Monday, February 28, 2022

Freezing February + Fantastic February

February 2022 in review!

Total mileage for the month: 402.6
  • Jan. 31-Feb. 6:  101.6
  • Feb. 7-13: 86.5
  • Feb. 14-20: 104.2
  • Feb. 21-27:  109.5 
  • Feb. 28-March 6: 110.3
S'no problem!
Races:
  • Feb. 12:  Cabin Fever Reliever 20k in 1:20:08 for 1st overall female, a new 20k state record for age 41, a PR for the coldest I've raced in (5 degree wind chill), and a decent rust-buster.
  • Feb. 19:  Run With the Wind 25k as a workout targeting 50k goal pace, in 1:45:37 for 1st overall female, a new 25k state record for age 41, and a lot of humbling in regards to the difficulty of running half the race distance at goal pace during a 104 mile week.
This was Feb. 1 but we really
wanted to do one more jumping
photo - & we are so in sync!
Workouts:
  • Feb. 1: 2 x 0.25 hill reps, 4 mile threshold (6:09, 6:10, 6:10, 6:04), 2 x 0.25 hill reps, with about 0.25 jog recoveries in a 13 mile run. I planned to run this workout Feb. 2 but due to 6-12" of snow in the forecast, everyone in my running group worked out a day early. I only had 1 easy day between a huge weekend (20 mile workout Saturday + 18 mile Sunday) so I wasn't sure how it would go, but I ended up feeling strong. The weather was ideal at 45 degrees, which definitely helped. My threshold miles were almost exactly the same as the previous week's, on the same course, but I was solo on them for this workout whereas I had Spencer pulling me along the previous week (plus I was more fatigued for this one), so I was pleased. My hills rep paces were 6:15, 6:12, 6:27, 6:33 (the 2 after the threshold really hurt!), which was the fastest I've run quarter miles on that specific hill by 11 seconds/mile pace, which also made me happy.
  • Feb. 8: 6 x 0.25 hills + 2 mile tempo (6:17, 6:00) straight off hill rep #6. The goals for the hill reps were "hard", to keep them even, and not to ease up on #6. Those splits were all 1:32-1:35 (paces of 6:11-6:24, which Strava grade adjusted to about 5:11-5:24, though that seems awfully generous), and #6 was consistent with my other splits - which I haven't been able to do on this type of workout before. The first mile of the tempo had more incline and the second mile more decline, so the average pace of 6:08 was probably consistent with my effort across the board. The first half mile of the tempo on workouts like this is always spent trying to get my breathing down to tempo mode from hill rep mode, and does not feel the greatest. I know these workouts are beneficial for me!
  • Feb. 16:  6 mile wave tempo alternating 0.5 at threshold/0.5 at 50k pace; half mile paces were: 6:40, 5:56, 6:33, 6:14, 6:38, 6:05, 6:35, 6:08, 6:46, 5:57, 6:38, 5:53. I was aiming for 6:45/6:05 so got a couple of them right, haha! The south wind was 19 mph so it made pace control very challenging on the loop course we did - though the loop course split up the wind so I was never running more than about 0.4 straight into it, which was nice. I'd be running 6:15 pace into the wind, then turn out of it and be running 5:55 at the same effort. It felt good to nail this workout even in those conditions though, and oddly my overall mile splits were pretty even at 6:17, 6:23, 6:21, 6:21, 6:21, 6:16.
  • Feb. 19: Run with the Wind 25k at 50k goal pace - target of 6:45, actual average pace 6:44. This hilly race wasn't the most confidence-inspiring (i.e., 50k pace felt much harder than I expected towards the end and I couldn't have gone much farther at it), but then I remembered that I typically max out at 12-13 miles at MP in training, often with a little break (e.g., 2 x 6 miles at MP), and it always feels exponentially harder than the first 12-13 miles of the actual marathon. I can now confirm that the same is true of running a 25k at 50k goal pace during a 104 mile week!
  • Feb. 23:  2 miles threshold (6:06, 6:09), 4 x 0.5 (3:05, 2:54, 2:57, 3:02), 2 miles threshold (6:08, 6:09), and a new PR for my coldest "feels like" workout, at 0 degrees (14 degrees air temp + bitter north wind). Overall this went better than I expected based on the temperature and residual fatigue from the weekend. My first 0.5 was against the wind, so that is why it was slow (not sure on #4). I was aiming for 2:55 on those, so I wasn't successful, but my threshold was right on. It's harder for me to shift gears during heavy mileage, plus the cold makes it harder to run fast! I kind of felt like just attempting this workout was a victory. I covered my face in Vaseline so I could take my neoprene mask off for the hard running.
  • Feb. 26:  26 miles via 10 easy then 16 with 0:45 pick ups at the beginning of each. The pick ups were planned to be about tempo effort, and ranged anywhere from 5:40 to 7:02 because we were a hilly course (1365 feet of gain), but most were 6:00-6:15.
  • Doubles: Feb. 1, 3, 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 18, 21, 22, 23, 25, 28.
Winter running vibes

