Category Archives: aidsmarathon

Double digits and all is well

Start time: 06/18/05, 7:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 10 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 11:00min/mile

What a beautiful, beautiful day for a 10-miler. Our half of the group did fantastic, keeping on pace almost perfectly. (The other half once more came back in pieces. Hmmm.) Today was also a big turning point for me, because when I ran the Cherry Blossom 10-miler back in April my average pace was 10:54min/mile. Essentially, 10 miles is the furthest I’ve gone at this pace. Next week takes me into new territory, and based on how I felt today… bring it on, bring it on! Fantastic.

Is that Buster Poindexter I see?

Start time: 06/11/05, 7:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 9 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 11:00min/mile

“Hot hot hot” was the order of the day, and it wasn’t even in the 80s! Gotta love the crazy DC humidity. Today’s run was one of attrition; we lost one person two miles in (who switched over to the 11:30 group for the rest of the run), then two more around mile six. The good news was that aside from the occasional water stop we hit all of our miles right on pace. We’ve got a great group, a bunch of real troopers. Our half of the “Cathy O’Brien” group actually fared better than the other half, which I think came back in something like five different sections. Oops.

It’ll be interesting to see how everyone’s doing next week as the temperature continues to rise…

7am and all is well

Start time: 06/04/05, 7:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 8 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 11:00min/mile

When our training group switches over to 7am runs, we often have a few people miss it because they’ve completely forgotten about the time change. We still had nine zillion runners this week in our group, so that was the end of that idea! I took half the group out (Pam was running the Race for the Cure) and we did really well, staying on pace pretty much the whole way through. It’s a good group of people and while due to the numbers we’re all still getting to know each other, they seem nice.

Must remember to buy more Clif Shots later today. I’m down to my emergency Vanillas, and if that isn’t incentive, I don’t know what is. (Well, ok, I also have a box full of Apple Cinnamon Carb Booms but those I save for long runs to use as rewards, because they’re so delicious…)

Hmph

Start time: 05/28/05, 8:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 7 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 12:03min/mile

AIDS Marathon has what’s called a “designated driver” system; each week, someone in the group offers to be the “DD” and if a runner is having problems, the DD hangs back with them so no one’s out by themselves. (On really long runs, you assign two DDs and then the DDs can drop off the ailing runner at a water stop and then keep running their old pace.) I was DD this week, and alas, my services were needed. One runner was running out of steam before the fourth mile was even over, so for three-and-a-quarter miles I got to go at a slower-than-normal pace. It wasn’t until after I got back that I discovered she’d had the same problem last week. *sigh* Let’s hope this isn’t a trend.

Ah well. Being DD means that sooner or later you’re going to be taken up on it, and in five years this is the first time that’s happened for me. At least it was on a week with short milage!

Oops, almost forgot…

Start time: 05/21/05, 8:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 6 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 11:10min/mile

Another run with the new group. Still finding the proper pace, and still trying to learn everyone’s names… always very difficult at first, especially in such a huge group as we’ve got this year. All things in time, though.

A gorgeous Saturday morning

Start time: 05/14/05, 8:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 5 miles & 3 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 11:30min/mile & 10:00min/mile

Today’s official run was a bit slow–we got caught behind another group and first tried leapfrogging, then trying to slow down a little bit to let them get ahead… finally we just had to pass them entirely. No sooner had we done that than someone needed a bathroom break, 3.5 miles in. *sigh* Ah well, my first year I know it took a little while to get hydration under control.

Afterwards, Mark and I went and knocked out three more miles. We weren’t aiming to go any faster, but as you can see clearly did. There’s a small part of me that wonders if I should’ve gone with the 10:30min/mile group, but ah well! Better safe than sorry and in agony this August.

I got up early for this? :)

Start time: 05/07/05, 8:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 4 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 5:1
Average pace: 11:00min/mile

Oops, almost forgot to put this down for my records. The 4-miler with the training group felt almost silly to have gotten up early for; it’s very easy to get blaise about this sort of thing after so many years! It was nice to be able to meet the new people in the running group, though, or rather groups since there were so many people in our pace time that we’re split into two. Our pace group leader was still trying to find footing for this particular speed; one mile we were thirty seconds under, the next one thirty seconds over, and so on. It’s a fine art to hitting those times just right but hopefully later jaunts down the W&OD as a group will go smoothly, given time.

Here We Go Again

Start time: 04/30/05, 8am
Location: W&OD Trail
Distance: 3 miles
Average pace: 9:15min/mile

Another year, another jaunt through AIDS Marathon! I suppose the weather gods were doing their best to make sure everyone knew what they were getting into since it rained the entire time. Ugh. In fact, it rained so much that the underpass right before the turnaround marker flooded out, so technically it was something like 2.95 miles. Tsk tsk tsk. I once again went out a little too fast and ended up with a time that’d put me in the 10:30 group, but knowing that it was not following the rule of “comfortable pace you can hold a conversation at” for thoat first mile and a half, I stuck with the original plan of the 11:00 group. Happily, Julie ended up landing in the 11:00 group (shocking the hell out of her, but I knew she could do it), so we’ll be running together for another year after all.

