Saturday, December 27, 2008

Training secrets

Dammit L, quit divulging my training secrets!! This is all supposed to seem effortless, and um, easy. Let's preserve the illusion at least!

(The wires go through the holes, Sweetie, with the Ipod in the pocket.....)

....just kidding, I love you! Mom

Thursday, December 25, 2008

We're on vacation (well, some of us...)

Re: mom's claim that over the holidays she'll "run whenever she feels like it without following a particular schedule": bullshit. I've heard all about her schedule to run the bridge, do an easy run, run 9, 10, or 12 miles this weekend, and generally run 6 days per week allowing herself only one day of rest!

My strategy is somewhat different: get really sick just in time for Christmas so I don't have to tag along on the difficult bridge run : ) No, I kid, I kid. I was really looking forward to running here in Charleston while on my vacation, since it is safe to go out no matter the hour, since there's no risk of being run over by diplomats or politicos, and since it's almost 80 degrees, there's no smog, and I'm not in the middle of a frigid city. But alas, my body thinks otherwise. Oh well, Merry Christmas!

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Running less, shopping more

While L spins like crazy getting fit, I have reduced my mileage about 20% these past two weeks, giving my arthritic knees a break. That allowed me to do some Christmas shopping. Laurel received a "Care package" of some old and new cold weather running clothes, a not so subtle hint to do some running this winter in DC. I'm told she was puzzling over the Ipod holes in the high tech Nike jacket I sent...

Although I worked up until Christmas eve, I now have off until Jan 5th, which makes it much easier to get my runs in. The weather has been nuts--some days hot and near 80, some cold and dreary. Very confusing to my cardiovascular system. I've signed L and I up for the Resolution Run next weekend. Although it is supposedly a certified race with chip timing, which qualifies it as a "real race," its label as a "fun run" tells me that other niceties such as reporting and verifying the results per USAT&F standards cannot be expected.

Good friends of mine in NC, Ron and Kathy, emailed that they did the Napa to Sonoma Half two years ago--I'm eager to hear what they have to say about the race and things to do in that area. I'll see them at a Radiology meeting in Hawaii in March. Now for a long morning run.....

Sunday, December 7, 2008

On track

After Month One (November) of my "Phase One: Increase General Fitness" plan ended up being a FAIL (I think I ran an average of twice a week), Week One of Month Two (December) was a WIN!

Mon: Spinning. 60 minutes of heart-racing, sweat-drenching cycling at the YMCA...I'm still trying to find the best instructor--so far there is only one I like, and instead of shopping around (and ending up with narcissistic spinning junkies who play house music and yell at you about when you can and cannot drink your water), I should probably stick with him.
Tues: "Body Bar" with Marsha, again at the Y. A weight training class involving "body bars" (like the large barbells that you load up with different weights, except all the weight is in the bar, and there are varying sizes/weights). My upper-body strength is laughable.
Wed: Rest--very sore from weight workout! Especially in the hamstrings.
Thurs: Indoor run on the treadmill. Whenever I run on a treadmill, I get shin splints. When I run outside, I do not: Discuss.
Fri: Wine.
Sat: Run AND Wine. (Kind of a like a 2-a-day. Definitely not at the same time, though.) Ran outdoors mid-day, down to the Washington Monument and back. Saw the inaugural stand under construction in front of the back of the white house (sometimes I wish I had a camera with me on runs...do they make such a thing? Runner-friendly cameras?)It was about 30 degrees. I froze my ass off. Literally: my butt was numb when I got back to the apartment.

Hoping Week Two is just as successful!

Running sick

My Reindeer Run race was supposed to be my goal race for the season and I really wanted to better my Turkey Day time. An intervening trip to Chicago and the obligatory cold that followed messed up my plans, however. Despite the liberal use of decongestants verboten in serious running competitions, I ran a seriously slow race, a minute and 20 seconds slower than last week. Maybe I was being punished by the Olympic Gods. Anyway, lesson learned: don't run while you are sick, the outcome is usually not optimum. It is time now to take a bit of a break over the holidays and run when I feel like it without following any particular schedule. Then next month it is back to building a base.