#freezingfebruary
Long Runs:
  • Feb. 5: 22.3 easy (7:45) that felt fantastic with fabulous company! We had a lot of great conversations on this run, including how our running group would team up during the apocalypse. Colin did all 22 with me, Casey and Spencer did 18, and we had David, Abby, Claudio, and Christian for various distances too!
  • Feb. 6:  15 easy (7:57) that felt surprisingly fantastic. I lifted the previous evening (after the 22 miler) and woke up a bit sore from that, but ended up feeling great. Last year the back-to-back long runs were intimidating, but now they have become normalized.
  • Feb. 12: 20.3 miles, including the Cabin Fever Reliever 20k.
  • Feb. 13: 12 miles (8:10), with some fatigue from Cabin Fever and the low-glycogen cool down that followed it!
  • Feb. 19:  23.2 miles with 2.5 jog, Run with the Wind 25k, 5 jog. We are getting better at death marching after long races, maybe?
  • Feb. 20:  15 miles (8:22) that was one of my least favorite runs of the month, because I had zero pep in my step! Great company made it possible.
  • Feb. 26:  26 miles (7:37) with pick ups described above. I was planning to do 25, as was Colin, but he was a little late to the group run and we did a mile before he arrived, so I decided if I felt good I'd finish with him. Conveniently enough, I'd already been considering doing 26 if I felt good as this run approached, so it all worked out and I felt great! We had 11 people at this group run doing anywhere from 13 to 26.
  • Feb. 27: 16 miles (8:26) for my biggest weekend ever! We kept this one easy enough that I think it could be considered a true recovery run, even though it was 2:15 on feet. I felt immensely better than I did on the Feb. 20 Sunday long run, I think mostly because my during and after run fueling on 2/26 was far superior to on 2/19 (due to the awards ceremony taking a really long time and there being no restaurants in Sarcoxie, I didn't get a full meal until several hours after Run with the Wind).
  • My workout days were 13.2, 11.3, 13.6, and 14.3 so I guess those could also be considered long runs.
Boston training

10 on Tuesday
Running Highlights:
  • My first two races of 2022 yielded two overall female titles and two state records...nowhere to go but down from here, bahaha!
  • A new weekly mileage PR of 109.5, which improved upon my previous of 106 (I don't remember the tenths). I would have run a monthly mileage PR if February had been 31 days! I was most proud of this mileage because I did it during a crap weather week with my workout in "feels like" 0 and with 4 runs on sleet.
Snow.

Rebecca trying to make a snow
angel in ice cover
Life Highlights:
  • We had quite the winter storm hit on February 2-3! By being flexible and running 1.25 runs on the treadmill, I didn't miss anything except some strides. I do okay with easy running in the snow but strides on it don't really work (nor do they work on the treadmill for me!). 
  • We then had crazy sleet on February 23-24, but I it was almost like sand so it was fine to run on wearing screw shoes, but made for some slow miles, and a few more missed strides.
  • Albani participated in Science Olympiad which is a pretty great after school activity. She had a competition at MSU on February 26.
Morning routines

Albani's JROTC uniform

Valentines
Twosday!

