 15% because my body was not restricted by its own inflexibility. Stretching properly will also help prevent many injuries from occurring as the strain of our training will be reduced by a more flexible structure.
I still hate stretching…but it does make the long run that much easier!
A great way to combine another activity and get stretching ‘coached’ in to your schedule is Hot Yoga. If you enjoy a good sweat and are open to yoga, these classes with warm your muscles to allow for a more complete stretch. One caution, the heat can also allow you to over-stretch and tear a muscle. Remember to take the stretch to a comfortable level and baby step your way to a greater range of motion.
I would like to get out to the mountains for some trail hikes/runs, depending on your ability. I am thinking that we should head up to Barrier Lake for a loop sometime soon. Anyone interested???
That is all I have for you today. Enjoy the weather and we will see you trotting the trails soon!

Thursday 24 May 2012

Who knew Cowboy's wore adidas?

Well yee-ha! Can you believe it is only six weeks until my birthda...I mean Stampede? yes my friends, the days of wearing questionable clothing, drinking enormous quantities of beer, and staying away from any form of workload are soon to be here. Last weekend I was in Chicago and found the perfect cure for the sore Stampede foot. This beauty of a boot was at the Aurora Outlet Mall adidas store, in case you are shopping. They do retail for $300 but for some reason are marked down to a paltry $100US. Try finding a comfy boot at Alberta Boot Company for that price! Do the Flames get this option when they score a 'boot-trick'?

So the boots screamed a need for a great shirt. Yep, adidas has also created the country shirt of your dreams. For an additional $280US you too can wear tassels like Dwight Yoakam. Little Sister, won't you kiss me once or twice when I wear this shirt???

I was blessed last week to have a chance to run around Stanley Park. What a great day when you can run along the ocean, see a lovely girl sitting in the sun

And of course some of those perrenials that in Calgary we call annuals...or as I call them 'dead if in my backyard!'
Hmmm. Where to train on Saturday? We have had some great travels over the last month (hail, rain, wind, and snow notwithstanding) so I think we should find another good spot to try. Could it be time for John and Joy's backdoor trot? Perhaps the Bowness loop? A reservoir romp? So many options. Well, as I am the leader and get to choose the routes, this week is a Mallard Point start in Fish Creek. Yep, come see Joy and John for a Saturday trip at 8am. To get there take Canyon Meadows Drive as far east as you can go. When you get there you will be in the lot! We will have options for all. See you soon!

So this weekend is the oldest continual marathon in Canada, the Calgary Marathon. I have many fond memories of running this race. I think I have finished the marathon five times. Many friends have joined me here and enjoyed hot sun and one year of snow (in July!) The first time I was able to make a snowball every month of the year - brrr... I want to wish all of my friends who are joining ~10,000 trotting walkers and runners a safe journey from start to finish. I do promise you a scenic race with some challenging terrain. And yes, you will see Joy, Sadie and me in the pace car. This is the real one as seen earlier today.
I had some questions from the trot last weke that I thought I would share with you. It is my version of 7 steps to training injury free.

First is to find a friendly surface. While the sheet on your bed may seem like the right answer, we are talking more about pavement. The surface that can be most damaging to us on the long days is the canted path. When you are on the edge of the road it slopes to the side for drainage. While good for the rain it is not so good for training. We tend to put more stress on our hips and back with the one foot striking lower than the other. If the road is your only option, train out and back on the same side. This way there is a balance. As well, we need to make sure hills are not too steep on our journey. A path to steep up is one where you can’t get your heel on the ground. Going down should be well controlled and not causing you to accelerate from gravity. Heel pain can happen from impacting too hard from these downhills.

Second is to warm up and cool down. We do a short walk to warm our bodies for the long day ahead. Ideally we should get about 15 minutes of light warm-up before we get to our normal pace. I think Jodi does it best. Slow and steady to start and storng to the end! This will help get your body more flexible before we start the high intensity of the main training. Our cool down would be similar. We should not finish and then stop. A walk for the same length as the start will help immeasurably in the reduction of soreness the next day. Remember do as I say, not as I do! Weeee!!!

Third is Stretching firmly but gently. Our muscles are basically elastics. They have the ability to stretch out and come back.  My personal opinion (not the bible!!!) is to stretch after the run to help the muscles resist tightening after training. We all have suffered the stiffness after a long training day. Stretching is there to slow the after affects of running and it increases performance. When I was a competitive runner I would do a light 10 minute jog and then 15 minutes of stretching. The muscles are more flexible from the warm-up and you will be able to stretch them further. It did cut 10% off my times. I gained ALL that time back now…LOL

Four is keeping your training flexible. You may find that some days you feel just awful and don’t feel like running.  Listen to your body! It has its own internal doctor that can diagnose problems and recommend rest. If you’ve been faithful to your plan, a day off will not affect the result. Recover my friends, recover!