Friday, November 28, 2008

On why my mother will most certainly be better prepared for this than I

Though I hope to convince my brother to go for a run with me tomorrow in the nearby park here in brisk Pittsburgh (where I am staying for the holiday weekend), my plans thus far to strike out on my own have not gone so well. For one, I'm afraid I'll get lost and end up on the wrong side of the tracks, but more importantly it's just too damn cold, and I'm a wimpy southerner with thin blood who just can't handle it. I also discovered a scale in my brother's house, and weighed myself for the first time in a couple years (I don't own a scale. Ignorance is bliss! And obsessing over small fluctuations in weight has never seemed worthwhile to me. If my clothes start to feel tight, that's my indicator.) And, well, let's just say that even though I walk everywhere in DC, my lack of regular running has had an impact. Phase one of my training for winter 08/09 (to increase my general fitness) has been stalled in favor of an alternate strategy for the holiday season: Eat and Grow Large With Food.
Laziness: 1, Laurel: 0

Preparation by way of racing

I have a bit of a head start on L on the running thing and maybe the wine thing as well. I ran the Turkey Day 5K race in Charleston, winning my age group in 24:03. That time is not particularly impressive unless you are under 10 or over 60. I'll leave it to your imagination into which category I fall. It was a perfect day for a race, chilly (46 degrees) and sunny with negligible wind. The post race libation was beer--bizarre on a cool morning, but we enjoyed it. It's a fun race and well attended (4000 plus). It's not always the case that a charity run can create an event which appeals to serious competitive runners. I am off to Chicago for a couple of days and then will try to better that race time at the Reindeer Run next Saturday. My most serious local competitors will be doing a half marathon at Kiawah on that same morning. I'm thinking their times will give me some idea of what I might be able to do in Napa next summer.

Monday, November 24, 2008

It's official

We're registered. That's it. No backing out now! The hardest part about it was not the act of committing to months of training for a grueling race (or the steep registration fee), but whether or not to sign up for the pre-race dinner/wine tasting. That's right, pre-race. We elected to decide on that later, instead assuredly choosing just the post-race wine glass souvenir/ticket to tasting, as running-whilst hungover is not currently part of our training plan.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Update

Well, I'm doing REALLY well with the wine part. (I didn't realize we were training for that portion, too, Ma :P) Not so well with the running part, though I did walk about 5 miles today all-told. I did a walk-a-thon for the homeless this morning and I haven't been that cold in a long time. Apparently jeans are no match for the 27 degree temperature + brutal wind along the Tidal Basin. That and a trip to the newly opened American History museum (which has a big exhibit on antebellum Charleston, btw) and I am just about walked out. So, that counts as training...right?

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Purpose of this blog

Just for fun. And to encourage one another. And to encourage friends and family to encourage us. Because I will need all the encouragement I can get to train in the freezing cold for a race that's in July! It is also to document our journey and progress so that we can have a record of how this goes. (Mom and I have the memory of goldfish, so if nothing else this might prove useful as a memory aid.)

We hope that this blog will at least mildly amuse anyone who keeps up with it, and at most provide advice or inspiration for us along the way.
I'm new to this blog stuff, so bear with me. I am Nance, the Mom, who has agreed to this adventure in hopes of spending some quality time running with my daughter in wine country. How can it not be fun? (Except for my lack of enthusiasm for really long runs.) It is probably good for both of us to get out of our comfort zones and do something challenging and different and enjoy doing it together. I think it will be a hoot! I've even started training--ran 5 miles last night and then had a big glass of really bad, cheap Merlot! So what you doing, Tweetie?

Sunday, November 16, 2008

We're doing what?

So, I'm not sure who convinced who here, but somehow mom and I have agreed (though nothing has been signed yet)to train for, and run (God willing) a half marathon next summer.

The idea launched this summer when mother uttered a series of words I'd never imagined she would: "You know, if you wanted to train for and run a marathon, I'd do it with you." Huh? Up until that point, I would not be exaggerating when I say that mom was adamantly anti-marathon: "Who in their right mind would want to do that?! I have no desire..." And I felt the same way. Running quick, fast 5ks or 10ks (and setting records in them if you're Nance) sounds like much more fun than grueling long runs and eventually running for 4 hours.

But, what's done is done. The harebrained idea has been hatched, and we're in it together. Towards 13.1!!

The race is July 19th in Northern California, and it's called the Napa-to-Sonoma Wine Country Half Marathon. Wine and running. What could be better? : )