Books:
  • The Night She Disappeared by Lisa Jewell
  • The Third Wife by Lisa Jewell
  • Interference by Brad Parks
  • Daniel's Running Formula by Jack Daniels
  • Wish You Were Here by Jodi Picoult
  • People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry
  • Angel Falls by Kristin Hannah
  • No Exit by Taylor Adams
  • Finlay Donovan is Killing It by Elle Cosimano
  • The Santa Suit by Mary Kay Andrews
Theme for the month:
  • Freezing February! I am extremely thankful for my fantastic running buddies, who make it possible to get out the door every morning in terrible winter weather.
I have a lot of pics to share this month!

The freak morning when it was 60* but dropped to
30* & sleet by 10:00 a.m.

The world will never know who is
holding this cake

MonYay run crew

Farm road distance


Monday, February 21, 2022

Run with the Wind 25k

The short:

My training buddy Colin and I were planning to run 15 miles at 50k pace within a 23 mile run on 2/19/22, so when I saw the date for the Run with the Wind 25k (15.55 miles), I thought maybe we should run it for our workout. Then I saw that if I ran about my 50k goal pace I could break the 25k state record for my age, and that solidified the plan. I ended up setting the age 41 state record with a 1:45:37, winning overall female, and hitting my 50k goal pace almost on the nose with a 6:44 average. It was also my first time racing during a 100+ mile week! Colin won overall male, and my friend Amy who came for a steady pace hilly Boston training run won her age group and set the age 50 state 25k record!

Running half the race distance at pace was also pretty humbling. I'm not sure why I thought it would be easy, but much like running 12-13 miles at marathon pace during training is exponentially harder than the first 12-13 miles of the actual marathon race for me, running 25k at 50k pace was no walk in the park. I don't think I could have really run any faster than I did even if I'd gone in with the plan of racing all-out. Amy said that the challenging hills in the race were harder than Boston's, which made me feel better about dying up one of them, and made me certain this was good Boston training in addition to good 50k training!

Results aren't posted online, but the race sent them out in a spreadsheet that I included a partial screenshot of below.

25k state records are here.

My Strava activity is here.

My fast friends & our awards
The long:

I've run this race 3 times previously, in 2010, 2012, and 2015, which was enough to know that 1) you never actually have a tailwind the entire way, 2) it's hilly, and 3) 25k state records are generally easily attainable since it's not a common race distance. The race organizers announce the night before the race which direction it will run, and this year was Sarcoxie to Carthage, which means primarily a west and north route. The wind was behind us going west and we had a headwind going north.

Because "Run with the wind going west & against 
the wind going north" is much harder to fit on a sign ;-)

My running buddies and I decided to drop a car at the finish first, then drive to the start together so we'd be in control of our return time and make it easier for the volunteers who were driving people back (no shuttles at this one!). Amy and I met Colin in Carthage, and just after I jumped back into my car after peeing behind a building while waiting for Colin to arrive, a guy drove up and asked us if we were going to Sarcoxie. I said yes and he asked for a ride. When then pulled around to where Colin had just parked, and I got out of the car and told Colin, "I met a guy while peeing," which wasn't 100% accurate but I found it humorous. The man's name was Brady and he, like 99.9% of runners, was really nice. Everything before the race took longer than planned for various reasons, so we only got in a 2.4 mile warm up instead of the 4 miles we'd planned.

This race used to be pretty good sized for the area (~200), but this year it was tiny at 32 participants. You kind of assume that a race that small won't be competitive, but there were a man and woman on the starting line who looked fast and had on Vaporflys.  When we took off, Colin and I moved into the lead fairly quickly, but they were right behind us. After we put a little distance on them, Colin told me that he'd heard them talking before the race about starting easy then cranking it down. I was not in the mental space for really truly racing, but I told him that if they came up on us I was going to go with them because I wanted to win the women's race. I also told him that I didn't mind if he and the guy went ahead of me if he needed to race for overall male. Our race plan before then was to run 12 miles together at 50k goal pace (6:45) then we had the option of fast finishing from there if we felt good. When we turned into the north wind, I told him that if the man and woman caught up to us, I was going to tuck in behind him because the wind sucked and 6:45 pace is harder for me than it is for him (though it's both of our 50k goal paces, the differential between his half and 50k pace is much larger than mine is)!