Five is to blend the training. Do not have high intensity training on back-to-back days. By having easy blended with hard days your body gets some stimulation and recovery to make training easier. Training is about balance. I have been doing some trail runs, TRX, and slow jogs as a mix for my body. The injury of the winter is finally gone!

Six is spacing out your racing. Doing your maximum in a race situation every weekend is not the best for performance. We should have a plan for our schedule months in advance, blending training in with the odd race.  Not all of us are “Greg” and can do it all. If you watch him in training he takes every day as a relaxed day. No stress in his body!

And lastly number seven. Keep track of your training. Tracking your performance day in and out helps you discover the good and bad of you. Our friend Kara had it right when she said we are a 10/80/10 group. Ten percent of the time we have a great day, 80 percent is okay, and another ten is ‘I should have stayed in bed’ days. By logging the training you can see what makes the good days good and the bad days bad. For Kara the latter ten is all about Las Vegas. Ask her about it. Your log can also help with your nutrition needs while out on the trails. What works and what does not. 

You are fed many pieces of info that promote the best way to do things. We take these pieces and they form the puzzle that creates your training masterpiece. Can you get the pieces together?

Tuesday 15 May 2012

Pacing a dog is tough work.

Well hello my friends. Busy days bring missed posts. I had a 'hard' weekend of visiting Canmore for the Rocky Mountain Soap Company Women's Run on Saturday. Then Sunday Sadie was my co-pilot as we cruised the 10 km course of the Sport Chek Mother's Day Race. Two days of sniffing runners was tiresome for our little Sadie.


So I missed some of you on Saturday. We had a handful meet at the default location (Eau Claire @ 8am is the Saturday default!) and trot off a 20 km loop. This next week I will be absent from the runs as I sneak off to Vancouver for a conference and then Chicago for the G-8 Summit. No protesting here, just happened to match the needed detour. See you all Wednesday of next week! Oh, if you are coming to Saturday training remember it is always good to default to Eau Claire, so Eau Claire it will be. Have fun.

Have an Apple? Check out this App.
http://itunes.apple.com/ca/app/city-calgary-pathways-bikeways/id464141446?mt=8
Calgary pathway map for your Apple product...

Hey, I need a co-pilot (Sadie only has her learners permit) who can drive with me for two-ish hours of the Calgary Marathon. I am driving the pace vehicle in two weeks and we need a person to support Sadie and me as we dodge water stations, volunteers, and hopefully all the runners! Give me an email if you can make the race.


I look back a couple weeks ago and see some great results by some of our group in Vancouver. Ken ran a fabulous 3:37, Carolyn a 3:45, Brenda 4:05, Budd 4:08, and Strides Barb at 4:45. If I missed you it was unintentional. Let me know what you are up to next! Did I mention that Ken did a marathon the week prior in Eugene Oregon? he did a lovely 'taper' run of 3:53. The man is a machine!


It was great to see our running buddy Tasha on the route last weekend. She was certainly shakin' it with hands full of kids. Cochrane has been kind to her family and one day hopefully she can join Joy in another trot as in the past. Well done Tasha!



And well done our friends Christine and Wendy. Christine is missing her tinkerbell wings but was all 'magic' for Wendy as she needed the support on the route. This is why friendship running is so important. Buddies DO make the difference.


And finally my little Joey and Char hoofed it hard and walked in with Sadie on the 12 km route. Lorianne is out of frame but also a trooper. All you girls earned your stripes and burnt arms in the lovely sun of Canmore.

Don't forget that if you see me driving at a race, this might be the result!

Friday 4 May 2012

Lose a penny? Bring back the four dollar bill!

Well hello my friends. What a lovely Friday we have here. It looks like spring may have finally won and those darling buds of May will shoo away those April showers.

I feel we might need to trot a different trail this weekend, so lets take a trip north to Huntington Hills and another trot on the lovely Nose Hill. There is a ball hockey tourney at the arena so they will be open for our pre-race prep...See you there at 8 am. The arena is located at 78th Ave and Centre Street North.
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Stephen Colbert had a pretty funny segment on Canadian currency during one of his recent episodes.  The attached video is worth the 3 minutes – I hope you enjoy it!
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I know many of our crew are big dog fans. I saw this story and thought it was a great example of why we all train together. Some of us are blind to the challenge and the rest of us just lead the group along, or something like that. Pull out your kleenex.

As a fundraiser I have the opportunity to see the good in many. It is always inspirational to see how people are motivated when they have the opportunity to give. this aritcle was a beautiful way to show how little opportunities in life can offer great return. Of course we have to put our minds to it!

TED talk, “How to Buy Happiness” by Michael Norton from Harvard Business School

I’ve been following this fascinating research for a while; this talk is a great overview of some of the most significant (and, to some, surprising) results.