Race for Hope 5K tomorrow morning. Please, no more rain. I’d like to get a new PR on my journal page of the website!

Running: 19.5 miles

Start time: 8/16/03, 6:00am

Location: W&OD Trail

Activity: Running

Distance: 19.5 miles

Run:Walk ratio: 2:2, then 2:3

The Twenty Mile Run: A Breakdown By Milage

Mile 0: Seven of us prepare to head out; me, John, Dave, Scott, Mary, Beth, and Lisa. Madelyn is curiously missing in action, Lindsay is resting her knee due to doctor’s orders, and Julie is up in Massachusetts visiting her sister and ran on Friday. Everyone appears to be hopeful about this week’s run despite the promises of extremely high temperatures coupled with 98% humidity.

Mile 3: We hit our first turn-around pretty quickly. Everyone still very happy and chatty, especially with the clouds overhead keeping the sun away. We could get used to this.

Mile 6: Still doing pretty well. We’ve made it back to home base in strong form. All we have left is seven miles out to Vienna and back. Jokes are being told and we’re cracking each other up.

Mile 11: Whoops! We took that mile a little fast. We’d been given a slower pace to run at in order to keep from burning out, but we were doing a good job of nailing the new pace pretty well. We vow to run a tiny bit slower. Mary and Lisa, who aren’t running the full 20-miler, are bid adieu. They’re supposed to keep walking forward while we run and then that way they can catch us on the return trip.

Mile 12: It turns out our attempts at “run a tiny bit slower” actually equalled “run that mile even faster.” John suggests adjusting our run/walk ratio and we agree. In this heat, slower is actually better because it lessens the chance of keeling over. Right after this mile marker is the Vienna Community Center, and that means air-conditioned bathrooms. Trust me, you have no idea what a godsend this is. This is where we pick up Karla, who was running with a slower group that is running hideously out of control (anywhere from 45 seconds to 1 1/2 minutes too fast per mile). So in order to run a slower pace, she has to switch to what is supposed to be a faster group. Karla fits in pretty quickly with our group and we’re glad to save her from people that are going to hurt themselves if they keep this up.

Mile 13: The other turn-around! Now all we need to do is hoof those seven miles back to Falls Church and we’re done.

Mile 14: We grab a partially-full jug of water to bring back to Lisa and Mary, who we fear will be running low on water. After two miles of not seeing them we finally realize that they gave up on the original plan and just turned around, so we split the water among ourselves and dump the jug in a nearby trashcan.

Mile 16: Our group starts to really struggle to keep our pace. There’s no shade on this part of the trail and the sun has completely come out of the clouds and is beating on our faces. I’m very thankful that I have my hat to provide some minimal protection.

Mile 17.5: The sun is wiping Beth out; she decides that she needs to just start walking, so Dave sticks with her.

Mile 18: We encounter a site assistant at the water fountain and John reads her the riot act on why they switched the course around so the shady part isn’t at the end. He points out that the fast groups were so upset about that course aren’t the ones who need the shade to be at the end because they’re already home and showered. The site assistant doesn’t seem particularly interested in John’s points. We give up and move on.

Mile 18.5: Dave catches back up with us; the site assistant called someone with a car to pick Beth up, and we’re moving slow enough that catching us isn’t too hard. By this point John is dragging a bit more and so am I.

Mile 19: All energy abruptly vanishes. I ask John if he wants to walk a little more and he immediately agrees. We wave goodbye to the vanishing dots on the horizon of Karla, Dave, and Scott.

Mile 19.5: Suddenly and without warning, I am feeling dizzy and nauseous. Not a good sign. I tell John and he’s concerned, so we decide that as soon as we get to where his car is parked, he’s going to get it.

Mile 19.6: I sit down on the curb of the road while John goes the extra 100 feet to his car. A minute later, I’m in it and air-conditioning has never felt so good. Even more importantly, within about ten seconds I am instantly feeling better. Clearly a case of the heat having pounded me into submission. Back at home base I put an ice pack on the back of my neck, sit down and eat a bagel, and feel completely back to normal. I remind myself that I made the right choice. This is my third time through this training program and I don’t have to prove anything to anyone, quite frankly. I’d have liked to have finished that last half mile but ignoring warning signs like that is how people hurt themselves. On the way back to my car I tell John that he’s the best but not to tell Julie. He instantly vows to tell Julie. Oh well.

Running: 9 miles

Start time: 8/9/03, 7:00am
Location: W&OD Trail
Activity: Running
Distance: 9 miles
Run:Walk ratio: 3:1

Took the rest of last week off to recover from the 18-miler; aside from yesterday morning’s dreadful humidity, the 9-miler was a piece of cake. Gotta love it.