The pace felt really good for the first stretch going west, which was pretty flat and with a tailwind. I kept an eye on my splits to keep from going too fast. When we turned north into the wind, we also hit the first of the bigger hills, with a climb of about 60 ft. Colin is a much better uphill runner than me, so he gazelled up the hill while I sucked air for the first time of the day. Once we crested the hill I caught back up, and we passed one of the four country houses with three dogs that came out to chase us. They were all bark but no bite, but strange dogs during a race isn't ideal, especially for Colin who got bit last year when we were on a 22 mile 50k training run. When we turned we took a look back and saw we had probably a minute on the next two runners, which made me feel pretty safe about our overall leads.

That stretch into the wind was pretty short (~half mile), then we turned back west for about a mile before another half mile stretch that was into the wind and had another tough hill (about 50 ft of gain in that one). We then got another mile of running west with a tailwind before turning into the longest stretch against the wind, which was about 4.6 miles long. I was timing my nutrition and thought we were about to hit mile 8, then my watch beeped 9 and I was pleasantly surprised - always great to learn you're a mile closer to the finish than you thought!

Mile 10 was a gradual incline of about 50 ft, with an aid station at the top of the climb. When Colin spotted it, he told me he was going to run ahead to the porta-potty there. He floated up the incline in front of me and I took the opportunity to back off slightly because I wasn't feeling very strong on the hills. When I passed the aid station the volunteers excitedly told me, "You're in the lead; he took a bathroom stop!" I told them not to worry, he'd catch me back quickly. I tossed my gloves at the aid station and continued through while Colin was in the bathroom, but a few seconds later he was out and back in stride with me. The next mile felt easy because it had a lot of drop (80 ft), but then mile 12 contained a pretty steep 80 ft climb. When I saw it I told Colin I'd stay as close to him as I could, but I know from training that steep climbs are pretty much the hardest thing for me. I can tackle a long gradual hill FAR better than even a really short steep one. Power is not my strength!

Tossing my gloves at the aid station
while Colin was in the bathroom

Colin pulled away from me dominantly on that hill. I climbed up it the best I could, and my left hamstring gave me some shooting pain in the process. I think it was the combination of carbon plated shoes (the only time my hamstrings bug me) and the hill, but I slowed to a shuffle/almost walk for a few steps to alleviate it. That did the trick so I got up the hill and continued to watch Colin pull away into the distance. After the hill we had about 2 more miles into the north wind, and I just kept telling myself it was going to get much easier when we turned back west!

It did get easier when we turned west, but anytime I tried to push my hamstring yelled at me, so I settled into steady and scrapped the possible fast finish. I was also feeling pretty fatigued and doubt I could have managed it even if my hamstring had felt great. I could tell Colin was doing the fast finish, as he was pulling steadily farther ahead of me. I knew that there was one more turn, into the Carthage High School parking lot to the finish line, so I just kept hoping for Colin to turn, and when I saw him turn left I gauged how much I had left. I stayed steady and finished it up.

Country road racing!

Colin was waiting for me after his overall win, and we went to his car to change shoes and get nutrition. We had 5 more miles to run since our warm up was shorter than planned, so we headed back out on the course to cheer Amy in. She was in her last quarter mile when we got back out so we didn't have to go far! We cheered her in, and somehow she managed to run 2:00:00 exactly - although they were hand-timing and I told them it was really 1:59:59! This was a new state record for age 50.

Colin and I continued jogging around while Amy got some things out of the car, and conveniently enough she had a 3.5 mile cool down, which was exactly what we had left when she was ready to start. We ran out 1.75 miles on the course and back, cheering on everyone coming in. It was pretty lonely out there so I like to think we helped! I was pretty fatigued, and it was one of the most sluggish death marches long cool downs I've done - and that's saying something, based on my history of making races into really long runs!

After finishing up I foam rolled in the parking lot while Amy stretched, then we all went into the high school to put on dry clothes, to enjoy post-race food, and to attend the awards ceremony. They had hot soup as part of the post-race food, which I'm really appreciating at these cold races! 

No way is she 50, right??!

In addition to my overall female award, I also got an award for setting a state record and another one for the top age-graded performance. I was actually #2 on that, but first place went to the race organizer, who ran 7:20 pace for 15.55 miles at age 69! I was so impressed by him. I tried to make him take it but he said he'd made it and wanted me to have it.

I can have a meal off my awards

The day was full of laughs and memories. Though I wish a 25k at 50k pace had felt easy or at least moderate, post-race I've put it a little more in perspective, especially while writing this post. 1) 13 miles at marathon pace in training is always terribly hard for me, 2) I was in a 104 mile week, 3) I started said 104 mile week already fatigued due to racing the Cabin Fever 20k in a 5 degree wind chill last weekend, 4) about 6 miles of the race was into a 14 mph wind, and 5) the course was challenging. Here's hoping that 6:45 pace is do-able for twice the distance on March 26!


I have three 25k state records still - I had
age 31 but it was broken in this race. 41 is
my fastest even though I truly raced the 
other years!


Sunday, February 13, 2022

Cabin Fever Reliever 20k

The Short:

I busted the rust in the coldest conditions I've ever raced in at the aptly named Cabin Fever Reliever 20k on 2/12/22! When I saw the race morning wind chill of 5 degrees (19 degree air temperature with a 16 mph wind), my race goal changed from "beat last year's time" to ".........???" I was able to win overall female (not easy because my training partner Casey was also in the race), and set a new Missouri state record for the 20k for age 41. I ended up about 20 seconds off my 2021 time, but with a faster average pace on my Garmin on the new course - more on that below. My running group completely dominated the event! In the 20k we had 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th overall males (Brad, Colin, Toby, and Spencer respectively, with Toby taking 1st masters male), 1st and 2nd overall females (me and Casey), and 1st masters female (Amy, as they took me out of masters). In the 10k we had 1st and 2nd overall females (Sierra and Christian), and in the 5k 1st overall female (Sarah)! Brad, Toby, Casey, and I all broke single age state records.

Results are here.

My Strava activity is here.

A video of me finishing is here.

20k state records are here.

Most of the Miles from Mentor 20k-ers

Race wind chill = not a PR I want to improve upon
The Long:

Much like last year, I was really excited for this race to kick off a new season! I like this event as a rust-buster, because it's low-key and very close to home. It was more competitive than usual this year, since most of my Miles from Mentor running group members ran one of the races. It was a good thing I was so pumped about the race, and that I signed up a week in advance when I the forecast said 35, because I'm not sure I ever really wanted to race in a 5 degree wind chill! Luckily, we'd had one workout in a 7 degree wind chill in January that had gone better than I'd expected, so I focused on that. I didn't taper for this race, but it fell during a cut-back week, so I had 89 miles on my rolling 7 instead of 100+.

With so many friends at the race, it was laid back and really just felt like a workout. We warmed up together, lamented about the weather and especially the brutal wind, and hoped for the best. I ran 2.8 miles total before the race, including strides.

Pre-race group shot!

Spencer and I have been running workouts together and hoped to work together in the race. Casey planned to try to stay with us for as long as she could, and Sarah wanted to run about our pace for her 5k so went out with us as well. We ended up having us 4 plus a super talented late-50's local runner named Matt and another man we know named Kevin together for the first mile or so, then Spencer, Matt, and I unintentionally gapped the other 3. I could tell Spencer felt really good and I hoped I could hang onto him. The effort level felt a little too spicy, but I kept telling myself "stay with him, it will be exponentially harder alone", which is what I tell myself every time Spencer is pushing workouts and I don't want to let him gap me, and which usually works! We dropped Matt around the 5k point, and I basically just hung onto Spencer until between miles 5-6. I wanted to help him, but I didn't have it in me to do so. The 20k did the 10k course twice, so we ran through the finish line then did a hairpin turn to go back onto the course. As usual I hadn't looked at my watch, but I saw the 10k clock at 39-mid and hoped I could even split for a high-1:18.

Our early group about 0.25 in

The course changed from previous years, in good ways (a little less hilly) and bad (7 hairpin turns). The upside of all of the out-and-backs was that they split up the brutal wind. Navigating a hairpin turn kills your momentum and for me is mentally tough though. We also all thought they had the turn around that we went through 4 times out too far. Garmins aren't perfect, but everyone's read about 12.6, whereas last year's course read a little short for everyone, and anytime the turn around is marked by a Gatorade bottle in the middle of the road you kind of have to wonder... (if I did average 6 seconds/mile faster this year in much worse weather, I'm stoked)

2022

2021

After Spencer gapped me between miles 5-6, I was in no-man's land the rest of the race. Matt was next behind me, and Casey was after him, but I knew from the hairpin turns that I had a pretty safe lead. I had a lot of ups and downs with how I felt during this race. One minute it would be "I'm doing this, I'm strong!" then the next, "Are my legs going to hold up/this hill is terrible/this wind is killing me/just get in". The cold and wind got to me a bit on the second tour of the route. With this being a local race put on by my running club, Ozark Mountain Ridge Runners, I knew a lot of people on the route who were super kind in their cheering, which really helped. The OMRR President was at a spot we passed 8 times, and almost every time he yelled, "There's our hall of famer, Sara!" Seeing a lot of other runners everywhere on the course that was also open to traffic was a little bit of a cluster, but it was also really encouraging.

Every time I heard my watch beep during the second half, I counted down a mile..."okay, just 5 miles left...okay, 4 mile tempo...okay, 3 miles, you can do this...2 miles, bring it home...1 mile, kick!" and used all of the mind games I could. I think I should have taken a gel, because you burn more glycogen when it's that cold, but I couldn't fathom taking off my mittens to open one so hadn't carried one - this ended up being ironic because I tossed my mittens at the halfway turn around because they were too hot (though I did regret that when I went back into the headwind!).

Parking lot finish

The last mile seemed to go on forever, plus it had a couple of hills that didn't play nice, but when I finally got within view of the finishing clock I could see it was on 1:19 and I wasn't sure if I could make it in under. I didn't - I finished in 1:20:08, so I positive split the thing - a reminder that I should have listened to my body instead of staying with Spencer! I don't run as fast when it's this cold (no one does, because physiology), but it doesn't hurt me as much as heat I don't think! The announcers gave me a hilarious shout-out as I came in (including, "Looking hot. Coming in hot!"), and one of my running buddies who was spectating caught it on video.

When race spectators have to wear parkas...

After the race, I went out for 5 more miles for 20 on the day with Spencer and Colin - actually 20.3 total. I kind of felt like I ran the cool down in a dream state and in slow motion, and I could not get in grilled cheese and soup fast enough in the post-race area!

I was really proud of our Miles from Mentor group! Everyone ran their hearts out in brutal weather, and we had so much fun out there! Several of the athletes I coach in the group PRed (Colin, Spencer, and Casey). Races are wonderful, wins are a blessing, and competing is a gift - but the best part is that every day I get to do something I love with some of the best people I know! I'll race again soon, but tomorrow I get to run more miles and that is amazing.

Cute trophy on adorable hoodie
This is pretty normal for this area but
not the easiest racing terrain

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

OMRR Hall of Fame

On January 29, I was inducted into my local running club's hall of fame. Ozark Mountain Ridge Runners is an awesome organization that I've been blessed to be a part of since I moved to the Springfield area in 2010, and this was quite the honor.

My parents were able to attend!

Two of my running buddies introduced me, and they are truly the best. Their short speeches can be viewed here.
Love these two

My 2 minute acceptance speech can be viewed here, and is also written below:
I had my speech on my phone, hah

I'm honored to receive this award, and being part of OMRR has been amazing. Back in 2004 to 2009, before I lived in the Springfield area, I became acquainted with several OMRR members at races around the 4-state area. John Everett [current OMRR president] included me in the club even when I lived 2 hours away! I met several long-time members, and then when I moved to the area in 2010 I immediately felt at home in this running club.

After serving on the OMRR board in 2017, I developed an even deeper appreciation for everything the board does. Our board is very hard working and passionate! I hope to rejoin the board down the road when I retire, but really they do so much that I could not keep up. Make sure to thank the board members often!

Every weekday at 5:30 a.m., you can find me running with the Miles from Mentor competitive group. This group improves my life every day! They are all talented competitors, but they are also really, really good people. They also inspire me to chase big goals, but more importantly to be a better person.

I run about 99% because I love it and 1% for training, which often surprises people because I am competitive. While I do enjoy racing, nothing is more valuable than the day-to-day process. Thank you for being part of mine!

A few of my Miles from Mentor sub-group buddies

Doug was the male inductee for the year

She looks happy here but was "so
bored" most of the evening!

Running buddies are the best!

With the OMRR President and Vice President